The Asian Age

Elderly, sick people more likely to die from coronaviru­s attack

Death rate from disease for males is 2.8%, females about 1.7%: Researcher­s

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Beijing: People infected with the novel coronaviru­s who are more than 80 years old have the highest chances of dying from infection of all age groups, according to the largest study since the highly contagious outbreak began in China, with details of nearly 44,000 cases.

The study, published on Monday in the Chinese Journal of Epidemiolo­gy, revealed that a total of 1,023 deaths have occurred among 44,672 confirmed cases as of February 11, for an overall case fatality rate of 2.3 per cent.

The novel Chinese coronaviru­s, or COVID-19, has so far killed over 1,800 individual­s and infected more than 72,000 people, Chinese health officials said on Tuesday.

According to the clinicians from the Chinese center for Disease Control and Prevention, majority of the patients were aged 30–69 years (77.8 per cent), male (51.4 per cent), farmers or labourers (22 per cent), and diagnosed in Hubei Province (74.7 per cent).

The study noted that people with ages 80 and above had the highest case fatality

◗ The study noted that people with ages 80 and above had the highest case fatality rate of all age groups at about 15 per cent. It said the death rate from the disease for males was 2.8% and that for females was about 1.7%.

rate of all age groups at about 15 per cent.

It said the death rate from the disease for males was 2.8 per cent and that for females was about 1.7 per cent.

In terms of occupation, patients who reported being retirees had the highest case fatality rate at about 5 per cent, and those in Hubei Province had a fatality rate that was more than seven-fold higher at nearly 3 per cent compared to patients in other regions of China, the study noted.

The researcher­s reported that patients with comorbid conditions had much higher fatality rates — 10.5 per cent for those with cardiovasc­ular disease, 7.3 per cent for diabetes, and 6.3 per cent for

◗ Patients who reported being retirees had the highest case fatality rate at about 5%, and those in Hubei Province had a fatality rate that was more than seven-fold higher at nearly 3 % compared to patients in other regions of China

chronic respirator­y disease, 6.0 per cent for hypertensi­on, and 5.6 per cent for cancer.

The fatality rate was about 50 per cent for cases categorise­d as critical, the study noted.

Assessing the cases as they emerged over the weeks, the scientists found that in December 2019 only 0–22 cases/day began to experience symptoms with the peak onset of symptoms for all cases overall occurring on February 1, 2020.

Since then, the researcher­s reported that the onset of illness has declined. The researcher­s noted that the virus is highly contagious.

“It has spread extremely rapidly from a single city to the entire country within only about 30 days,” the researcher­s reported in the study.

“Moreover, it has achieved such far-reaching effects even in the face of extreme response measures including the complete shutdown and isolation of whole cities, cancellati­on of Chinese New Year celebratio­ns, prohibitio­n of attendance at school and work, massive mobilisati­on of health and public health personnel as well as military medical units, and rapid constructi­on of entire hospitals,” they said.

Overall, the scientists said the viral infection has been mild for nearly four-fifths of the patients, and has a very low case fatality rate. Among the 1,023 deaths, they noted that a majority have been of age 60 years or older and/or have had pre-existing, comorbid conditions like hypertensi­on, heart disease, and diabetes.

“Moreover, the case fatality rate is unsurprisi­ngly highest among critical cases at 49 per cent, and no deaths have occurred among those with mild or even severe symptoms,” the clinicians wrote in the study.

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