40% of coronavirus-related fatalities registered in England and Wales took place in Care according to figures releases this morning from the Office for National Statistics

In the week ending 1 May, with at least 10,535 of all deaths to date taking place outside hospitals, figures from the Office for National Statistics show.

Of the 6,035 deaths linked to Covid-19 and registered in the week ending 1 May, some 2,423 were in care homes, compared with 3,214 in hospitals.

This weekly number of care home deaths is a slight dip from 2,794 in the previous seven days and is the first week-on-week decrease since 20 March, according to the ONS.

The latest  figures have revealed there has been over 40,000 excess deaths so far this year  three-quarters of which were linked to Covid-19.

Dr Jennifer Dixon, Chief Executive at the Health Foundation, said:

‘Today’s data shows that action to tackle the coronavirus pandemic in social care has been late and inadequate, and has highlighted significant weaknesses in the social care system due to decades of neglect and lack of reform. COVID-19 has ultimately magnified the human impact of decades of underfunding in the sector and policy neglect.

‘There were 6,409 deaths in care homes in the week ending 1 May, exceeding the number of deaths in hospitals (6,397). In recent weeks we’ve seen rising deaths among care home residents from COVID-19, while deaths in hospitals and in people’s homes have fallen, having hit their peak in early April. While today’s figures show that overall deaths from all causes, and COVID-19 deaths, in care homes may be stabilising this should not lead to complacency. The toll of 8,312 COVID-related deaths in care homes since the start of the outbreak is deeply concerning.

‘Sadly, those working in social care are at almost twice the rate of death due to COVID-19. There were 23.3 deaths per 100,000 for men and 9.6 deaths per 100,000 for women working in social care, compared to 9.9 deaths per 100,000 in men and 5.2 deaths per 100,000 women in the general population. The death rate among women care workers and home carers (who provide direct care to people in their own homes), was particularly stark with 12.7 deaths per 100,000 women, making them the highest risk group of women in any occupation.

‘The government needs immediately to ensure adequate measures in social care to prevent infection, such as PPE for staff and adequate testing. More fundamentally it cannot any longer duck its responsibility to reform social care through adequate funding of the system, addressing staff shortages, and improving terms and conditions for care workers.’

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