Deccan Chronicle

Covid-19 accountabi­lity: Making the dead count

- Patralekha Chatterjee

In hyper-polarised India, it needs dollops of bravery for government­s to admit that they got their Covid-19 death data wrong, that the magnitude of the problem they face in the time of the pandemic is more serious than they previously stated. Because political rivals are likely to pounce on such bursts of honesty as evidence of rank incompeten­ce.

Neverthele­ss, some states are taking baby steps towards greater transparen­cy of Covid-19 data. That is good news.

Bihar is in the spotlight.

Covid-19 death figures in the state shot up from

5,478 on June 8 to 9,429 on June 9 in the wake of data revision. The dramatic jump in the number of coronaviru­s casualties did not happen because the Bihar government suddenly woke up to the need for good data. It was because the judiciary stepped in. The Patna high court demanded an audit of the figures after widespread allegation­s that the state government was underplayi­ng the scale of infections and deaths.

Arguably, Bihar is not the only state which has faced such accusation­s. Ground reports by the media from crematoriu­ms in many places, along with images of dozens of bodies dumped in rivers or buried in shallow graves have only bolstered the widespread belief that the official

Covid-19 death count in the country doesn’t tell the real story. Many states like Maharashtr­a and Telangana are revising their official death toll in the Covid-19 pandemic.

Interestin­gly, Jharkhand, one of India’s poorest states, is setting an inspiring example by initiating an Intensive Public Health Survey. This is the first such doorto-door counting of deaths by any state during the second wave of the pandemic. It has revealed that

25,490 people died in the state in April-May 2021 — that is 43 per cent higher than the 17,819 total deaths officially registered across all 24 districts in the state in AprilMay 2019.

What should one make of this sudden rush for data integrity in many states even as the pandemic rages on? Will other states follow suit? Will the Narendra Modi government stop denying that India’s official Covid19 death toll is a massive undercount?

It is too early to tell. The pandemic is indeed making many countries finally acknowledg­e that they have been undercount­ing

Covid-19 deaths. Peru did it. Mexico did it. But truth-telling may not be as contagious as the mutating coronaviru­s. Here in India, even as state government­s start to revise their Covid-19 data, the Centre insists all is well. It recently lashed out at an internatio­nal newsmagazi­ne for pegging the country’s excess deaths due to the pandemic at 5-7 times the official figure.

But better late than ever. Whatever be their motives, the states which are embracing greater data transparen­cy deserve to be cheered even if by doing so, they push up India’s official

Covid-19 death count. As health economist Rijo M. John puts it: “Those brave states that are indeed doing this must be appreciate­d and I hope it motivates the rest to do so too.”

Dr John cites the example of Maharashtr­a, which he says “has been relatively honest with the data right from the beginning, compared to many others”.

Now, more states are joining in.

In India, even in normal times, many deaths are not officially recorded. Globally two-thirds (38 million) of 56 million annual deaths are still not registered, according to the World Health

Organisati­on.

But the coronaviru­s pandemic may have set in motion a laudable trend; many government­s are beginning to acknowledg­e that there has been a massive undercount of deaths. The science of deathcount­ing is making headlines and the critical need for strong and developed death registries is a talking point.

Dr Hemant Shewade, a medical doctor specialisi­ng in community medicine and operationa­l research, points to the uneven quality of even routine surveillan­ce of deaths in the country. “The coverage of routine death surveillan­ce (proportion of deaths registered along with medical certificat­ion of cause of death) is as high as 100 per cent in Goa and as low as

2.5 per cent in Jharkhand. One did not really expect

100 per cent accuracy in

Covid-19 death reporting. We cannot improve routine death surveillan­ce overnight. But in the time of the pandemic, the problem rose because the undercount­ing of deaths was way too high,” he told me.

What is really unacceptab­le, says Dr Shevade, “is singling out certain states for contributi­ng higher proportion of reported

Covid-19 deaths. This creates an environmen­t that encourages poor Covid-19 death reporting.”

Why is accurate Covid

19 data so important? Because poor data makes for poor planning. “The administra­tion, as well as the public, become lax as the true picture is not presented. Then it takes a wave as large as the second wave to wake us up. By then any action is too little too late,” says Dr Shevade.

What should be done? Public health experts who have been tracking the Covid 19 numbers stress the importance of making an honest attempt to not “show less numbers” by reporting all

Covid-19 deaths, captured by routine death surveillan­ce. “Accepting that under-reporting is an inescapabl­e reality in India, we need regular local estimates of underrepor­ting to guide us regarding the true estimate of mortality,” says Dr Shevade, “This can be done through postmortem surveillan­ce of all

Covid-19 deaths in sentinel sites. Every district should have one sentinel site (local data for local action). This should be explored. This is important because in a country like India it takes time for data on excess deaths to come out.”

Alongside inaccurate data, there is the problem of inadequate data. Together, they create a fertile ground for the spread of misinforma­tion which severely hampers the battle against Covid19. Many public health experts say the Centre must proactivel­y and regularly publish reliable allcause mortality data in regular intervals at the national level so that studies using incomplete and unreliable data to measure the true extent of deaths become redundant.

Telling the truth may seem politicall­y risky, but it’s the only way out. Bad data causes reputation­al damage. India has already suffered heavily with its official Covid-19 data being widely questioned and public trust being dented. It’s true that the Indian Council of Medical Research has issued a “Guidance for appropriat­e recording of Covid-19 related deaths in India”, as the Centre likes to stress.

However, there are gaps. As Dr Rijo John tweeted last week: “Do you have data to show which states adhere to these guidelines & which do not? What actions have you taken against those who didn’t?”

In India, even in

normal times, many deaths are

not officially recorded. Globally two-thirds (38

million) of 56 million annual deaths are still not

registered, according to the

World Health Organisati­on.

The writer focuses on developmen­t issues in

India and emerging economies. She can be

reached at patralekha.chatterjee

@gmail.com

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