More than 60 coronavirus deaths registered across Yorkshire hospitals in latest figures

There have been 61 more Covid-19 deaths recorded at Yorkshire hospitals, according to the latest figures.
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It brings the total number of deaths at Yorkshire hospitals since the start of the pandemic to 3,841.

Deaths were recorded where a patient either tested positive for Covid-19 or where no positive test result was received for Covid-19, but Covid-19 was mentioned on their death certificate.

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NHS England releases updated figures each day showing the dates of every coronavirus-related death at hospitals in England, often including previously uncounted deaths that took place several days or even weeks ago.

Leeds General Infirmary.Leeds General Infirmary.
Leeds General Infirmary.

Deaths were recorded at the following hospitals:

Airedale NHS Foundation Trust - 1

Barnsley Hospital NHS Foundation Trust - 1

Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - 2

Calderdale and Huddersfield NHS Foundation Trust - 4

Doncaster and Bassetlaw Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - 8

Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust - 1

Hull University Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - 5

Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust - 9

Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust - 8

Northern Lincolnshire and Goole NHS Foundation Trust - 4

The Rotherham NHS Foundation Trust - 5

Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - 4

South Tees Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust - 5

York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust - 4

It comes as UK doctors warned the second wave of Covid-19 will be “gruelling” with increased pressure prolonged throughout winter.

Chief medical officers and other senior health figures have written to doctors urging them to be flexible as they may be required to work in clinical areas outside their usual practice.

The letter, tweeted by England’s chief medical officer Professor Chris Whitty, said the second wave “may well be prolonged throughout the winter period, with wide local variation and fluctuation in cases, requiring a sustained response from the whole profession”.

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It warned: “This will be gruelling professionally and personally.”

It added that pressure will “inevitably be exacerbated by staff shortages” due to sickness or caring responsibilities, and assured doctors that regulators will take into account the need for temporary changes to practice.

Healthcare professionals will have to be “flexible”, which “may entail working in unfamiliar circumstances or surroundings, or working in clinical areas outside of their usual practice”, the letter said.

It added: “This can be stressful and you may have concerns about both the professional practicalities and implications of working in such circumstances.”

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Hospitals, trusts and healthcare leaders have been told to “bear in mind that clinicians may need to depart, possibly significantly, from established procedures in order to care for patients in the highly challenging circumstances of the epidemic”.

Healthcare regulators, including the General Medical Council, have committed to “take into account factors relevant to the environment in which the professional is working”, the letter said.

It added that coronavirus restrictions imposed across the UK will result in the initial peak of pressure on the healthcare system being “significantly lower” than it otherwise might have been.

The letter said “We all need to support one another during this time. It is, and is going to remain, hard going but mutual support makes this prolonged crisis easier to manage personally, as well as professionally.”

The chief medical officers of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, the NHS, the GMC and the medical royal colleges all signed the letter.