North East reports highest percentage of deaths above five-year average
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According to official figures released by the Office for National Statistics on Tuesday, August 25, there were 520 deaths registered in the North East of England for the week ending Friday, August 14.
The five-year average for the region is 468, meaning that the North East is 11.1% above average for this time period, with a difference of 52 deaths.
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Hide AdThe East Midlands, London, North West, South West, Eastern England and South East also reported numbers above the five-year average for that week, with the East Midlands reporting the highest number of difference in deaths at 75 (9.9%).
The number of registered deaths in the West Midlands and Yorkshire & the Humber were below the five-year average.
The ONS figures are based on when a death was registered, rather than when a death occured.
A total of 9,392 deaths were registered in England and Wales for the week ending August 14 – the first time that deaths have been above the five-year average in around nine weeks (since, Friday June 12).
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Hide AdThe number of deaths registered in that week was 3.4% above the five-year average, according to ONS data.
Of the deaths registered in England and Wales that week, only 139 of them mentioned ‘novel coronavirus (Covid-19)’.
This is the lowest number of deaths involving Covid-19 in the last 21 weeks, accounting for 1.5% of all deaths in England and Wales.