Scroll down to the heading "PĂ„ denna sida" (On this page), below it are headlines for the various tables:
Döda senaste Äret/Dead last year
Döda över tid/Dead over time
Döda efter Älder/Dead by age
Döda per mÄnad/Dead per month
SpÀdbarnsdödlighet/Infant mortality
During the 1940s, Sweden had in excess of 120 000 children born per year. Those people are now dying off, which affects mortality numbers. Normally, we have between 90 000 and 110 000 births per year. Meanwhile, the 1950s saw a drop in nativity. This of course affects numbers, when seen as #/100 000.
A German Maths Prof. has just looked into the official German death data and calculated similar results for 2022, in particular back-end loadedness and the most significant impact on the 30-45 age group!
His approach is also quite simple and understandable.
Data from CDC seems much less detailed (or maybe just harder to access), but mortality was up in 2021 compared to 2020 in all groups. No information yet for 2022.
"The number of deaths was above the five-year average in private homes (28.7% above, 732 excess deaths), hospitals (20.4% above, 869 excess deaths), care homes (14.8% above, 298 excess deaths) and other settings (14.3% above, 106 excess deaths)."
"The number of deaths registered in the UK in the week ending 31 March 2023 (Week 13) was 13,137, which was 19.6% above the five-year average (2,156 more deaths)"
This statement at the beginning:
"In the week ending 31 March 2023 (Week 13), 11,584 deaths were registered in England and Wales;"
So looks like Scotland and Northern Ireland a higher percentage yet again based on them having between them about 10% of the population.
Considering the Winter 'flu season has gone why are the excess deaths still so persistently high and that is with the new revised upwards 5 year average death numbers which is now "The term excess deaths in this statistical bulletin refers to the number of deaths above the five-year average. For 2020 and 2021, the average for 2015 to 2019 has been used. For 2022, the average is calculated from 2016 to 2019 and 2021 data. For 2023, the average is calculated from 2017 to 2019, 2021, and 2022 data. This provides a comparison of the number of deaths expected in a usual (non-coronavirus pandemic) year.".
Anyone guess at a cause considering almost zero autopsies are being done that include looking for a possible link to the jibbyjabbies or whether they had no part of the death and we are all nutters.
But how can stat be true?!
https://www.hartgroup.org/stats-not-the-whole-story/
Thanks for the link Alex - I hadn't seen that (excellent) article đ
Stats no problem.
Glanced at our mortality-data, what's publicly available:
https://scb.se/hitta-statistik/sverige-i-siffror/manniskorna-i-sverige/doda-i-sverige
(This is the quick short-hand version.)
Scroll down to the heading "PĂ„ denna sida" (On this page), below it are headlines for the various tables:
Döda senaste Äret/Dead last year
Döda över tid/Dead over time
Döda efter Älder/Dead by age
Döda per mÄnad/Dead per month
SpÀdbarnsdödlighet/Infant mortality
During the 1940s, Sweden had in excess of 120 000 children born per year. Those people are now dying off, which affects mortality numbers. Normally, we have between 90 000 and 110 000 births per year. Meanwhile, the 1950s saw a drop in nativity. This of course affects numbers, when seen as #/100 000.
A German Maths Prof. has just looked into the official German death data and calculated similar results for 2022, in particular back-end loadedness and the most significant impact on the 30-45 age group!
His approach is also quite simple and understandable.
https://reitschuster.de/post/massive-uebersterblichkeit-ab-dem-zweiten-halbjahr-2021/
Data from CDC seems much less detailed (or maybe just harder to access), but mortality was up in 2021 compared to 2020 in all groups. No information yet for 2022.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db456.htm
From this week's ONS figures total deaths down which they seem to boast about:
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/deaths/bulletins/deathsregisteredweeklyinenglandandwalesprovisional/weekending31march2023
But look at the excess numbers:
"The number of deaths was above the five-year average in private homes (28.7% above, 732 excess deaths), hospitals (20.4% above, 869 excess deaths), care homes (14.8% above, 298 excess deaths) and other settings (14.3% above, 106 excess deaths)."
"The number of deaths registered in the UK in the week ending 31 March 2023 (Week 13) was 13,137, which was 19.6% above the five-year average (2,156 more deaths)"
This statement at the beginning:
"In the week ending 31 March 2023 (Week 13), 11,584 deaths were registered in England and Wales;"
So looks like Scotland and Northern Ireland a higher percentage yet again based on them having between them about 10% of the population.
Considering the Winter 'flu season has gone why are the excess deaths still so persistently high and that is with the new revised upwards 5 year average death numbers which is now "The term excess deaths in this statistical bulletin refers to the number of deaths above the five-year average. For 2020 and 2021, the average for 2015 to 2019 has been used. For 2022, the average is calculated from 2016 to 2019 and 2021 data. For 2023, the average is calculated from 2017 to 2019, 2021, and 2022 data. This provides a comparison of the number of deaths expected in a usual (non-coronavirus pandemic) year.".
Anyone guess at a cause considering almost zero autopsies are being done that include looking for a possible link to the jibbyjabbies or whether they had no part of the death and we are all nutters.