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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Why ‘excess mortality’ figures for Covid must be calculated -Chinmay Tumbe

Why ‘excess mortality’ figures for Covid must be calculated -Chinmay Tumbe

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published Published on May 26, 2021   modified Modified on May 26, 2021

-The Indian Express

They will not only help capture the true scale of the tragedy, but will also help in planning better for the next waves of the pandemic.

In his memoirs, the writer Suryakant Tripathi (1896-1961), better known as Nirala, described the river Ganga as “swollen with dead bodies” when the deadly second wave of the influenza pandemic struck India in 1918. The pandemic was a deeply traumatic experience for him, as his family “disappeared in the blink of an eye”. Other oral histories from that period describe dead bodies being thrown off cliffs or in jungles. When the Sanitary Commissioner of India, Norman White, gave the estimate in 1919, of six million deaths during the pandemic, even he acknowledged that the true number must have been much higher because the statistical system recording deaths also broke down during the pandemic. A few years later, when the Census was conducted in 1921, officials found many villages depopulated and nudged up the pandemic death toll estimate in excess of 10 million. Over the next century, several researchers used refined demographic estimation methods based on “excess deaths” or “inter-censal growth rates” to nudge the number even higher. My own research, which accounted for deaths in the princely states as well, places the death toll of the 1918 pandemic in the Indian subcontinent to 20 million or three times the official figure. This was around 6 per cent of the total population and one of the greatest demographic shocks ever recorded in history. The best estimates for the global death toll of the 1918 pandemic, which were initially pegged at around 20 million, now exceed 40 million.

A century later, we find ourselves caught in the second wave of another deadly pandemic and brave journalists on the ground in India are showing that the true death toll is far in excess of the reported Covid-19 fatality numbers that are released on a daily basis. In Gujarat, on May 14, the newspaper Divya Bhaskar broke a story showing that between March 1 and May 10, around 1,23,000 death certificates were issued as compared to only 58,000 in the same period in 2020. These “excess deaths” numbering around 65,000, when compared to an official Covid-19 death scorecard of around 4,000, point to a potential under-reporting factor of 16. The Gujarat government has not disputed the 2021 numbers but correctly pointed out that 2020 was a problematic reference year because the national lockdown halted the death certification process and that deaths increase every year by a certain amount any way. So I use the April-May period of 2019 as the reference period and project the deaths for the 40 day period of April 1-May 10 in 2021 as if it was a normal year using the average growth rate of deaths in 2017-19. The analysis is displayed in the table and chart. This shows an “excess mortality” figure of around 43,000 compared to 3,992 reported Covid-19 cases for this period or an under-counting factor of close to 11. This is lower than 16, what Divya Bhaskar reported, but is still very high and much greater than 3, the value I found for India during the 1918 pandemic. Using the excess mortality method, the under-reporting factor for the USA and many other high-income countries in the current pandemic, as per an estimate by the University of Washington, is between 1 and 2.

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The Indian Express, 26 May, 2021, https://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/why-excess-mortality-figures-for-covid-must-be-calculated-7330348/


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