COVID-19 killed more people in England and Wales this year than flu and pneumonia, data shows
The disease caused by the novel coronavirus killed three times more people in England and Wales during the first eight months of this year than influenza and pneumonia combined, according to new data released Thursday by the U.K. Office for National Statistics (ONS).
"More than three times as many deaths were recorded between January and August this year where COVID-19 was the underlying cause compared to influenza and pneumonia," Sarah Caul, head of mortality analysis at the ONS, said in a statement. "The mortality rate for COVID-19 is also significantly higher than influenza and pneumonia rates for both 2020 and the five-year average."
The highest number of deaths due to influenza and pneumonia occurred in January; however, deaths from influenza and pneumonia were below the five-year average -- 2015 to 2019 -- in every month of 2020, according to the ONS.
"Since 1959, which is when ONS monthly death records began, the number of deaths due to influenza and pneumonia in the first eight months of every year have been lower than the number of COVID-19 deaths seen, so far, in 2020," Caul said.
Meanwhile, the proportion of deaths occurring in care homes due to COVID-19 -- 30% -- was almost double the proportion of deaths due to influenza and pneumonia -- 15.2%, according to the ONS.
The U.K. agency noted that its analysis of COVID-19, influenza and pneumonia deaths focused on fatalities where people died due to those conditions, rather than deaths where the conditions were either the underlying cause or mentioned as a contributing factor.