Exploratory research has revealed worrying trends in England and Wales. This means that an increasing number of people are being found dead or decomposed.
This study Journal of the Royal Society of Medicinesuggesting an association between increased social isolation and these deaths; COVID-19 (new coronavirus infection) Pandemic.
The study was authored by a team led by Dr. Lucinda Hiam. oxford university and Dr. Theodore Estrin-Cerluis, Registrar of Histopathology at Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust.
Researchers analyzed data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) to identify deaths where bodies were found decomposed. They used new proxies with deaths coded as R98 (“neglected death”) and R99 (“other unclear causes of death”) according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) and previous versions. did. “Unspecified death.”
amazing discovery
The study found that between 1979 and 2020, there was a steady increase in ‘unspecified deaths’, or deaths of people found decomposed, for both men and women. Male deaths exceed those of females, and male deaths increased significantly from the 1990s to the 2000s, when overall mortality rates were rapidly improving. The authors said the increase in deaths found in decomposing conditions, especially in men, was a worrying trend.
“Many people would be shocked to find out that someone could lie dead in their home for days, weeks, or even longer, without anyone in their community raising the alarm,” Estrin said. Dr. Serrui says: “The increase in people found dead and in decomposing conditions suggests that there was a broader societal breakdown in both formal and informal social support networks even before the pandemic. and warrants urgent further investigation.”
The study’s authors call on national and international authorities to consider measures to make it easier to identify deaths when people’s corruption is more easily detected in routine data.
Reference: ‘Deadly Silence: Why are the number of people found decomposing in England and Wales increasing?’ Lucinda Higham, Theodore Estrin-Cerlouis, Danny Doring, Martin Mackie , by John Minton, November 20, 2023, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.
DOI: 10.1177/01410768231209001
Source: scitechdaily.com