UK’s COVID-19 death toll tops 38,000
LONDON (Reuters) – The United Kingdom’s COVID19 death toll topped 38,000 as of early May, by far the highest yet reported in Europe, raising questions about UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s handling of the coronavirus crisis.
Figures published by the Office for National Statistics for England and Wales brought the United Kingdom’s official death toll to 38,289 as of May 3 – up nearly 6,000 in the space of a week, according to a Reuters tally of death registrations data that also includes Scotland and Northern Ireland.
While different ways of counting make comparisons with other countries difficult, the figure confirmed Britain was among those hit worst by a pandemic that has killed more than 285,000 worldwide.
The data came a day after Johnson set out a gradual plan to get Britain back to work, including advice on wearing homemade face coverings – though his attempt to lift the coronavirus lockdown prompted confusion.
Such a high UK death toll increases the pressure on Johnson: opposition parties say he was too slow to impose a lockdown, too slow to introduce mass testing and too slow to get enough protective equipment to hospitals.
The data painted a grim picture in care homes, which have been hit especially hard by the virus.
“Care homes [are] showing the slowest decline, sadly,” ONS statistician Nick Stripe told BBC TV.
“For the first time that I can remember, there were more deaths in total in care homes than there were in hospitals in that week.”
Care homes now account for a third of all COVID19 deaths in England and Wales.