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Don't let dropping death rates fool you. COVID is still dangerous
While cases are rising, deaths from COVID-19 are dropping, likely because we are learning to treat it sooner.
Author of the article:
Laura Hensley
Publishing date:
Oct 26, 2020 • Last Updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read
A nurse wipes away tears as she stands outside NYU Langone Medical Center on 1st Avenue in Manhattan as New York police came to cheer and thank healthcare workers in New York City, New York, U.S., April 16, 2020. PHOTO BY REUTERS/MIKE SEGAR
While COVID-19 cases are rising in many parts of the world, including the United States and Canada, two new studies found a significant drop in death rates among hospitalized patients.
Researchers in both the U.S. and U.K. found that fewer people among various groups, including older patients and those with underlying health conditions, are dying from the disease, indicating that doctors are now better able to treat patients and also recognize early COVID-19 symptoms.
“We find that the death rate has gone down substantially,”Dr. Leora Horwitz, a professor of population health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and one of the author’s of the U.S. study,told NPR.
Horwitz and her team analyzed data of nearly 5,000 patients hospitalized for COVID-19 at a single health system in New York City — an area heavily hit by the disease — from March to June. They found that mortality rates dropped 18 per cent in that period.
Doctors have learned more about watching for the “cytokine storms” and blood clots that killed many patients earlier on, and public health interventions — including physical distancing and mask wearing — may also be factors. Researchers wrote that both of these interventions “lower viral load exposure,” meaning they help reduce the spread.
The decline in mortality is good, but Horwitz told NPR that COVID-19’s death rate “is still higher than many infectious diseases, including the flu.” What’s more, aslong-haulers show, even if you survive the disease, you can still have complications or lingering effects.
“It still has the potential to be very harmful in terms of long-term consequences for many people,” Horwitz said.
The U.K. study yielded similar results.
Mateen and his team’s work will be published soon in the medical journalCritical Care Medicine, but apreprint is already online.
Alison Thompson, an associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy whose research focuses on public health policies, says these findings are not a “get-out-of-jail-free card.” As case counts rise in hotspots across Canada — and the world — there’s a lot of concerns around the disease burden of the novel coronavirus.
“Just because those death rates are going down doesn’t mean that we aren’t going to see a lot of illness still,” Thompson explains. “And as we head into influenza season… we don’t really know what that’s going to look like yet because we haven’t experienced a whole flu season where people could be getting both viruses at the same time. There’s still quite a lot to be concerned about.”
In Canada, COVID-19 cases are spiking across the country in hotspots including in Ontario, Quebec and Alberta.
While death rates droppedsince the pandemic began, Canada’s top doctor,Dr. Theresa Tam, warned hospitalizations and deathscould increase with rising case counts.
As of Saturday, the number of active COVID-19 cases rose 16 per cent week over week, according to figures from the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).
The sharp uptick left an average of 1,010 patients being treated in hospital each day over the past week, about 20 per cent of whom were in intensive care, Tam said. Average daily deaths associated with the virus reached 23 over the past seven days, up from six deaths six weeks ago.
Tam said that because case counts are rising, the most critical consequences have yet to emerge.
“As hospitalizations and deaths tend to lag behind increased disease activity by one to several weeks, the concern is that we have yet to see the extent of severe impacts associated with the ongoing increase in COVID-19 disease activity,” Tam said in a written statement.
— With files from the Canadian Press
While cases are rising, deaths from COVID-19 are dropping, likely because we are learning to treat it sooner.
Author of the article:
Laura Hensley
Publishing date:
Oct 26, 2020 • Last Updated 5 hours ago • 3 minute read
A nurse wipes away tears as she stands outside NYU Langone Medical Center on 1st Avenue in Manhattan as New York police came to cheer and thank healthcare workers in New York City, New York, U.S., April 16, 2020. PHOTO BY REUTERS/MIKE SEGAR
While COVID-19 cases are rising in many parts of the world, including the United States and Canada, two new studies found a significant drop in death rates among hospitalized patients.
Researchers in both the U.S. and U.K. found that fewer people among various groups, including older patients and those with underlying health conditions, are dying from the disease, indicating that doctors are now better able to treat patients and also recognize early COVID-19 symptoms.
“We find that the death rate has gone down substantially,”Dr. Leora Horwitz, a professor of population health at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and one of the author’s of the U.S. study,told NPR.
Horwitz and her team analyzed data of nearly 5,000 patients hospitalized for COVID-19 at a single health system in New York City — an area heavily hit by the disease — from March to June. They found that mortality rates dropped 18 per cent in that period.
In the study, which will be published in theJournal of Hospital Medicinethis week, researchers concluded that the reason behind the fact that fewer people are dying from the virus may be due to a combination of medical advancements and doctors understanding better how to prevent and treat serious symptoms of COVID-19.Researchers in both the U.S. and U.K. found that fewer people among various groups, including older patients and those with underlying health conditions, are dying
Doctors have learned more about watching for the “cytokine storms” and blood clots that killed many patients earlier on, and public health interventions — including physical distancing and mask wearing — may also be factors. Researchers wrote that both of these interventions “lower viral load exposure,” meaning they help reduce the spread.
The decline in mortality is good, but Horwitz told NPR that COVID-19’s death rate “is still higher than many infectious diseases, including the flu.” What’s more, aslong-haulers show, even if you survive the disease, you can still have complications or lingering effects.
“It still has the potential to be very harmful in terms of long-term consequences for many people,” Horwitz said.
The U.K. study yielded similar results.
Researchers looked at 21,000 hospitalized cases of COVID-19 in England and found that over time, the death rate decreased around 20 points since the height of the pandemic. One of the study’s authors,Bilal Mateen, a data science fellow at the Alan Turing Institute in the United Kingdom, told NPR the drops are also across age groups, racial groups, and among people with underlying conditions.COVID-19’s death rate is still higher than many infectious diseases, including the flu
Mateen and his team’s work will be published soon in the medical journalCritical Care Medicine, but apreprint is already online.
Alison Thompson, an associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy whose research focuses on public health policies, says these findings are not a “get-out-of-jail-free card.” As case counts rise in hotspots across Canada — and the world — there’s a lot of concerns around the disease burden of the novel coronavirus.
“Just because those death rates are going down doesn’t mean that we aren’t going to see a lot of illness still,” Thompson explains. “And as we head into influenza season… we don’t really know what that’s going to look like yet because we haven’t experienced a whole flu season where people could be getting both viruses at the same time. There’s still quite a lot to be concerned about.”
In Canada, COVID-19 cases are spiking across the country in hotspots including in Ontario, Quebec and Alberta.
While death rates droppedsince the pandemic began, Canada’s top doctor,Dr. Theresa Tam, warned hospitalizations and deathscould increase with rising case counts.
As of Saturday, the number of active COVID-19 cases rose 16 per cent week over week, according to figures from the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC).
The sharp uptick left an average of 1,010 patients being treated in hospital each day over the past week, about 20 per cent of whom were in intensive care, Tam said. Average daily deaths associated with the virus reached 23 over the past seven days, up from six deaths six weeks ago.
Tam said that because case counts are rising, the most critical consequences have yet to emerge.
“As hospitalizations and deaths tend to lag behind increased disease activity by one to several weeks, the concern is that we have yet to see the extent of severe impacts associated with the ongoing increase in COVID-19 disease activity,” Tam said in a written statement.
— With files from the Canadian Press
Don't let dropping death rates fool you. COVID is still dangerous
Study shows that dropping death rates are a result of growing knowledge of the potentially deadly virus.
ottawacitizen.com