That is very true. It's a question I was often asked when working in broadcasting.david63 wrote: 08 Apr 2020, 15:36The reason why bad news is reported more than good news is that the good news is not sensational.
If some of these news reporters were to spend a bit of time ding some research, as I have just done, they would be able to report that the average number of deaths in the UK up to the end March is below average for the last five years.
Also the number of deaths this year is up by just over 4,000 - the majority (3,800) in the first three weeks of the year.
There are approximately 500,000 deaths a year in the UK which equates to around 1,400 on average per day.
But putting the Coronavirus deaths in context does not make news.
Now I am not saying that the number of deaths from Coronavirus is not a significant figure to measure the trend and whether we have peaked or not but I suspect that some of these deaths are a crossover from other reasons.
Source: ONS
100,000 vehicles passing safely up and down the M1 is not news because that is what is supposed to happen. A minibus full of people wiped out by a sleeping lorry driver is.
A town full of pensioners having a good night's sleep is not news. One being woken by a burglar and raped is.
Most of the world being at peace isn't news. The continuing strife in places like Syria is.
But some good news is news too. People recovering from Coronavirus is. Discovering a cure for cancer will be. Cruises starting again will be.
But the problem with the bald statistics you quote is no-one actually knows the definitive numbers. The stats are for people dying in hospital with CV. That's a bit like most men over 80 die with prostate cancer, but few of them of it. But the stats don't include those dying in care homes or the community or undiagnosed. So the figure we have is all we have and the only real significance is that if it is calculated consistently it will eventually give us a trend that indicates we're winning. And that will be good news.
And of course everyone, the government, the NHS, the media, are careful not to downplay this. There are enough idiots out there ignoring the rules without giving them any further reason to say it's not really a problem.






