Britain has LOWER Covid excess death rate than Spain, Germany and Italy

Britain has LOWER Covid excess death rate than Spain, Germany and Italy – despite doom-mongers insisting UK fared worst in Europe

UK ranks roughly in the middle of an EU table of excess death rates, coming 15th out of the 27 member statesThere were widely-publicised claims by zealous scientists and MPs that UK had worst toll in Europe last yearBut latest estimates by WHO look at all excess deaths, not just those confirmed by testing – a more fair scale

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Britain’s pandemic death rate is lower than most major European nations, according to estimates by the World Health Organization (WHO).

The UK ranks roughly in the middle of an EU table of excess death rates, coming 15th out of the bloc’s 27 member states, behind Spain, Germany and Italy

There were widely-publicised claims by zealous scientists and MPs — including Sir Keir Starmer — last year that Britain had endured one of the biggest death tolls on the continent. The claim was used by critics as justification for tougher restrictions. 

But countries were previously judged by Covid death rates alone, which skewed Britain’s tally because it was testing more than anywhere else.

Excess deaths include fatalities from all causes and it is considered the most consistent way to measure pandemic death tolls because it accounts for a lack of swabbing and undiagnosed cases.

Out of the 194 countries that the WHO looked at, the UK ranked 54th with a death rate of 109 per 100,000 people, slightly above the global average of 90.

Spain (111), Germany (116), and Italy (133) all ranked higher, despite remaining in lockdowns for much longer than the UK. The US had the 40th highest excess death rate (140 per 100,000).

In the most comprehensive look into the pandemic’s fatality count yet, the WHO estimated that almost 15million deaths were logged from the start of 2020 to the end of 2021. Peru has logged the most excess deaths in relation to its population, with an extra 437 fatalities for every 100,000 people than expected. The US had the 40th highest excess death rate (140 per 100,000), while the UK came 56th (109 per 100,000)

HOW DOES UK’S DEATH RATE COMPARE TO EU?

Excess deaths associated with the Covid pandemic from all-causes per 100,000

Bulgaria 415Lithuania 319Romania 279Slovakia 223Croatia 210Poland 208Latvia 204Hungary 189Czechia 173Slovenia 134Italy 133Estonia 127Germany 116Spain 111UK 109Portugal 100Greece 93Netherlands 85Belgium 77Austria 66France 63Sweden 56Malta 54Cyprus 42Denmark 32Ireland 29Finland 26Luxembourg 6

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In the most comprehensive look into the pandemic’s fatality count yet, the WHO estimated that almost 15million deaths were logged from the start of 2020 to the end of 2021.

The UN agency’s tally, which misses off the entirety of 2022, includes people who directly died from Covid or the virus’s impact on overwhelmed health systems.

For comparison, the current official virus death toll is 6.2million, with a third of those logged in the US, Brazil and India.

The WHO said 20 countries, including the UK and the US, accounted for more than 80 per cent of the estimated ‘excess deaths’ over the first two years of the pandemic.

Peru has logged the most excess deaths in relation to its population, with an extra 437 fatalities for every 100,000 people than expected. 

WHO director general Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that the ‘sobering’ figures should prompt nations to invest in more resilient health systems to quell future crises

WHO scientists estimated the global Covid death toll between January 2020 and January 2022 by calculating the difference between the number of deaths that have occurred and the number of deaths that were expected, based on data from previous years. 

They estimated there were 14.9million deaths that could be attributed to Covid, but the figure could be as high as 16.6 million.

And more than 80 per cent of Covid deaths were logged in just 20 countries, including the UK and US, as well as Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Germany and India.

The vast majority of the fatalities (84 per cent) occurred in South-East Asia (5.9million), Europe (3.3million) and the Americas (3.23million), followed by Africa (1.3million), Eastern-Mediterranean (1.1million) and the Western Pacific (0.1million). 

Peru had the highest excess death rate per 100,000 people (437), followed by Bulgaria (415), Bolivia (375), North Macedonia (369) and Russia (367).

The US had came 40th out of the 194 countries the WHO looked at, with 140 excess deaths per 100,000 people, while the UK came 56th (109 per 100,000). 

Its analysis also confirms that more men were struck down by Covid than women, with 57 per cent of virus deaths among men.

The figures include those who died from Covid, as well as those who died due to the pandemic’s impact on health systems, such as deaths among people with cancer who were unable to seek treatment because hospitals were full of virus patients.

The WHO there could be even more Covid deaths because some fatalities were averted during the pandemic, such as fewer deaths in road accidents or in work during lockdowns. 

Experts have long warned the true virus death toll will be many times higher than the reported figures due to limited testing and difficulties attributing the cause of death to the virus, as many fatalities will involve other underlying conditions.

And it is difficult to compare figures between countries because some nations only count deaths that occurred in hospitals.

Only 6.2million official Covid deaths have been confirmed worldwide, according to Oxford University-based platform Our World in Data.

This data shows the US has the highest death toll, while the UK has the seventh-highest.

Dr Albert Ko, an infectious diseases expert at the Yale School of Public Health, said the WHO analysis ‘may seem like just a bean-counting exercise’.

‘But having these WHO numbers is so critical to understanding how we should combat future pandemics and continue to respond to this one,’ he said.

The WHO graphs show the difference between reported deaths and excess mortality per region. The shaded grey areas show the number of deaths reported to the WHO by countries, while the red lines indicated the estimated excess death rate (the additional people who have died more than the expected number of deaths). Where the red line dips below zero, it indicates that less people died than expected due to pandemic-related changes in behaviour and society. The red numbers in the top right corner of each graph show the total excess mortality from January 1 2020 to December 31 2021

The WHO charts show the difference in reported deaths (shaded grey areas) and excess morality (red lines) when countries are split into World Bank income groups. The red numbers in the top right corner of each graph show the total excess mortality from January 1 2020 to December 31 2021

The WHO findings come after US scientists estimated there were more than 18million Covid deaths from January 2020 to December 2021.

Separate researchers by a team of Canadian researchers estimated there were more than 3million uncounted Covid deaths in India alone.

WHERE HAVE THE MOST CONFIRMED COVID DEATHS BEEN LOGGED? 

HIGHEST DEATH TOLL

US: 996,704

Brazil: 663,994

India: 523,975

Russia: 368,840

Mexico: 324,334

Peru: 212,891

UK: 175,717

Italy: 164,041

Indonesia: 156,321

France: 146,445

HIGHEST DEATH TOLL RELATIVE TO POPULATION (per million people)

Peru: 6,381.74

Bulgaria: 5,358.1

Bosnia and Herzegovina: 4,831.68

Hungary: 4,802.29

North Macedonia: 4,457.28

Montenegro: 4,324.49

Georgia: 4,224.11

Croatia: 3,884.7

Czechia: 3,747.85

Slovakia: 3,659.76

Source: Our World in Data 

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Some countries, including India, have disputed WHO’s methodology for calculating Covid deaths, resisting the idea that there were many more deaths than officially counted. 

Earlier this week, the Indian Government revealed the country logged 474,806 more deaths in 2020 compared to the previous year, but did not say how many were due to the pandemic. 

India did not release any death estimates for 2021, when the highly infectious delta variant swept through the country, killing many thousands.

Dr Ko said the WHO’s figures may explain some ongoing mysteries about the pandemic, including why Africa appears to have been one of the countries least affected by the virus, despite its low vaccination rates. 

‘Were the mortality rates so low because we couldn’t count the deaths or was there some other factor to explain that?’ he said.

Dr Ko noted that high death rates in the UK and US proved resources alone were insufficient to contain a global outbreak.

Dr Bharat Pankhania, a public health expert at the University of Exeter, said it may be impossible to calculate the true Covid death toll, especially for poor countries

He said: ‘When you have a massive outbreak where people are dying in the streets because of a lack of oxygen, bodies were abandoned or people had to be cremated quickly because of cultural beliefs, we end up never knowing just how many people died.’

Dr Pankhania noted the currently estimated Covid death toll is still a fraction of the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic – when experts estimate up to 100million people died.

But he said it is ‘shameful’ that so many people died due to the coronavirus pandemic, despite significant advancements in modern medicine.

Dr Pankhania warned the cost of Covid could be far more damaging in the long term, given the increasing burden of long Covid.

He said: ‘With the Spanish flu, there was the flu and then there were some (lung) illnesses people suffered, but that was it. ‘here was not an enduring immunological condition that we’re seeing right now with Covid.

‘We do not know the extent to which people with long Covid will have their lives cut short and if they will have repeated infections that will cause them even more problems.’

Dr Jeremy Farrar, director of scientific charity the Wellcome Trust, said: ‘There can be no hiding from the fact this devastating death toll was not inevitable; or that there have been too many times in the past two years when world leaders have failed to act at the level needed to save lives.’

He noted that a third of the world’s population is still unvaccinated and ‘more must be done’ to protect people from Covid and future pandemics.

‘Climate change, shifting patterns of animal and human interaction, urbanisation and increasing travel and trade are creating more opportunities for new and dangerous infectious disease risks to emerge, amplify and then spread,’ Dr Farrar said.

He called on world leaders to ‘learn from this crisis and act immediately to end this pandemic, and make sure they do everything they can to prevent this ever happening again’. 

Dr Farrar said global surveillance networks must be built and sustained to detect outbreaks before they escalate, while national and global health professionals must be supported to respond quickly at the start of an outbreak.

And vaccine, testing and treatment capacity must be equally distributed worldwide, he added. 

EXCESS DEATHS IN 2020 AND 2021 DUE TO THE PANDEMIC PER 100,000 IN EACH COUNTRY Country Excess deaths associated with the Covid pandemic from all-causes per 100,000 Afghanistan 57 Albania 221 Algeria 79 Andorra 242 Angola 34 Antigua and Barbuda -15 Argentina 99 Armenia 332 Australia -28 Austria 66 Azerbaijan 280 Bahamas 127 Bahrain 19 Bangladesh 43 Barbados -62 Belarus 259 Belgium 77 Belize 87 Benin 48 Bhutan -26 Bolivia (Plurinational State of) 375 Bosnia and Herzegovina 240 Botswana 156 Brazil 160 Brunei Darussalam -13 Bulgaria 415 Burkina Faso 52 Burundi 39 Cabo Verde 83 Cambodia 37 Cameroon 66 Canada 29 Central African Republic 64 Chad 58 Chile 101 China -2 Colombia 161 Comoros 41 Congo 41 Cook Islands -102 Costa Rica 94 Côte d’Ivoire 48 Croatia 210 Cuba 80 Cyprus 42 Czechia 173 Democratic People’s Republic of Korea -14 Democratic Republic of the Congo 65 Denmark 32 Djibouti 89 Dominica 10 Dominican Republic 54 Ecuador 228 Egypt 122 El Salvador 131 Equatorial Guinea 60 Eritrea 34 Estonia 127 Eswatini 164 Ethiopia 44 Fiji -6 Finland 26 France 63 Gabon 36 Gambia 59 Georgia 307 Germany 116 Ghana 33 Greece 93 Grenada -118 Guatemala 137 Guinea 47 Guinea-Bissau 71 Guyana 178 Haiti 42 Honduras 113 Hungary 189 Iceland -2 India 171 Indonesia 187 Iran (Islamic Republic of) 137 Iraq 82 Ireland 29 Israel 35 Italy 133 Jamaica 61 Japan -8 Jordan 58 Kazakhstan 202 Kenya 11 Kiribati -19 Kuwait 49 Kyrgyzstan 94 Lao People’s Democratic Republic 12 Latvia 204 Lebanon 136 Lesotho 93 Liberia 39 Libya 57 Lithuania 319 Luxembourg 6 Madagascar 46 Malawi 44 Malaysia 12 Maldives 23 Mali 66 Malta 54 Marshall Islands -67 Mauritania 74 Mauritius 37 Mexico 242 Micronesia (Federated States of) -48 Monaco 81 Mongolia 0 Montenegro 311 Morocco 47 Mozambique 67 Myanmar 40 Namibia 151 Nauru -7 Nepal 55 Netherlands 85 New Zealand -28 Nicaragua 91 Niger 70 Nigeria 45 Niue -154 North Macedonia 369 Norway -1 Oman 111 Pakistan 52 Palau -111 Panama 88 Papua New Guinea 4 Paraguay 138 Peru 437 Philippines 84 Poland 208 Portugal 100 Qatar 26 Republic of Korea 6 Republic of Moldova 225 Romania 279 Russian Federation 367 Rwanda 21 Saint Kitts and Nevis -194 Saint Lucia 101 Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 222 Samoa -22 San Marino 251 Sao Tome and Principe 43 Saudi Arabia 25 Senegal 49 Serbia 319 Seychelles 4 Sierra Leone 49 Singapore 13 Slovakia 223 Slovenia 134 Solomon Islands -4 Somalia 110 South Africa 200 South Sudan 41 Spain 111 Sri Lanka -21 Sudan 43 Suriname 62 Sweden 56 Switzerland 47 Syrian Arab Republic 20 Tajikistan 67 Thailand 11 The United Kingdom 109 Timor-Leste 26 Togo -42 Tonga -17 Trinidad and Tobago 72 Tunisia 100 Turkey 156 Turkmenistan 5 Tuvalu -46 Uganda 22 Ukraine 227 United Arab Emirates 12 United Republic of Tanzania 33 United States of America 140 Uruguay 45 Uzbekistan 67 Vanuatu -12 Venezuela (Bolivarian Republic of) 39 Viet Nam -3 Yemen 56 Zambia 63 Zimbabwe 62

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