Heart deaths in Australia

Big factor in Australian excess deaths. Just a bit of an update from John. After my experiment with Substack many people have pledged to a paid subscription. @johninengland?utm_source=user-menu However, I have decided NOT to accept these payments and my Substack will remain free access. This means the pledged money will not be deducted from people’s accounts. I still plan to continue some posts to Substack as time allows. The other factor is that I can still post whole videos directly to Substack. However, for those who would like to contribute to my campbell teaching work, I have created a buy me a coffee account. This money will help in the production of educational materials and support health and development projects in Africa and Asia. Buy me a coffee ink: Excess deaths in 2022 22,000 (12%) excess deaths (Population 26 million) Excess mortality is widely regarded as the best measure of the overall impact of a pandemic, since it includes deaths both directly and indirectly due to the disease. Of the 20,200 excess deaths in 2022 10,300 deaths (51%) were from COVID-19 2,900 deaths (15%) were COVID-19 related, (meaning that COVID-19 contributed to the death) 7,000 deaths (34%) had no mention of COVID-19 on the death certificate. Non-COVID-19 deaths represent excess mortality of 4%, (which is extraordinarily high in itself) Most excess deaths were in 65 But, excess mortality was at least 5% higher in ALL age groups It is notable that there are excess deaths in all age groups, and that this excess is generally significant, even after removing COVID-19 deaths Excess deaths higher in females than males The differences are worth investigating, (although the small numbers mean that there is considerable natural variation) Excess mortality in all States WA excess deaths were delayed due to late reopening Many more deaths from IHD Ischaemic heart disease Much higher number of deaths than expected from IHD (despite continued deaths from dementia) Deaths from respiratory disease have been significantly lower than expected throughout the pandemic
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