First we have England - projected deaths 0.14 of admissions 11 days previous.
![Image](https://imgur.com/06DYUOB.jpg)
The reported deaths (blue) are now running slightly above the projected deaths (red) - but not by significantly more than the standard deviations (vertical bars). Both the deaths and admissions are now increasing slowly. Probably to be expected by the reduction of constraints.
And now for Scotland - projected deaths 0.14 of admissions 12 days previous.
![Image](https://imgur.com/iPrIdpx.jpg)
The statistics are considerably poorer - but even so, it looks like the reported deaths (blue) are now levelling off significantly higher than the projected deaths (red). And once again, the actual Scottish death rate significantly exceeds the English death rate. From the above, the current weekly ratio of reported Covid-19 deaths in Scotland are around 1/5 of those in England, whereas from population sizes you would expect 1/10.
I know that the age demographics are different - but are they so different as to create such a difference in Covid-19 death rates?