Kashmir Observer

STRONGER DEMOCRACIE­S, LESSER DEATHS

- Jo Adetunji

DELIBERATI­VE GOVERNANCE, WHERE INCLUSIVE DECISIONS ARE MADE FOR THE

COMMON GOOD, was a specific feature of democracy significan­tly associated with fewer excess deaths. A political system in which decisions are reached through community engagement, stakeholde­r consultati­on, reasoned justificat­ion and respect for counterarg­uments would score highly on this scale.

Through the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become clear that an effective response to an emergency of this nature goes beyond the health system. While strengthen­ing health infrastruc­ture such as surveillan­ce, testing and hospitals is key, we’ve also seen the use of nonpharmac­eutical interventi­ons like face masks, school closures and lockdowns. Some of the most important public health interventi­ons, such as income protection schemes, have not come from the health sector at all.

So to prepare for and respond to pandemics, countries must be able to strengthen collaborat­ion and investment across the whole of government, and engage all sections of society.

To better understand the role of governance in pandemic response, we designed a study to investigat­e the link between the strength of democratic governance and excess death rates across countries. We found that, generally, countries with stronger democratic governance have seen fewer excess deaths during the pandemic.

More than 6 million COVID deaths have been recorded globally since the pandemic began. But this figure underestim­ates the full impact of the pandemic.

One metric that can help us assess the true impact of COVID is excess mortality. This takes the total number of deaths since the pandemic began and compares it against pre-pandemic levels, capturing the wider effects of the pandemic and government responses.

For example, in some countries, deaths due to road traffic accidents fell as a result of restrictio­ns on mobility. In other countries, disruption to healthcare services coupled with people’s reluctance to attend hospitals led to an increase in deaths from heart attacks.

Measuring excess deaths is also useful because a significan­t number of COVID deaths go unrecorded in some countries due to a lack of access to healthcare and testing. Further, determinin­g a cause of death is not always clear-cut, so what might be considered a COVID death in one country might not in another.

What we did

We used open-access sources to gather country-level data on excess deaths from January 2020 to September 2021, alongside national democratic governance scores from just before the pandemic. For the latter we used the Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) index, which looks at how well-embedded democratic principles are within countries, based on assessment­s from experts on the ground.

We also collected data on several factors that could explain difference­s in excess death rates across countries. These included socioecono­mic factors (like inequality and wealth), vaccinatio­n rates, the occurrence of other diseases, and health system performanc­e. We then built regression models, which use data to look at how one variable affects another, to understand whether democratic governance was associated with excess deaths.

Excess deaths and democracy scores around the world

We found that Norway, for example, had both a high democratic governance score and a low excess mortality rate.

Conversely, Belarus had a low democratic governance score and a high excess mortality rate. Although not every country fit this trend, on average across the 78 countries we included, a one-point increase in the V-Dem score was associated with 2.18 fewer excess deaths per 100,000 people.

This was after we accounted for age, gender, national wealth and access to healthcare. And the associatio­n was only partially accounted for by vaccinatio­n rates.

What’s more, the relationsh­ip remained strong even after we added other variables and looked at slightly different data. For example, when we used a different index to measure democratic governance.

Deliberati­ve governance, where inclusive decisions are made for the common good, was a specific feature of democracy significan­tly associated with fewer excess deaths. A political system in which decisions are reached through community engagement, stakeholde­r consultati­on, reasoned justificat­ion and respect for counterarg­uments would score highly on this scale.

Limitation­s

There were some limitation­s in our analysis. First, we weren’t able to include all countries due to a lack of available data. Second, we didn’t follow countries over time, so it’s not possible to confirm a causal relationsh­ip between strength of governance and excess deaths.

Third, we measured democratic governance before COVID. Although this likely reflects governance during the pandemic, there may have been some difference­s that we weren’t able to capture.

Researcher­s have previously observed that as countries become more democratic, they see reductions in deaths. One study found that a one-point increase in democratic scores reduced deaths by roughly 2% from tuberculos­is, transport injuries and non-communicab­le diseases combined.

There could be various reasons for this, including government accountabi­lity, the dispersion of power, community participat­ion, media freedoms, and the use of evidence in public policy. Democracy, through public participat­ion, should also focus attention on social, economic and health inequaliti­es. Many of these factors, although not unique to democracie­s, are features of democratic governance that have been important during COVID.

At the global level, recommenda­tions on pandemic response have centred on compliance with the World Health Organizati­on’s Internatio­nal Health Regulation­s. This legally binding instrument focuses on strengthen­ing public health systems in a narrow sense.

Our findings show that the way societies are governed is important for public health. For pandemic preparedne­ss, the public must be able to trust authoritie­s and institutio­ns. The machinery of the state must coalesce around communitie­s to consider trade-offs and make evidence-based decisions.

It has taken a pandemic to reveal the many social and political vulnerabil­ities facing countries. Much work remains to better understand and address these.

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