Posted on 03/03/2020 1:30:37 PM PST by Heartlander
The ongoing COVID-19 outbreak is still in its early stages, having emerged in China at some point in late 2019 and spread to dozens of countries in early 2020. Theres plenty we dont know about this virus, called SARS-CoV-2, but a clearer picture is starting to emerge in regards to how it spreads and whos most at risk of both contracting and dying from this disease.
Before we get into the latest research, however, its important to understand how a SARS-CoV-2 infection actually leads to death.
This new coronavirus is similar to SARS, which stands for severe acute respiratory syndrome, which is why the virus itself is informally referred to as SARS-2. The disease, which is associated with fever and cough, has also been referred to as NCIP, which stands for novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV)-infected pneumonia. As both of these titles suggest, the disease affects the lungs and our ability to breathe. In severe cases, the arising pneumonia can trigger a dangerous condition known as acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), which causes the lungs to fill with fluid and become rigid. This makes breathing difficult, if not impossible, requiring some patients to be hooked up to mechanical ventilators. Consequently, death from COVID-19 is typically due to massive damage to the lungs and progressive respiratory failure, according to recent research published in the Lancet.
So thats how COVID-19 kills, but how deadly is it overall?
A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) on February 28, 2020 presented an overall fatality rate of 1.4 percent. These figures, compiled by the China Medical Treatment Group for COVID-19 and many other Chinese institutions, were based on 1,099 patients who were admitted to 552 hospitals across China up until January 29, 2020. The median age of these patients was 47 years, of which most58.1 percentwere male. Of the 5 percent of patients who were admitted to intensive care units, 2.3 percent had to undergo invasive mechanical ventilation, which, more often than not, failed to save their life.
In a related article published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, along with his co-authors, wrote that the COVID-19 outbreak poses critical challenges for the public health, research, and medical communities, but that the actual death rate from the disease is likely lower than the rate reported by the Chinese researchers. The reason, they say, is that many cases are mild and thus are not being reported.
If one assumes that the number of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic cases is several times as high as the number of reported cases, the case fatality rate may be considerably less than 1%, wrote Fauci and his colleagues in the letter.
Assuming this is correct, that means the health consequences of COVID-19 are more akin to severe seasonal influenza, which is associated with a 0.1 percent death rate, or the pandemic influenza outbreaks of 1957 and 1968, according to Fauci et al. These figures are mercifully much lower than the fatality rates of two other notorious coronaviruses, namely SARS (death rate between 9 and 10 percent) and MERS (death rate of 36 percent), according to research published in Nature Reviews Microbiology in 2016.
These are all preliminary estimates, and much still needs to be learned about SARS-CoV-2 and how it works. Recent figures put out by Chinas Center for Disease Control in Beijing presented a fatality rate for COVID-19 at 2.3 percent. This is probably way too high, for the reasons previously mentioned, but its alarming nonetheless. This rate was based on 44,672 cases reported as of February 11, 2020.
Now, to claim that people have X-percent chance of dying from a disease is a rather blunt and not entirely informative statement, as this rate applies to the total infected population. Statistics from China CDC are providing a more nuanced look at the disease and whos most at risk.
Men appear to be more at risk of both contracting and dying from COVID-19; China CDC stats show that 2.8 percent of males have died from the disease, compared to 1.7 percent of females. Its not immediately clear why this should be the case, but many sociological and cultural factors could explain why men might be more prone to contracting the disease (e.g. perhaps more men in China travel for work).
That said, the most significant risk factor for dying from COVID-19 is age. According to China CDC, people above the age of 80 have a 14.8 percent chance of dying from the disease; people in their 70s, 8 percent; people in their 60s, 3.6 percent; and people in their 50s, 1.3 percent. Once below this age range, the risk of dying drops to between 0.2 and 0.4 percent. Again, these figures could be inflated due to the fact that a plethora of mild cases likely arent reported.
In addition to age, pre-existing medical conditions are also a major contributor to death from the disease. COVID-19 patients who also had cardiovascular disease had a 10.5 percent chance of death; diabetes, 7.3 percent; chronic respiratory disease, 6.3 percent; hypertension, 6 percent; and any form of cancer, 5.6 percent, according to China CDC stats. Clearly, advanced age plus any of these conditions are a dangerous combination.
Other research published in the NEJM last week describes the early transmission dynamics of the disease. This study, co-authored by Qun Li from the China CDC, looked at the first 425 cases reported in Wuhan, China, the epicenter of the epidemic. This research included cases from December to January 22, 2020. The figures provided in this paper are important, but again, they need to be treated with caution given that this data was collected during the earliest stages of the outbreak.
At a median age of 59 years, the patients were a bit older than those reported elsewhere. Of these patients, 56 percent were male. There were no reports of children under the age of 15 with the disease. The reason is that children might be less likely to become infected or, if infected, may show milder symptoms, and either of these situations would account for underrepresentation in the confirmed case count, according to the authors. If this is indeed the case, that means scientists dont possess a full picture of the current outbreak, at least according to this limited sample.
The incubation period of the disease is around five days but can be as long as 12 days in some cases, according to the Li study. Importantly, this evidence supports the 14-day quarantine period for exposed individuals.
Patients who had to be admitted to hospital tended to be between 9 and 12 days into their illness. This delayed onset of serious symptoms could provide important clues about the virus and how it works, as well as provide a unique window of opportunity for intervention, Fauci and his colleagues wrote in their related article.
Fauci and his colleagues said that we should be prepared for COVID-19 to gain a foothold throughout the world, including in the United States. Regrettably, they say we may have no choice but to shift out of containment mode and adopt mitigation strategies instead. These strategies could involve social distancing, as worded by Fauci et al, which would involve the isolation of sick people (e.g. staying home), closing schools, canceling events like seminars and conferences, and working from home, among other measures.
Depending on where you or your loved ones stand on the demographic spectrum, the figures presented in research papers so far are either alarming or a somewhat reassuring. At the same time, we probably shouldnt compare COVID-19 to other outbreaks, such as influenza. This disease and the ensuing outbreak is its own unique beast. Its clear from the data that were now firmly entrenched in uncharted territory.
Not very.
Some folks like to freak out about stuff.
the freakin paranoia is worse than the virus. My sister is 4 months pregnant, its ALL she talks about, 24/7 watching TV coverage of this mass hysteria, I dont remember this in 2009 when people were dropping dead from the swine flu, no mass panic and it killed more people in the US(over 14,000) but Obama was President and 99.9 percent of the commie media voted for him to had to protect him
What are you trying to do do, spread calm and reasonableness?
The bad news today: no buttwipe at Costco
The good news today: gas $1.95/gal at Costco
Wow they really messed this up. You can’t look at the cases to see the death rate as 80% of them are active and have not been marked as recovered. Death rate doesn’t look too good when you look at recovered vs dead.
Precisely
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fn1Yaorf2Tw
Fun history lesson from 2009 with a couple of relevant faces from today.
Is it time to cancel travel bans from China and shut down quarantine centers?
My son paid $2.79 for gas last night in AZ!!
What's happening in civilized countries? Japan? South Korea? Australia? Singapore? Europe? The US? Is it older folks who are dying? Is it people with compromised immune systems (cancer,AIDS,etc)?
In what ways,if any,does this virus affect a particular region differently than your basic run-of-the-mill flu that can be found just about everywhere during the winter?
“I like the way you think. I’ll be keeping an eye on you” Sam Kennison.
“...the number of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic cases
is several times as high as the number of reported cases...”
-
People that were exposed and only had a mild cough or a mild fever are not counted,
which greatly effects any attempted calculation of a death rate.
Numbers from one country to the next are not comparable.
Every political body on the planet has different sanitation systems,
different customs, different health systems, different reporting systems,
and they all “count things” in a different way.
Exactly.
Where are you?
In a related article published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Anthony Fauci, director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, along with his co-authors, wrote that the COVID-19 outbreak poses critical challenges for the public health, research, and medical communities, but that the actual death rate from the disease is likely lower than the rate reported by the Chinese researchers. The reason, they say, is that many cases are mild and thus are not being reported.
If one assumes that the number of asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic cases is several times as high as the number of reported cases, the case fatality rate may be considerably less than 1%, wrote Fauci and his colleagues in the letter.
Assuming this is correct, that means the health consequences of COVID-19 are more akin to severe seasonal influenza, which is associated with a 0.1 percent death rate, or the pandemic influenza outbreaks of 1957 and 1968, according to Fauci et al. These figures are mercifully much lower than the fatality rates of two other notorious coronaviruses, namely SARS (death rate between 9 and 10 percent) and MERS (death rate of 36 percent), according to research published in Nature Reviews Microbiology in 2016.
What is the difference between the symptoms of the ChiCom virus in mild patients, and the colds that we normally have at this time of the year?
Would we be able differentiate between a mild case of the ChiCom viruses and the normal early allergy season in the West Coast?
Indiana USA
You need to check out the John Hopkins website, they have the number of recovered as well as the number of cases. The last I looked there were about 47,000 recovered cases of the 92,000 or so cases.
3.24/gal in N. California.
I work among many many asians and im not scared,, yet.
I tell them my pure american anti-communist blood makes me immune ..
they no likey me sometimes ..
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