19th June Stats

Figures reported on a Monday by Wales are for a 48h period. This is reflected in the UK total.

Hospital data for ST&S is updated weekly on a Thursday.

* Data not updated from previous day.

+/- compared to one week ago.

Figures in brackets for doses = daily total.


86 cases in Sunderland. +51
0 deaths in Sunderland. 0
0 patients admitted to hospital in South Tyneside & Sunderland. 0
3 patients in hospital in South Tyneside & Sunderland. -1
0 patients on ventilation in South Tyneside & Sunderland. 0

742 cases in the NE. +294
0 deaths in the NE. -1
34* patients admitted to hospital in the NE & Yorks. +11
149* patients in hospital in the NE & Yorks. +48
21* patients on ventilation in the NE & Yorks. +9

10,321 cases in the UK. +2,583
14 deaths in the UK. +2
226 patients admitted to hospital in the UK. +39
1,316 patients in hospital in the UK. +227
210* patients on ventilation in the UK. +52

1,034,415* tests conducted.

England 7 day test positivity rate as of 14/06/21 = 2.4% +0.6

Sunderland 7 day rolling average:
119.6 cases per 100,000 using backdated data. +61.6
124.0 cases per 100,000 using daily data. +61.7

95.4 cases per 100,000 for the UK using daily data. +23.8

186,625 (844) people have received 1st dose of vaccination in Sunderland. +7,930
136,312 (850) people have received 2nd dose of vaccination in Sunderland. +4,320

1,719,961 (9,005) people have received 1st dose of vaccination in the NE. +50,490
1,300,550 (9,399) people have received 2nd dose of vaccination in the NE. +65,951

42,679,268 (218,636) people have received 1st dose of vaccination in the UK. +1,387,937
31,087,325 (188,858) people have received 2nd dose of vaccination in the UK. +1,636,672
 


Not good nationally for cases, hospital or death, but that second vaccination figure is quickly getting close to 50% of the population. That one will be a little cause for cheer. It will be a sign of a fair way to go yet, but having more people vaccinated than unvaccinated really starts to tip the balance in favor of beating this.
 
MUST HAVE MORE STATS AROUND THE DEATHS......

How many of these tragic deaths have actually been Covid ?!?

What’s the age of those who have died ?!?

Were these people vaccinated ?!?
I'm not sure if there are better sources around for vaccinations but for ages of deaths, the weekly report here is the definitive source:

The latest one is:

20-29 and 30-39 year olds are the biggest groups for cases, but those two age groups have been the regular two highest for a long time, possibly all the way through, but the graph on the bottom of page 8 does look like it is showing cases are really falling in the older age groups now. There is a graph on page 47 showing hospitalisations by age group, but because the large January peak is in the graph the current state is squashed up and unreadable. Page 56 is where you finally get to deaths, That says since week 27. Given it is week 24 now, it is almost a year of data bundled in together.

The best way is to grab the spreadsheet from the first link. Having gone through the report, it is a bit of a shame what they have done to it. It used to be useful but now because it contains a year of data in most cases, lumped together, it is really hard to see the current state. A data sample of the last 5 weeks along side the bigger data set would say a whole lot more.
 
Last three days it looks as if the numbers are broadly the same, cases actually heading slightly downwards.

Have we reached a peak or a plateau? Or is it the 'weekend effect'?

Either way, agree with post #3 that more info is needed around the deaths and possibly the hospitalisations.
 
Last three days it looks as if the numbers are broadly the same, cases actually heading slightly downwards.

Have we reached a peak or a plateau? Or is it the 'weekend effect'?

Either way, agree with post #3 that more info is needed around the deaths and possibly the hospitalisations.

this was asked last week when we had 7,000 for about 6 days then it jumped massively
 
14 deaths there'll have been more people killed in road accidents

This one is constantly mentioned. Around 1,800 people die each year in road traffic accidents, which is about 5 a day.

& heart disease etc

There's limited value in saying that "more people die of cause X, Y or Z" because in this instance road traffic accidents are an accidental event that we have limited control over, whereas heart disease deaths are the result of a lifetime of poor health choices.

Neither of which have the capacity to place great acute strain on the NHS as a whole. The former being spread out across the country by chance and the latter being a chronic system pressure.

Yes, deaths from, due, with, etc COVID at the moment are low. Thankfully low, but we wouldn't still be under restrictions if there wasn't either

a) sufficient evidence to suggest unrestricted contact may result in significant numbers of hospitalisations and deaths or
b) insufficient evidence to suggest that said contact would not result in significant numbers of hospitalisations and deaths
 

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