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Athletico Madrid match may be linked to 41 deaths!

4 replies

HeIenaDove · 26/05/2020 00:56

www.liverpoolecho.co.uk/news/liverpool-news/atletico-madrid-match-linked-41-18305495

Atletico Madrid match linked to 41 deaths in Merseyside hospitals
New health data analysis predicts impact controversial fixture may have had

Liverpool's controversial match with Atletico Madrid has been linked to 41 extra deaths in local hospitals.

The Reds hosted the Spanish side in the Champions League at Anfield on March 9, with 3,000 Madrid fans travelling to the city for the game.

Spain and Madrid in particular was suffering an acute outbreak of coronavirus at the time and questions have been consistently asked about why the game was allowed to go ahead.

Now, a new analysis of health data suggests the match can be linked to at least 41 extra deaths in local hospitals.

The data forms part of a major investigation in the Sunday Times, which has shed light on some of the government decisions through the crisis that appear to have led to the UK's soaring virus death toll

This included allowing events like the Liverpool-Madrid match and the Cheltenham Festival to go ahead.

Edge Health, which analyses health data for the NHS, has conducted modelling and estimated that the Liverpool-Atletico match is linked to 41 extra deaths at local hospitals in our region between 25 and 35 days after the game.

This number could of course be larger, with fans travelling further afield to their homes after attending Anfield.

At the time of the Anfield match, there were an estimated 640,000 Covid-19 infections in Spain compared to 100,000 in the UK.

For weeks the ECHO has been asking questions about the decision to go ahead with the game and the potential impact it may have had on Liverpool and Merseyside's high Covid-19 infection rate and death toll.

When we asked government figures about the decision at the Downing Street press conference, Deputy Chief Scientific Adviser Angela McLean said a potential link between the Spanish and Liverpool virus outbreaks was an "interesting hypothesis.

The Edge Health data analysis also linked the Cheltenham Festival to 37 extra deaths in Gloucestershire hospitals.

The Sunday Times investigation carries a reminder of what government guidance was around the time of these events.

It carries a comment from Chief Scientific Adviser Sir Patrick Vallance from mid March, which expressed why it was felt that major sporting events should continue.

He said: "There's only a certain number of people you can infect.

"So one person in a 70,000 seat stadium isn't going to infect the stadium.

"They will infect potentially a few people they've got very close contact with

On the day of the Liverpool-Atletico game itself, Deputy Medical Adviser Jenny Harries was featured in an interview with Boris Johnson where she said she felt such events would not have a big impact on transmission of the virus.

Liverpool Council's Public Health Team is currently working on an investigation into the impact the match had on the city's infection rates"

OP posts:
Deelish75 · 26/05/2020 09:36

The North West has been hit very hard from this virus. From what I've heard it's coming out the other side but it's still quite bad.

I believe many Madrid fans were mingling in the city centre during the day - visiting tourist attractions, shops, restaurants, it's bound to have had an impact. The scientists stated that outdoor events were safer and the match itself "might" have been safe but other venues in the city weren't.

Ultimately it's our government's job to protect us and there are a lot of questions that need answering about why we let those fans in but I'm also shocked that at the time of that match, Spain, particularly Madrid, was being ravaged by Covid, gathering of over 1000 people had been banned yet those fans still got on planes and came over.

nobbymcphailisverypale · 26/05/2020 10:34

Ultimately the government allowed 1000 fans from a city that had already locked down in a country with a huge rate of infection to have free reign in Liverpool.
I'm a fairly rational measured person. That decision was utter madness.

HeIenaDove · 28/05/2020 01:03

www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/coronavirus-emergency-cash-poor-england-hotspots-conservatives-a9528371.html

Coronavirus: Poorer areas miss out as £100m of emergency cash diverted to richer Tory councils with lower infection rates
Exclusive: Anger as ministers strip out deprivation weighting from grants to ‘fight the pandemic’ – despite higher infection rates in poorer neighbourhoods

Poorer parts of England, many of them Covid-19 hotspots, have lost out on more than £100m of emergency cash, after ministers diverted it to richer – mostly Tory-run – areas, a new analysis suggests.

The government stripped deprivation out of its calculations, despite announcing plans for that switch had been shelved – and despite saying the money was to “fight the pandemic”.

As a result, Labour-run councils which lost big sums include Sunderland (£3m), Knowsley (£2.6m), Sheffield (£2m), Gateshead (£2m), South Tyneside (£2m) and Oldham (£1.1m).

All are among the 10 areas of England with the highest rates of coronavirus infections, according to official figures, and among the most deprived.

Yet, when the cash was announced, local government minister Simon Clarke said it was to recognise that councils are “the unsung heroes of the fight against Covid-19” and faced huge extra costs as a result.

It is intended to fund getting rough sleepers off the streets and domestic abuse victims into safe accommodation, as well as to help manage funerals and bolster frontline services; all tasks more onerous in deprived areas with more virus cases.

The biggest losses in percentage terms were suffered by Knowsley (38.8 per cent), Blackpool (37.4 per cent), South Tyneside (32.8 per cent) and Liverpool (32 per cent), according to the Labour analysis seen by The Independent.

All are among the five poorest council areas, according to the government’s official index of multiple deprivation, except South Tyneside, which is 22nd
In stark contrast, the 10 richest areas all enjoyed huge boosts in funding, including (Wokingham £2.2m, 83 per cent), Buckinghamshire (£4.3m, 41 per cent), Windsor and Maidenhead (£1.7m, 39 per cent), Surrey (£8.1m, 32 per cent) and Oxfordshire (£4.7m, 32 per cent). All have Conservative-controlled councils.
The Labour analysis follows a study by the Health Foundation finding that the risk of dying from coronavirus is more than twice as great in the most deprived areas of England as in the least.

Steve Reed, the shadow local government secretary, condemned the way funds had been allocated after ministers “promised to fund ‘whatever it takes’ to get communities through this pandemic”.

Now the government is cutting emergency funding for areas with the highest rates of Covid-19 infection and diverting it to areas that are suffering less,” he told The Independent.

“This money was earmarked for fighting Covid-19, so it must go to the communities that need it the most. Emergency funding should go to areas with the highest rates of infection.”

Steve Rotheram, mayor of the Liverpool city region, said its authorities believed ministers had “pulled the rug from under them”, after promising they would receive “whatever it takes”.

“Now it’s ‘take whatever you are given’ and it’s noticeable that it’s Labour areas that have missed out in the second tranche,” he protested.
“It is disgraceful if funding is being allocated in that partisan way, after what ministers said about putting away party-political squabbles in a time of national crisis.”

In total, more than £100m was diverted from councils in the bottom half of the deprivation index, when £1.6bn of emergency grants were announced in late April, according to the Labour analysis.

That is the difference from the allocations to each town hall from the first £1.6bn pot, handed out in March, which did include deprivation in the weightings.
The second £1.6bn tranche was awarded on a per-capita basis, raising fears in town halls – which still face an estimated £10bn black hole because of coronavirus costs – that the method will be used for future allocations.

The future downgrading of deprivation was signalled in the so-called fair funding review which began under Theresa May and triggered loud protests.

However, it is supposed to be on hold, until April 2022, after poorer areas that delivered Boris Johnson’s general election triumph were among those facing big cuts.

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said: “We’re providing councils with an unprecedented £3.2bn in the fairest way possible and giving them the resources to tackle the immediate pressures they have told us they’re facing.

The two tranches of funding were allocated in different ways because they address different needs, but should be considered together as the true picture of this additional support.

OP posts:
SudokuBook · 28/05/2020 01:04

That’s awful :( truly awful

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