Devon and Cornwall sees lowest weekly total of deaths linked to Covid since early October
Five were registered across the region, relating to the week of March 20th to March 26th
Devon and Cornwall has seen its lowest weekly total of deaths linked to Covid-19 since the week ending October 9th.
The figures from the Office of National Statistics (ONS) which relate to the week of March 20th to March 26th, but registered up to April 3rd, show that five of the 304 deaths registered in the Devon and Cornwall had Covid-19 mentioned on the death certificate.
Of the five deaths registered in week 12 (March 20-26), there were two deaths of people from East Devon (both in a hospital), one death of someone from Torbay (in hospital), one death of someone from Mid Devon (in hospital) and one death of someone in the South Hams (in a care home).
Whilst no deaths were registered in Cornwall or the Isles of Scilly during this period, one was confirmed at the Royal Cornwall Hospitals' Trust in the lastest 24 hour period.
That is the first in over a fortnight and you can read more here.
No deaths have yet been registered in the Isles of Scilly, and no deaths in Exeter, Torridge, Cornwall, Plymouth, Teignbridge (for the 4th week running), West Devon (for the 6th week running) and North Devon (for the 7th week running) were registered.
No backdated deaths were added into the dataset this week.
Previous weeks have seen 9, 12, 22, 43, 47, 84, 99, 146, 152, 78, 55, 32, 46, 48, 52, 43, 43, 37, 24, 11, 13, 15, 6, 5, 2, 0, 3, 1, 2, 0, 1, 2, 1, 0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 5, 1, 7, 10, 11, 15, 38, 44, 70, 85, 107, 90, 60, 16 and nine deaths registered.
In total, 1,718 deaths from coronavirus have been registered across Devon and Cornwall, with 946 in hospitals, 651 in care homes, 110 at home, four in a hospice, three in a communal establishment and four 'elsewhere'.
Other communal establishments, as defined by the ONS, include defence bases, educational premises, prisons (including probation/bail hostel, prisons, detention centres and other detention), hotels, hostels, travel and temporary accommodation (including B&Bs, temporary shelter for homeless and holiday parks), and religious premises.
The ONS define elsewhere as all places not covered by the other definitions, such as deaths on a motorway, at the beach, climbing a mountain, walking down the street, at the cinema, at a football match, while out shopping or in someone else’s home.
Of the deaths, 567 have been registered in Cornwall, 231 in Plymouth, 204 in East Devon, 167 in Torbay, 127 in Teignbridge, 127 in Exeter, 81 in Mid Devon, 71 in North Devon, 55 in Torridge, 51 in the South Hams, 37 in West Devon, and none on the Isles of Scilly.
So far in 2021, there have been 305 deaths in Cornwall, 92 in Plymouth, 80 in East Devon, 67 in Teignbridge, 58 in Torbay, 54 in Exeter, 34 in Mid Devon, 27 in South Hams, 14 in North Devon, 14 in Torridge and 9 in West Devon.
The figures show in which local authority the deceased’s usual place of residence was. For instance, if someone may have died in Derriford Hospital but lived in West Devon, while the death may have been registered in Plymouth, their death would be recorded in the mortality statistics for the ONS figures against West Devon.
Deaths that have occurred since March 26th will be recorded in next week’s figures, as long as the deceased lived within Devon and Cornwall, the death has been registered, and Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate.
One Covid-19-related death was confirmed at the Royal Cornwall Hospitals' Trust in the latest 24 hour period.
That is the first recorded at hospitals in the Duchy in over two weeks: Read more.