What the coronavirus death figures REALLY show

What the coronavirus figures REALLY show: COVID-19 is the third most common cause of death, males are dying more, England’s death rate per capita is 50% higher than Wales and 10% of victims have NO underlying conditions

Ten per cent of patients who have died from coronavirus in England and Wales had no underlying conditions, figures today revealed.

Data compiled by the Office for National Statistics broke down the details of all the COVID-19 victims who succumbed to the illness in March.

As well as showing that 90 per cent of the victims were at risk because they had a medical issue, the report showed:

England’s death rate is 50 per cent higher than Wales’, with 68.5 deaths for every 100,000 people – compared to 44.5 in Wales;

Coronavirus was the third most common cause of death during March and was behind 7 per cent of all fatalities, behind only dementia and heart disease;

Death rates are twice as high in men compared to women, with 97.5 deaths among every 100,000 men against 46.5 for women;

Heart disease was the most common pre-existing condition among the victims, with 14 per cent of victims having the condition;

The death rate in March was lower than the five-year average – despite the last week of March being the deadliest since 2005.

It comes after a separate ONS report laid bare the true scale of Britain’s devastating coronavirus crisis, suggesting there are potentially thousands of hidden victims. 

Figures showed the true number of people who have died of COVID-19 could be 52 per cent higher than official figures. 

Only 3,939 hospital deaths were recorded up to April 3 by the Department of Health, which provides a daily update on the UK’s situation.

But the ONS said the true figure was 5,979, when hospital deaths were back-dated and fatalities elsewhere in the community were recorded. 

The ONS’ death toll was also 15 per cent higher than the daily number given by NHS England, which collates hospital deaths on the day they occurred.  

Official data showed the week ending April 3 was the deadliest since records began in 2005, with 16,387 fatalities recorded. A graph shows how the week compares to others since the start of 2020

Official data showed the week ending April 3 was the deadliest since records began in 2005, with 16,387 fatalities recorded. A graph shows how the week compares to others since the start of 2020

Coronavirus is now linked to more than one in five deaths per week, according to the data for the last week of March. In London, the virus was mentioned on the death certificates of almost half of fatalities

Coronavirus is now linked to more than one in five deaths per week, according to the data for the last week of March. In London, the virus was mentioned on the death certificates of almost half of fatalities

ONS data showed deaths in care homes made up 10 per cent of Britain's fatality toll

ONS data showed deaths in care homes made up 10 per cent of Britain’s fatality toll

More men are dying of coronavirus in every age bracket in England and Wales, official figures collated by the ONS show

More men are dying of coronavirus in every age bracket in England and Wales, official figures collated by the ONS show