Excess deaths in England and Wales continue to trend high, even with Covid-related illnesses and conditions discounted, new figures from the UK's Office of National Statistics show.
With coronavirus discounted, excess deaths in nine months of 2022 were above the five-year average, ONS research showed.
Measuring excess deaths — the number of fatalities above the five-year average of overall deaths — in a pandemic year helps provide insight into mortality potentially related to Covid.
The new ONS figures appear to indicate that Covid is declining as a cause of excess deaths in England and Wales.
The first Covid lockdowns in the UK began in March 2020. The total number of excess deaths due to all causes between March 2020 and December 2022, compared with the five-year average, was 167,356, ONS figures show.
When the underlying cause of death was not Covid, deaths were 17,288 above the five-year average.
The months with the most excess deaths were April 2020 — 43,796 — and January 2021 — 16,546. Those months also had the most deaths due to Covid.
The 75-79 age group recorded the most excess deaths not due to Covid.
Between March 2020 and December 2022, the leading causes of excess death were ill-defined conditions associated with old age and frailty (12,170); cirrhosis and other diseases of the liver (4,846); and cardiac arrhythmias (4,375).
Early in the pandemic, many deaths that had been expected to occur were likely displaced by Covid, with deaths involving causes other than Covid appearing to be below average in almost every month.
December 2022 saw the largest number of excess deaths, excluding those involving Covid, since April 2020.
The figures are not yet available for 2023.
Brown/Black belt finals
3pm: 49kg female: Mayssa Bastos (BRA) v Thamires Aquino (BRA)
3.07pm: 56kg male: Hiago George (BRA) v Carlos Alberto da Silva (BRA)
3.14pm: 55kg female: Amal Amjahid (BEL) v Bianca Basilio (BRA)
3.21pm: 62kg male: Gabriel de Sousa (BRA) v Joao Miyao (BRA)
3.28pm: 62kg female: Beatriz Mesquita (BRA) v Ffion Davies (GBR)
3.35pm: 69kg male: Isaac Doederlein (BRA) v Paulo Miyao (BRA)
3.42pm: 70kg female: Thamara Silva (BRA) v Alessandra Moss (AUS)
3.49pm: 77kg male: Oliver Lovell (GBR) v Tommy Langarkar (NOR)
3.56pm: 85kg male: Faisal Al Ketbi (UAE) v Rudson Mateus Teles (BRA)
4.03pm: 90kg female: Claire-France Thevenon (FRA) v Gabreili Passanha (BRA)
4.10pm: 94kg male: Adam Wardzinski (POL) v Kaynan Duarte (BRA)
4.17pm: 110kg male: Yahia Mansoor Al Hammadi (UAE) v Joao Rocha (BRA
Understand What Black Is
The Last Poets
(Studio Rockers)
Teaching your child to save
Pre-school (three - five years)
You can’t yet talk about investing or borrowing, but introduce a “classic” money bank and start putting gifts and allowances away. When the child wants a specific toy, have them save for it and help them track their progress.
Early childhood (six - eight years)
Replace the money bank with three jars labelled ‘saving’, ‘spending’ and ‘sharing’. Have the child divide their allowance into the three jars each week and explain their choices in splitting their pocket money. A guide could be 25 per cent saving, 50 per cent spending, 25 per cent for charity and gift-giving.
Middle childhood (nine - 11 years)
Open a bank savings account and help your child establish a budget and set a savings goal. Introduce the notion of ‘paying yourself first’ by putting away savings as soon as your allowance is paid.
Young teens (12 - 14 years)
Change your child’s allowance from weekly to monthly and help them pinpoint long-range goals such as a trip, so they can start longer-term saving and find new ways to increase their saving.
Teenage (15 - 18 years)
Discuss mutual expectations about university costs and identify what they can help fund and set goals. Don’t pay for everything, so they can experience the pride of contributing.
Young adulthood (19 - 22 years)
Discuss post-graduation plans and future life goals, quantify expenses such as first apartment, work wardrobe, holidays and help them continue to save towards these goals.
* JP Morgan Private Bank
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Groom and Two Brides
Director: Elie Semaan
Starring: Abdullah Boushehri, Laila Abdallah, Lulwa Almulla
Rating: 3/5
COMPANY PROFILE
Name: Mamo
Year it started: 2019 Founders: Imad Gharazeddine, Asim Janjua
Based: Dubai, UAE
Number of employees: 28
Sector: Financial services
Investment: $9.5m
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Final round
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23 - Francesco Laporta (ITA), Mike Lorenzo-Vera (FRA), Andy Sullivan (ENG), Matt Wallace (ENG)
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19 - Steven Brown (ENG), Joakim Lagergren (SWE), Niklas Lemke (SWE), Marc Warren (SCO), Bernd Wiesberger (AUT)