Most of the people who are admitted into intensive care are over 70 and men, the chances are some will have some sort of diabetes even if its not formally diagnosed, this is without CV-19 and alot of these patients die. ITU have very few patients under the age of sixty, a young person who has been involved in a RTA is not the norm. I am not a statistician but I think you need to know how many of the total population of that area have diabetes, what sort and how well it is controlled and what age groups they fall in to, to draw any conclusions.
I am more interested why young people who are normally class as in good health are dying, do they have undetected conditions or something that links them? The spread in the UK is interesting, you would expect around airports, transit hubs, but some areas have far less cases, even though they have an airport and historically imigrant population.
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/f94c3c90da5b4e9f9a0b19484dd4bb14
Most of those tested positive will have been a contact with someone known to have CV, been in a high risk area or had symptoms. There have been around 65,000 tests completed, but they just tell you that you haven't got it that day, which is useful for tracing and if you are in isolation. An antibody test perhaps would show we has had it, and recovered which are not being picked up, what is the commonality between them.
I have no idea how the Italian health system works, in a America if you can pay they will keep you on a ventilator indefinately, the whole baby P case shed a light on how an American consultant would agree to treat without even seeing the patient, or assesing if the treatment would be effective.
It will be interesting when all this is over to over lay the 'normal' death rate over this years. Norovirus is down and so is rotavirus is down this year, perhaps due to the extra hand washing, norovirus is a bug to most of us but can kill.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopula...wales/2018to2019provisionaland2017to2018final
Some of the stats are scary, especially for the middle aged.