Using high-resolution satellite imagery, researchers at the London
School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) analysed burial
activity at all identifiable cemeteries in Yemen's Aden region and
calculated an estimated 2,100 "excess deaths" during the COVID-19
outbreak between April and September.
"This total is best interpreted as the net sum of deaths due to
COVID-19 infection and deaths indirectly attributable to the
pandemic," they said. The indirect deaths would be those caused by
disruptions to health services or by measures which may have caused
problems accessing food, they added.
Humanitarian and global health experts had expected the COVID-19
pandemic's impact on Yemen to be severe, not least because the
country's five-year conflict has disrupted already weak health
services and led to overcrowding, food insecurity and shrinking
humanitarian aid.
“The health system has been devastated, only half of the health
facilities are fully functioning - and those which remain open
usually lack qualified staff, essential medicines and medical
equipment, such as masks and gloves, oxygen and other essential
supplies," WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told a briefing in Geneva.
But as of 25 October 2020, Yemen, which reported its first confirmed
COVID-19 case on April 10, had recorded only 2,064 infections with
600 deaths from the disease.
No comment was immediately available from Yemen authorities on the
satellite estimates, but the internationally recognised government
has said previously that it reports figures daily for areas under
its control and nothing is hidden.
Jasarevic said the WHO and other global health experts "remain
concerned that the official epidemiological curve underestimates the
extent of COVID-19 in Yemen". He said this was due to a number of
factors, including low availability of testing and a lack of
official reporting.
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Francesco Checchi, who co-led the grave-counting study, noted that having an
accurate picture of COVID-19's impact "is vital for effective government and
humanitarian responses".
The researchers, whose study has not yet been peer-reviewed by other experts,
cited supporting material in their analysis.
In May, videos posted on social media and information from informants reported
high numbers of fresh graves, suggesting a spike in burial activity, they said,
adding: "The use of mechanical excavators in place of human gravediggers
suggested that demand exceeded routine capacity."
During the same period, the global medical charity Médecins sans Frontières
reported a peak in hospital admissions, with a very high case-fatality ratio,
and media said a shortage of personal protective equipment had forced several
hospitals to close or reject patients with COVID-19-like symptoms.
The research was funded by aid from the UK government and led by LSHTM and the
technology company Satellite Applications Catapult, which specialises in
geospatial analysis.
The researchers said they are now conducting a similar study in Mogadishu,
Somalia.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland, additional reporting by Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva,
editing by Giles Elgood)
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