Nearly 2 million excess deaths followed China's sudden end of COVID
curbs - study
Send a link to a friend
[August 25, 2023]
By Bernard Orr
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's abrupt move to dismantle its strict COVID-19
regime, which unleashed the virus onto its 1.4 billion residents, could
have led to nearly 2 million excess deaths in the following two months,
a new U.S. study shows.
The study by the federally funded Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in
Seattle was taken from a sample of mortality data published by some
universities in China and internet searches.
It found an estimated 1.87 million excess deaths from all causes
occurred among people over 30 years of age between December 2022 and
January 2023, and were observed in all provinces in mainland China
except Tibet.
China's decision last December to end the three-year zero-COVID policy,
which included mass-testing and stringent and persistent quarantine
lockdowns, led to a massive surge in hospitalizations and deaths that
health experts say were largely unreported by the government.
The study, published on Thursday in JAMA Network Open, said the number
of excess deaths far exceeded official Chinese government estimates in
January that 60,000 people with COVID-19 had died in hospital since the
zero-COVID policy was abandoned a month earlier.
In the study, researchers performed statistical analysis using
information from published obituaries and data from searches on Baidu, a
popular Chinese internet search engine.
"Our study of excess deaths related to the lifting of the zero-COVID
policy in China sets an empirically derived benchmark estimate. These
findings are important for understanding how the sudden propagation of
COVID-19 across a population may impact population mortality,"
researchers wrote.
China's National Health Commission did not immediately respond to a
request for comment on the report.
[to top of second column]
|
An epidemic-prevention worker in a
protective suit stands guard at the gate of a residential compound
as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreaks continue in Beijing,
China November 28, 2022. REUTERS/Thomas Peter/file photo
Global health experts repeatedly
called on China to reveal more data as reports of rising
hospitalizations and deaths started to surface, and especially as
the threat of new variants became a concern.
China stopped reporting official daily death
results at the end of 2022. The World Health Organization says there
have been 121,628 COVID deaths in China, out of a total global toll
of almost 7 million.
In a rare move, one Chinese province briefly published data on its
website in July showing cremations jumped 70% in the first quarter
of this year that was later taken down.
In February, China's top leaders declared a "decisive victory" over
COVID.
But the virus is still making its rounds in the country and on
Thursday, Beijing health officials said COVID is still the number
one infectious disease in the capital, according to Chinese state
media.
Officials cited a new Omicron variant, called EG.5 or "Eris"
nicknamed after the Greek Goddess of strife and discord, as the
current dominant strain across China.
"The National Bureau of Disease Control and Prevention said the
proportion of the new variant EG.5 increased from 0.6% in April to
71.6% in August, becoming the dominant strain in most provinces in
China," the Global Times reported.
(Reporting by Bernard Orr; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |