"Definitive conclusions"? What part of "Maybe it's 10%, maybe it's 50%, maybe it's something else" do you not understand?Mellsblue wrote:So, you have a ‘feeling’ it’s near 50% and also happy to draw definitive conclusions. You’re relying on your feelings to draw definitive conclusions.Son of Mathonwy wrote:Not at all. I'm sure the info is there, even if the extra numbers would lag behind the hospital positive test figures a little. But that's no excuse for not giving them as they become available. I don't think I'm being overly cynical to see political gain as a possible motive for excluding them.Mellsblue wrote: Are you saying it’s too early to draw definitive conclusions?
You’re happy that the political gain is a ‘possible’ motive and you’re happy to draw definitive conclusions.
You’re happy that the info is there, ie in black and white on the ONS website, and you think that the govt is under-reporting for political gain. That the govt is under-reporting for political gain despite Hancock stating in public that he had a “high degree of confidence” that care home deaths are greater than realised?
The ONS is giving the true number as they get them. That’s assuming they are the true number. As per Banquo’s link, and his post previous to this, a death certificate should state COVID as the reason for death if symptoms of COVID were present, not if there is proof COVID caused death. Therefore, any elderly person with a cough is counted as a COVID victim. This could lead to inflated COVID deaths outside of hospitals. None of that screams of politically motivated under-reporting.
Again, it’s seems you are happy to believe the figures from the CCP but not the ONS. Strange.
Anyway, that was then. Having done the analysis I can see the numbers indicate very strongly that, at least up to the end of March, the government were indeed underestimating the deaths by 49% or so.
And since they haven't changed their methodology, one would have to take as a base assumption that their current numbers are inaccurate to a similar degree.