DOZENS more deaths were recorded in Oxfordshire in the first half of the year than expected, the latest figures reveal.

That is according to Public Health England data, which compares the number of deaths registered with how many were predicted based on previous mortality rates to calculate the number of excess deaths in an area.

Based on estimates for 2015 to 2019, Oxfordshire was predicted to see 2,993 deaths from any causes in the first 26 weeks of the year (January 2 and July 2).

But there were 3,046 deaths during this period – 53 more than were estimated.

Of the deaths registered in the first half of 2021, 437 or 14 per cent had Covid-19 on the death certificate.

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The so-called 'excess deaths' are considered a much better measure of the overall impact of the virus than simply looking at mortality directly linked to the virus.

This is because they capture deaths that may have been indirectly caused by the crisis, and are not affected by changes in the level of testing.

Across England, there were 29,700 excess deaths during the first eight weeks of the year, as the effects of the second coronavirus wave were felt.

But between March and the start of July, there were 10,700 fewer deaths than expected.

The King's Fund said Covid-19 may have caused the premature deaths of some people, particularly the elderly, who would have died of other causes in the weeks and months following the peak periods of the pandemic.

It added that the number of excess deaths has followed the waves of Covid-19 infections rather than any seasonal trends as is usually the case.

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Dr Veena Raleigh, senior fellow at the think tank, said: "Compared with the 2015-19 average, the waves of high excess deaths in both 2020 and 2021 have been followed by a fall in deaths.

"In total, there were more excess deaths in the second wave than the first wave of the pandemic, which may explain why there is a bigger deficit in deaths between March and July 2021.”

The week ending February 5 was the deadliest of the first half of 2021 in England, when there were 5,004 excess deaths.

In Oxfordshire, the highest weekly excess death total came in the seven days to January 15, when the area recorded 50 excess deaths.

By contrast, there were 38 fewer deaths in the week ending March 5 than had been predicted.

Of the first 26 weeks of the year, there were 11 when registered deaths surpassed the estimate, 14 when the death toll fell below this point and one when it was equal to it.