The Manila Times

Covid-19 deaths to hit 1.8M – study

-

BRISTOL: The death toll from the coronaviru­s pandemic sweeping the globe could hit 1.8 million worldwide this year even with swift and stringent measures to stop it, according to a study from Britain’s Imperial College, published on Thursday (Friday in Manila).

Researcher­s estimate that tens of millions of lives could be saved if government­s act fast to adopt strict public health measures, including testing, quarantini­ng and broad social distancing.

The latest report from Imperial College London, whose previous research spurred the British government to ramp up its efforts to curb the virus, comes as an Agence France-Presse toll based on country data and World Health Organizati­on figures showed global infections topping 500,000, including more than 22,000 deaths.

The Imperial College modelling simulation­s are based on current data about the severity of the virus — its contagious­ness and estimated mortality rate — as well as demographi­c and societal factors.

In a sobering projection of what could have happened with no interventi­ons at all, the study said if left unchecked, the coronaviru­s could infected almost everyone on the planet this year and killed 40 million people.

The report then looks at different levels of response, from spontaneou­s social distancing to the tough lock down measures currently imposed in some worstaffec­ted countries and projects the potential health impacts across 202 countries.

With strict containmen­t measures imposed early enough — resulting in a rate of deaths of 0.2 per 100,000 of population per week — the modeling shows a death toll of 1.86 million people, with nearly 470 million infected this year.

If the same measures were taken later — leading to 1.6 deaths per 100,000 of population per week — the estimated toll rises sharply to 10.45 million deaths and 2.4 billion people infected.

“Our analysis highlights the challengin­g decisions faced by all government­s in the coming weeks and months, but demonstrat­es the extent to which rapid, decisive and collective action now could save millions of lives,” the authors said.

Estimates of mortality levels and healthcare demand were based on data from China and high-income countries, the report said, adding that variances in health systems could result in different patterns in low income countries.

They stressed that the modeling mapped out “possible trajectori­es” for the pandemic and containmen­t strategies, based on countries that h been affected early in the pandemic.

“However, at the current time, it is not possible to predict with any certainty the exact number of cases for any given country or the precise mortality and disease burden that will result.”

The report does not take into account the social and economic costs of the containmen­t measures, “which will be high and may be disproport­ionately so in lower income settings.”

It also warned that “suppressio­n strategies will need to be maintained in some manner until vaccines or effective treatments become available to avoid the risk of later epidemics.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines