Hundreds more middle-aged people dying each month of preventable conditions in 'pandemic of ill health' since Covid

14 December 2023, 09:03

More people are dying of preventable conditions
More people are dying of preventable conditions. Picture: Alamy/Getty

By Kit Heren

Hundreds more middle-aged people died each month of preventable conditions like heart disease and diabetes in the first half of 2023, compared to the last five years.

Listen to this article

Loading audio...

Some 28,000 excess deaths were recorded in the first half of the year. The biggest rise was among adults aged between 50 and 64.

Obesity and long NHS waiting lists are thought to be the main factors behind the increased deaths.

Difficulties getting to see a GP and long NHS waiting lists mean more people are not getting the treatment that could prevent them getting seriously ill and dying. Unhealthy lifestyles are also fuelling the excess deaths.

Professor Yvonne Doyle, who led Public Health England during the Covid-19 pandemic, has warned that the Covid inquiry should focus more on these deaths - or risk "missing the point".

She wrote in the Times: "More people are dying across the world since 2020. The prime driver of this has not been Covid-19, despite its heavy death toll.

Read more: England's cancer care blackspots revealed with death rates 70% higher in some places

Read more: Labour's Streeting says NHS uses winters to get more cash out of government as he vaunts Singapore

Tom Swarbrick discusses Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting’s recent comments on the NHS

"These deaths represent an underlying pandemic of ill health. They are driven by highly preventable conditions such as heart disease, diabetes and cirrhosis caused by lifestyle choices."

The inquiry has largely focused on government strategy so far - but Prof Doyle said the lesson should be the need for more action on improving the general health of the population.

She wrote: "Unfortunately, what has been said at the Covid inquiry about preventing the next pandemic focuses solely on tactical decision-making by political leaders. This misses the point.

"A disproportionate number of those who died from Covid were obese, diabetic, or lived in poverty with poor access to social care.

"People in these categories will be at most risk in any future pandemic and this is where the UK needs to focus its public health attention."

Sunak apologises to bereaved families as he appears before Covid inquiry

The excess deaths problem appears to be getting worse. Some 7.2% more people died in 2022 than the average of the past five years, according to a study published in the Lancet. This increased to 8.6% in the first half of 2023.

The issue is particularly concentrated in the middle-aged population. Among people aged 50-64, deaths have been 15% higher than average over the past year.

Deaths from heart attacks, strokes and diabetes are all up over a third among this age group.

Dr Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard, chairman of the Royal Society for Public Health, head of health analytics at Lane Clark & Peacock and the lead author of the study published in the Lancet, said: :Nearly four years on from the beginning of the pandemic, we are still seeing significantly more deaths than would be expected.

"The vast majority of these excess deaths are not directly Covid-related but lasting impacts of the pandemic on the population’s health and healthcare system."

Meanwhile NHS hospital waiting lists have reached 7.8 million, a big uptick from 4.4 million before Covid.

More Latest News

See more More Latest News

'Minuscule state' of RAF is 'utterly pathetic' meaning just one plane available for D-Day 80th anniversary parachute jumps

'Minuscule state' of RAF is 'utterly pathetic' with just one plane available for D-Day 80th anniversary parachute jumps

Infected blood campaigners meeting in Parliament Square ahead of the publication of the final report into the scandal

What is the infected blood scandal? Inquiry into biggest treatment disaster in NHS history due to publish findings

Obit Ebrahim Raisi

Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi dies at 63 in helicopter crash

Obit Ebrahim Raisi

Iran’s president found dead at helicopter crash site

Iran's President Ebrahim Raisi has been killed in a helicopter crash along with Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian and several others

Iranian president Ebrahim Raisi found dead at site of helicopter crash, state media confirms

China Taiwan Sanctions

China sanctions Boeing and two US defence contractors for Taiwan arms sales

Iran's president is missing after a helicopter he was travelling in crashed - with sources in Tehran warning his life is in danger.

'No sign of life' at crash site of helicopter carrying Iranian President, state television reports

Iran

‘No sign of life’ at crash site of helicopter carrying Iran’s president

Iran

Official says rescuers see helicopter that was carrying Iran’s president

Taiwan President

Lai Ching-te inaugurated as Taiwan’s president which will likely bolster US ties

Rescue teams’ vehicles are seen near the site of the incident of the helicopter carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi in Varzaghan in north-western Iran

Helicopter carrying Iran’s president apparently crashes in mountainous region

Rachel Reeves has said Rishi Sunak and Jeremy Hunt are gaslighting Brits over the economy - as Labour analysis claims high inflation has cost workers almost the equivalent of a 1p hike in tax.

Reeves accuses Sunak of gaslighting Britain on economy as research claims Inflation 'costs UK same as 1% tax hike'

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is set to offer the first government apology for the infected blood scandal as the public inquiry into the disaster publishes its final report.

Sunak set to apologise for infected blood scandal which killed 3,000 as inquiry publishes report

Iran's president is missing after a helicopter he was travelling in crashed - with sources in Tehran warning his life is in danger.

Pictured: Iranian president's helicopter taking off just moments before crash in adverse weather

File photo dated 16/10/13 of HMP Barlinnie in Glasgow. The Scottish Government has been accused of moving at a 'snail's pace' in refreshing the prison suicide prevention strategy. The documen

'Up to 23,000 criminals each year to avoid jail' if Government loosens sentences as prisons fill up

Pep Guardiola has hailed his history-making Manchester City side but admitted his future at the club is in doubt after his sixth top-flight win.

'It's insane': Pep Guardiola hails Manchester City record-breakers as side wins fourth Premier League in a row