Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Centre rejects WHO death report, says model flawed

INDIA’S LETTERS TO THE U.N. BODY FOR CLARITY ON METHODOLOG­Y GOT A LUKEWARM RESPONSE, GOVT OFFICIALS SAID

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The World Health Organizati­on’s estimates that 4.74 million lives were lost in India due to Covid-19 is flawed, the Union government said on Thursday with a rebuttal pointing out four major grounds on to dispute the finding.

Going by WHO’S estimates, India’s true death toll due to Covid-19 comes to approximat­ely 10 times the 481,000 Covid-19 fatalities recorded till December 31, 2021.

Globally, there were close to 15 million deaths in 2020 and 2021, the WHO said, roughly thrice the known death toll.

“India has been consistent­ly objecting to the methodolog­y adopted by WHO to project excess mortality estimates based on mathematic­al models. Despite India’s objection to the process, methodolog­y and outcome of this modelling exercise, WHO has released the excess mortality estimates without adequately addressing India’s concerns,” the government said in a statement, within minutes of the WHO report’s release.

Samira Asma, assistant director-general, data, analytics, and delivery for impact at WHO, said during the briefing that the WHO “engages in a close consultati­ve process with all member states to address the questions and clarify the methodolog­y and request the input data”.

“…As you know that India also released 2 days ago the 2020 estimates and we will continue to have these conversati­ons. In our next update we will also include the data” she added.

According to people familiar with the matter in the government, the Indian administra­tion wrote at least 10 letters to the UN body in the last 4-5 months asking for clarity and vital informatio­n regarding the processes having been followed, but was met with a lukewarm response.

“Even during the member consultati­on meeting on the modelling exercise, India raised its flag thrice to speak but was given a chance only towards the end, and even then, they weren’t able to convince us on points that we raised regarding the modelling methodolog­y etc.,” said an official, requesting anonymity. India’s objections hinged roughly on four major grounds. First, it opposed modelling as an approach – which was reserved for tier II countries that India was classified in -- and said only data from Registrar General of India based on the Civil Registrati­on system should be used for such estimation.

It said India should not be classified a tier II country, for which WHO used modelling, since the country’s “mortality data collected (is) through an effective and robust statutory system”. WHO till date has not responded to India’s contention, the official added.

The CRS data released for 2020 was released on May 3, and found in the first year of the pandemic, India recorded roughly 470,000 more deaths. Second, it objected to WHO using data from 17 states that were “obtained from some websites and media reports and was used in their mathematic­al model. This reflects a statistica­lly unsound and scientific­ally questionab­le methodolog­y of data collection for making excess mortality projection­s in case of India”. “They were not willing to share the states from which data was collected; first they said 18 states then they said 17, and later said data was taken from state websites and media reports based on RTI responses. In November we were informally told 13 lakh (1.3 million) excess deaths, which in a matter of 15 days jumped to 33 lakh (3.3 million); how on earth can there be such huge variation, is something we cannot understand,” said the person quoted above.

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