Business World

True COVID-19 global death toll may be way over one million

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THE WORLD officially recorded 1 million deaths from coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) in one of the most sobering milestones of the pandemic, but the real tally might be almost double that.

Actual fatalities from the worst outbreak in a century may be closer to 1.8 million — a toll that could grow to as high as 3 million by the end of the year, according to Alan Lopez, a laureate professor and director of the University of Melbourne's global burden of disease group. The coronaviru­s's rapid spread and ability to transmit in people who show no signs of the disease have enabled it to outrun measures to accurately quantify cases through widespread diagnostic testing.

“One million deaths has meaning by itself, but the question is whether it's true,” Mr. Lopez said in an interview before the tally was reached. “It's fair to say that the 1 million deaths, as shocking as it sounds, is probably an underestim­ate — a significan­t underestim­ate.”

Even in countries with sophistica­ted health systems, mortality is difficult to accurately gauge. Tens of thousands of probable COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. weren't captured by official statistics between March and May, a study in July found, frustratin­g efforts to track and mitigate the pandemic's progressio­n.

The dearth of accurate data undermines the ability of government­s to implement timely strategies and policies to protect public health and promote economic recovery. If the mortality from COVID-19 reaches 3 million as Mr. Lopez predicted, it would rank the disease among the world's worst killers. An undercount in deaths could also give some people a false sense of security, and may allow government­s to downplay the virus and overlook the pandemic's burden.

NO SYSTEM

India has confirmed more than 6 million COVID-19 cases, but accounts for only about 95,000 of the 1 million reported deaths worldwide, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University. The country, which has the highest number of infections after the U.S., lacks a reliable national vital statistics registrati­on system to track deaths in real time.

Meanwhile, in Indiana in the U.S. researcher­s found that although nursing home residents weren't routinely tested for the virus, they represente­d 55% of the state's COVID-19 deaths.

“Yes, cases are reported daily everywhere, but as soon as you get to the next tier down, like how many were admitted to hospitals, there have just been huge gaps in the data,” said Christophe­r J. Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington in Seattle. Medical data, including duration of illness and symptoms, help to ascribe a probable cause of death, he said.

Patients with heart disease, diabetes, cancer and other chronic conditions are at greater risk of dying from COVID-19. Some government­s, including Russia, are attributin­g the cause of deaths in some of these patients to the pre-existing condition, raising questions about the veracity of official mortality data.

WHO GUIDELINES

In July, Russia recorded 5,922 fatalities due to COVID-19. At least 4,157 other deaths were linked to the coronaviru­s, but not included in the tally because of how the nation defines such deaths. Overall, it recorded 29,925 more deaths in July than in the same month of 2019.

The WHO laid out guidance for classifyin­g coronaviru­s deaths in June, advising countries to count fatalities if patients had symptoms of the disease regardless of whether they were a confirmed case, and unless there was a clear alternativ­e cause. A COVID-19 fatality should be counted as such even if pre-existing conditions exacerbate­d the disease, said the organizati­on. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released similar guidelines.

Still, it may take health workers certifying deaths time to adopt the methodolog­y, the University of Melbourne's Lopez said. His research has received funding by Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, set up by Michael Bloomberg, founder and majority owner of Bloomberg News' parent Bloomberg LP.

“Doctors often are learning as they go along, so they're not certifying all the deaths that are due to COVID as COVID deaths,” Mr. Lopez said. Although the pandemic has altered mortality patterns worldwide, not all of the changes are a direct result of the pandemic, he said. Physical distancing measures may have reduced road fatalities and deaths caused by influenza. In Japan, which has been scrutinize­d for its lack of widespread testing and relatively lax containmen­t efforts, deaths fell by 3.5% in May from a year earlier even as COVID-19 cases peaked.

“The pandemic actually works in contradict­ory ways to affect mortality,” Mr. Lopez said.

Likewise, the economic cost of the pandemic — which may top $35.3 trillion through 2025 — will be driven more by changes in people's spending patterns than number of deaths and government-mandated “lockdown” measures, according to Warwick McKibbin, a professor of economics at the Australian National University and a non-resident senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n in Washington.

“We estimate this outbreak is going to cost tens of trillions to the world economy,” Mr. McKibbin said in an interview. “The change in economic outcomes is caused by individual­s changing their behavior, not because the government mandated a shutdown.”

Worldwide, the growth in the number of daily deaths has eased since spiking in March and April, helped by improved medical care and ways to treat the disease. But as resurgence­s flare in Europe and North America ahead of winter and the flu season, COVID-19 fatalities may rise sharply again. It took nine days for cases in the U.K. to double to 3,050 in mid September, compared with the previous doubling time of five weeks, the COVID-19 patients between ages 75 to 84 are 220 times more likely to die from the disease than 18-to29-year-olds, according to the CDC. Seniors over 85 years have a 630 times higher risk of dying. The older age of fatal COVID-19 cases has made some people think “they're old people, they're going to die anyway,” said Michael Osterholm, an epidemiolo­gist and director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

"Critics say, well, 'They're old people anyway mostly. They're going to die anyway.'"

“I have a really hard time with that,” Mr. Osterholm said in an interview. “That's an unfortunat­e and very sad way to come to understand this pandemic. Many of those people who died are very important loved ones to so many of us that it's hard to just dismiss it as it's just a number.” — Bloomberg

 ?? REUTERS ?? MOURNERS attend a funeral at The Green-Wood Cemetery during the outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, New York, US, April 11.
REUTERS MOURNERS attend a funeral at The Green-Wood Cemetery during the outbreak of the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the Brooklyn borough of New York City, New York, US, April 11.

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