There
have been over seven million recorded fatalities due to Covid-19, from the
beginning of the pandemic until the end of 2023, according to official data,
but the actual death toll from the disease may be closer to 21 million, the
World Health Organisation (WHO) has said.
And while the coronavirus may no
longer be of concern to most people, there are those who continue to suffer
silently from long-term impacts.
The WHO
is in the process of conducting an analysis of excess deaths during the
pandemic, as well as
after the disease ceased to be a global health emergency.
Excess deaths are
calculated based on
the difference between observed deaths in a specific time frame and the
expected number of deaths for that same period.
“We are working to estimate
what this is. We have estimates up to
the end of 2021, and these are being revised to look at excess deaths for 2022
– and will be done for 2023 as well,” said WHO’s Covid-19 technical lead and
director ad interim for Epidemic and Pandemic Preparedness and Prevention, Dr
Maria Van Kerkhove, at a virtual press conference on Jan 12. “We expect that
the actual true number is at least three times higher.”
The actual number of
infections caused by the virus is also subject to speculation. On paper, at
least, the world
has seen over 712 million cases of Covid-19 since the first outbreak in the
city of Wuhan, China, in December 2019.
The WHO began keeping records of
Covid-19 cases and fatalities from January 2020.
But Dr Van Kerkhove said the
reported numbers were likely just the tip
of the iceberg.
“Case-based data, as reported to WHO, is not a reliable
indicator. It has not been a reliable indicator for a couple of years now. And
so if you look at the epi curve, it looks like the virus is gone, and it’s
not,” she said.
The epi
curve – or epidemic curve – is a bar chart that shows the distribution of cases
over time. “According
to wastewater estimates that we have from a number of countries, the actual
circulation of Sars-CoV-2 is anywhere between two and 19 times higher than what
is being reported,” Dr Van Kerkhove added.
As at Jan 14, Russia, Singapore and
Italy were the nations reporting the highest number of Covid-19 cases in the
preceding 28 days. Globally, a total of 941,265 cases were reported during the
period.
But the United States, where 6,100 people died of Covid-19 in the 28
days leading up to Jan 14, does not even figure in the top 10 countries reporting
the most cases.
Globally, 10,000 deaths from Covid-19 were reported in December
2023.
“We are missing deaths from around the world. Because countries aren’t
reporting deaths, it doesn’t mean that they’re not happening,” said Dr Van
Kerkhove, adding that there had been a 42 per cent increase in hospitalisations
and a 62 per cent rise in ICU admissions in December 2023.
Under-reporting
cases of Covid-19 – and deaths from it – amid a spurt in infections worldwide
could be of concern, particularly in terms of capturing important data that
would help the health authorities make the right call in case a need arose. It
also complicates the job of health experts, for instance, when it comes to
measuring the case fatality rate (CFR) – confirmed Covid-19 deaths as a
proportion of all confirmed cases.
According to WHO, the CFR for Covid-19 shot
up to about 0.9 per cent in 2023 after falling to 0.28 per cent in 2022. In the
first year of the pandemic – 2020 – it stood at 2.4 per cent of all reported
cases.
But Professor Dale Fisher, the group chief of medicine at Singapore’s
National University Health System (NUHS), pointed out that while it might
appear as though a greater percentage of people were again succumbing to
Covid-19, this was not the case.
“The mortality rate is the number of deaths
divided by the number of cases. So that rate can go up because the denominator
is wrong, and we know many people with Covid-19 do not test, and if they do a
home test, they do not have it reported. It’s likely the rate captures all the
deaths, but not the cases or who stays home,” he said.
Dr Shawn Vasoo, clinical
director at Singapore’s National Centre for Infectious Diseases (NCID), said
the rates of death estimates were dynamic, and the numbers may vary by time of
year and region, as well as by sub-populations.
It is also important to look at
the specific mortality metric perused, said Dr Vasoo, noting that the CFR may
be very difficult to measure, and measure accurately, due to under-testing for
and under-reporting of Covid-19 infections.
Prof Fisher said the current spike
in Covid-19 infections and deaths reported globally is commonly seen in
infectious diseases, noting that as immunity wanes, there will be more cases,
which will consequently result in more deaths.
“Immunity wanes when there are
not so many infections around to create natural immunity, as well as less
vaccine uptake because the emergency is over. Endemic Covid-19 will continue to
come in waves typically lasting around six weeks. It may be seasonal, but it’s
too early to tell,” said Prof Fisher.
“Also, the virus that causes Covid-19 is
constantly undergoing minor changes, which will also gradually affect one’s
immunity.”
Dr Vasoo said there were several factors for the recent surge. “Most
importantly, this was driven by the emergence of a new variant, JN.1. Other
factors include the waning immunity in populations – which can result from not
getting the updated Covid-19 vaccine – as well as increased travel and
gatherings.”
Prof Fisher said vaccines designed to combat earlier strains lose
effectiveness as the virus mutates.
He said that vaccines were recommended for
the vulnerable, particularly seniors and those whose immune system is
compromised or those who suffer from chronic diseases. Outcomes
for those who get Covid-19 are better if they have been vaccinated in the last
six to 12 months,
he added.
Dr Vasoo said there is a danger that a variant may emerge that evades
immunity generated by previous vaccinations or infections. “Keeping
vaccinations up to date would be essential for vulnerable individuals to keep
severe Covid-19 at bay,” he added.
Associate Professor Barnaby Young, the head
of NCID’s Singapore Infectious Disease Clinical Research
Network, noted that long Covid – signs, symptoms and conditions that continue
or develop after acute Covid-19 infection – remains a challenge for health
experts.
“It remains a difficult syndrome to pin down, with no simple
diagnostic test and no simple treatment,” said Prof Young.
Nevertheless,
booster vaccinations and infections are building up people’s immunity and
reducing the risk of long Covid, he added.
Dr Van Kerkhove said that most
people with long Covid will recover after four to 12 months, but there are
still some people dealing with these long-term impacts for even longer than a
year. “We do not have the treatments available yet because it’s still so new.
There’s a lot of work that’s ongoing. This is not in someone’s head. This is
actually a real condition that needs to be studied properly,” she said.
Refer to the full article here.
Source: The Straits Times © SPH Media Limited. Permission required for reproduction.