Dubai Telegraph - China's low Covid death toll prompts questions

EUR -
AED 4.25674
AFN 73.599881
ALL 94.63924
AMD 426.786562
ANG 2.075229
AOA 1063.46406
ARS 1665.300658
AUD 1.638954
AWG 2.086353
AZN 1.969454
BAM 1.953264
BBD 2.335667
BDT 142.356387
BGN 1.959874
BHD 0.437095
BIF 3466.823235
BMD 1.159085
BND 1.485671
BOB 8.042557
BRL 5.900671
BSD 1.159694
BTN 109.603686
BWP 15.538824
BYN 3.210631
BYR 22718.066
BZD 2.332372
CAD 1.626057
CDF 2689.07734
CHF 0.919496
CLF 0.026086
CLP 1026.67098
CNY 7.832459
CNH 7.834968
COP 3981.456975
CRC 528.214147
CUC 1.159085
CUP 30.715753
CVE 110.518845
CZK 24.111344
DJF 205.992431
DKK 7.460034
DOP 67.922316
DZD 154.018025
EGP 57.847843
ERN 17.386275
ETB 183.570112
FJD 2.589049
FKP 0.862506
GBP 0.865176
GEL 3.065779
GGP 0.862506
GHS 13.094994
GIP 0.862506
GMD 84.612839
GNF 10173.867447
GTQ 8.839599
GYD 242.585018
HKD 9.08142
HNL 30.944321
HRK 7.534628
HTG 151.453347
HUF 348.47849
IDR 20572.136031
ILS 3.386568
IMP 0.862506
INR 109.312724
IQD 1518.40135
IRR 1593741.874933
ISK 144.109074
JEP 0.862506
JMD 183.411851
JOD 0.821813
JPY 185.758438
KES 150.124896
KGS 101.361707
KHR 4650.820524
KMF 492.610907
KPW 1043.176906
KRW 1752.38004
KWD 0.357112
KYD 0.966445
KZT 565.540801
LAK 25534.642323
LBP 103796.061813
LKR 388.508897
LRD 211.127136
LSL 18.771217
LTL 3.422477
LVL 0.701119
LYD 7.38919
MAD 10.715761
MDL 20.236724
MGA 4868.156941
MKD 61.531925
MMK 2433.437481
MNT 4146.424702
MOP 9.356651
MRU 46.456179
MUR 54.627955
MVR 17.919737
MWK 2012.171858
MXN 19.925262
MYR 4.711454
MZN 74.067971
NAD 18.779399
NGN 1575.335201
NIO 42.434218
NOK 11.018784
NPR 175.364787
NZD 1.99289
OMR 0.445666
PAB 1.159694
PEN 3.95539
PGK 5.085775
PHP 69.977449
PKR 322.571254
PLN 4.227959
PYG 7076.811199
QAR 4.219652
RON 5.224038
RSD 117.149943
RUB 84.580225
RWF 1724.71848
SAR 4.348764
SBD 9.343876
SCR 16.360628
SDG 696.029758
SEK 10.897891
SGD 1.485981
SHP 0.865374
SLE 28.687692
SLL 24305.437155
SOS 662.425802
SRD 43.270992
STD 23990.719317
STN 24.804419
SVC 10.146912
SYP 128.116096
SZL 18.773561
THB 37.710252
TJS 10.750241
TMT 4.068388
TND 3.374966
TOP 2.790799
TRY 53.683879
TTD 7.877771
TWD 36.578986
TZS 3042.601568
UAH 51.937311
UGX 4290.429144
USD 1.159085
UYU 46.819612
UZS 13914.81526
VES 690.856847
VND 30514.07171
VUV 138.224161
WST 3.175562
XAF 655.106385
XAG 0.01639
XAU 0.000266
XCD 3.132486
XCG 2.090068
XDR 0.815645
XOF 654.883233
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.586687
ZAR 18.740584
ZMK 10433.149863
ZMW 20.497385
ZWL 373.224897
  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.32

    -0.2%

  • JRI

    -0.1900

    12.62

    -1.51%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    70.81

    -1.06%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    62.87

    0%

  • BTI

    -1.8900

    59.49

    -3.18%

  • RIO

    -3.0700

    102.67

    -2.99%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • NGG

    -1.6000

    80.68

    -1.98%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.28

    -2.32%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    52.15

    -0.13%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0800

    18.55

    -0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.7900

    32.01

    -2.47%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    40.14

    -2.52%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    177.89

    -0.46%

  • VOD

    -0.3600

    14.53

    -2.48%

China's low Covid death toll prompts questions
China's low Covid death toll prompts questions / Photo: LIU JIN - AFP

China's low Covid death toll prompts questions

Two years into the pandemic, China's resurgent Covid-19 outbreak has revived questions about how the country counts deaths from the virus, with persistently low fatalities despite rising cases.

Text size:

Shanghai, China's largest city, has logged 190 deaths among more than 520,000 infections in nearly two months -- a fraction of the rate in outbreaks fuelled by the Omicron variant in other parts of the world.

The figures have been trumpeted by the ruling Communist Party as proof its strict zero-Covid pandemic approach works, but experts say the data alone does not tell the whole story.

- How does China's toll compare? -

Shanghai, the hardest-hit city in China's current coronavirus wave, has logged a case fatality rate (CFR) of 0.036 percent -- 36 deaths per 100,000 people infected since March 1.

China had wrestled domestic infections down to a trickle before the latest outbreak but, even so, the death toll is low compared with other countries lauded as Covid-19 success stories.

"If Shanghai had a similar CFR to New Zealand -- 0.07 percent in its current Omicron outbreak -- then it would have seen more than 300 deaths," Michael Baker, professor of public health at the University of Otago in New Zealand, told AFP.

China has recorded fewer than 5,000 deaths from Covid-19, despite logging nearly 200,000 symptomatic cases and more than 470,000 asymptomatic cases since the start of the pandemic.

Countries have used different methodologies to identify and count coronavirus deaths, however, making comparisons difficult.

India, with a comparable population to China's 1.4 billion, officially reported 520,000 Covid deaths after a devastating outbreak swept the country last year -- though a forthcoming World Health Organization study reportedly puts the actual toll at four million.

Paul Tambyah, president of the Asia Pacific Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infection, said some countries with high tolls such as Britain have regularly recorded anyone who dies within 28 days of a positive coronavirus test as a Covid death.

A WHO spokesperson said the organisation had held "extensive consultations with all countries" on death data, without commenting specifically on China.

- What do the numbers show? -

One explanation for the low toll is that China may be "very strict about classification of Covid-related deaths", Tambyah told AFP.

China's health commission told AFP its toll counts virus-infected people who die without first recovering from Covid.

That leaves open the possibility of patients with underlying conditions aggravated by the virus being excluded from the toll if they die of those conditions after meeting the official criteria for Covid recovery.

Another factor could be China's policy of aggressive mass testing, which may uncover more infections than countries such as India that have faced test shortages.

"The chances of you finding positive but asymptomatic and mild cases are very high," statistically pushing down the overall death rate, Leong Hoe Nam, an infectious disease specialist at Singapore's Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital, told AFP.

But even so, "there is always a lag between cases being identified and reported, and people getting sick and dying from this infection," added Baker.

The fatalities from the Wuhan outbreak at the beginning of the pandemic were later revised upwards by 50 percent by Chinese authorities.

Prabhat Jha, an epidemiology professor at the University of Toronto, said the overall toll from the current outbreak could be "a very large number" due to the large number of under-vaccinated elderly, and vaccines with lower efficacy rates.

- What's the official explanation? -

Top Chinese epidemiologist Wu Zunyou has attributed the country's low death rate to its strategy of early detection through mass testing.

"Keeping the scale of the outbreak to a minimum will completely avoid deaths caused by a squeeze on medical resources," Wu said.

Beijing has also seized on the low death toll as an endorsement of its strict Covid policies, claiming to have placed human life above freedoms, unlike Western democracies that have suffered heavier tolls.

Mai He, a pathology expert at Washington University, said the data was "very much politically affected".

- What about excess deaths? -

"Our best measure of undercounting Covid comes from comparing reported Covid deaths to excess mortality," Ariel Karlinsky, from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a technical adviser to the WHO, told AFP.

That would mean comparing deaths attributed to all causes during the pandemic with numbers from non-pandemic years.

Karlinsky said China has been "skittish" about this number, with more detailed data shared only with "select researchers".

Jha said previous estimates from China published in the international BMJ medical journal showed excess short-term deaths in Wuhan but not in the rest of China, which tallies with the official narrative of deaths.

U.Siddiqui--DT