Research in England and Wales reveals a concerning increase in the number of decayed bodies discovered, linked to societal isolation and indicating a breakdown in social assistance systems, especially amongst males.An exploratory research study has actually identified a worrying trend in England and Wales: an increasing number of people are being found departed and decomposed.This study, released in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, suggests a connection between growing social isolation and these deaths, a pattern observed even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.The research study was authored by a team led by Dr Lucinda Hiam of the University of Oxford and including histopathology registrar Dr Theodore Estrin-Serlui of Imperial College NHS Healthcare Trust.The researchers analyzed information from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), recognizing deaths where bodies were discovered in a state of decay. They used a novel proxy: deaths coded as R98 (” ignored death”) and R99 (” other ill-defined and unknown causes of mortality”) according to the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) and previous variations, referred to as “undefined deaths”. The proportion of total male deaths went beyond female deaths, with these deaths increasing significantly among males during the 1990s and 2000s, when general death was rapidly improving.