i see you took my
comment seriously. i’m sorry i wasn’t more clear.
the 2016 data is not a “trend” but is more reasonably seen as an outlier. by the same approach, the 2021 data would be an outlier too … except that the 2022 data is about to completely dwarf it! that’s the beginning of a trend … and from what i see in healthc…
the 2016 data is not a “trend” but is more reasonably seen as an outlier. by the same approach, the 2021 data would be an outlier too … except that the 2022 data is about to completely dwarf it! that’s the beginning of a trend … and from what i see in healthcare (i work on the front lines) … it’s about to turn into a hyperbole … as all cause mortality is skyrocketing in 2022 (definitely much worse than 2021). but, let’a wait and see the data before we continue this conversation.
Hi Sebastian,
i see you took my
comment seriously. i’m sorry i wasn’t more clear.
the 2016 data is not a “trend” but is more reasonably seen as an outlier. by the same approach, the 2021 data would be an outlier too … except that the 2022 data is about to completely dwarf it! that’s the beginning of a trend … and from what i see in healthcare (i work on the front lines) … it’s about to turn into a hyperbole … as all cause mortality is skyrocketing in 2022 (definitely much worse than 2021). but, let’a wait and see the data before we continue this conversation.
It's not an 'outlier', because it continued. The peak was in 2019. Have you actually read the article?
In the UK, all cause mortality, as far as I can see, is not 'skyrocketing', and is still below 2020 (which was the highest).