Dr John Lee
How to understand – and report – figures for ‘Covid
deaths’
29 March 2020, 3:07pm
Every day, now, we are seeing figures for ‘Covid
deaths’. These numbers are often expressed on graphs
showing an exponential rise. But care must be taken when reading (and
reporting) these figures. Given the extraordinary response to the emergence of
this virus, it’s vital to have a clear-eyed view of its progress and what the
figures mean. The world of disease reporting has its own dynamics, ones that
are worth understanding. How accurate, or comparable, are these figures
comparing Covid-19 deaths in various countries?
We often see a ratio expressed: deaths, as a proportion of cases. The
figure is taken as a sign of how lethal Covid-19 is, but the ratios vary
wildly. In the US, 1.8 per cent (2,191 deaths in 124,686 confirmed cases),
Italy 10.8 per cent, Spain 8.2 per cent, Germany 0.8 per cent, France 6.1 per
cent, UK 6.0 per cent. A fifteen-fold difference in death rate for the same
disease seems odd amongst such similar countries: all developed, all with good
healthcare systems. All tackling the same disease.
You might think it would be easy to calculate death rates. Death is a
stark and easy-to-measure end point. In my working life (I’m a retired
pathology professor) I usually come across studies that express it comparably
and as a ratio: the number of deaths in a given period of time in an area,
divided by that area’s population. For example, 10 deaths per 1,000 population
per year. So just three numbers:
1. The population who have contracted the disease
2. The number dying of disease
3. The relevant time period
The trouble is that in the Covid-19 crisis each one of these numbers is
unclear.
1. Why the figures for Covid-19 infections are a vast underestimate
Say there was a disease that always caused a large purple spot to appear
in the middle of your forehead after two days – it would be easy to measure.
Any doctor could diagnose this, and national figures would be reliable. Now,
consider a disease that causes a variable raised temperature and cough over a
period of 5 to 14 days, as well as variable respiratory symptoms ranging from
hardly anything to severe respiratory compromise. There will be a range of
symptoms and signs in patients affected by this disease; widely overlapping
with similar effects caused by many other infectious diseases. Is it Covid-19,
seasonal flu, a cold – or something else? It will be impossible to tell by
clinical examination.
The only way to identify people who definitely have the disease will be
by using a lab test that is both specific for the disease (detects this disease
only, and not similar diseases) and sensitive for the disease (picks up a large
proportion of people with this disease, whether severe or mild). Developing
accurate, reliable, validated tests is difficult and takes time. At the moment,
we have to take it on trust that the tests in use are measuring what we think
they are.
So far in this pandemic, test kits have mainly been reserved for
hospitalised patients with significant symptoms. Few tests have been carried
out in patients with mild symptoms. This means that the number of positive
tests will be far lower than the number of people who have had the disease. Sir
Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser, has been trying to
stress this. He suggested that the real figure for the number of cases could be
10 to 20 times higher than the official figure. If he’s right, the headline
death rate due to this virus (all derived from lab tests) will be 10 to 20
times lower than it appears to be from the published figures. The more the
number of untested cases goes up, the lower the true death rate.
2. Why Covid-19 deaths are a substantial over-estimate
Next, what about the deaths? Many UK health spokespersons have been
careful to repeatedly say that the numbers quoted in the UK indicate death with
the virus, not death due to the virus – this matters.
When giving evidence in parliament a few days ago, Prof. Neil Ferguson of
Imperial College London said that he now expects fewer than 20,000 Covid-19
deaths in the UK but, importantly, two-thirds of these people would have died
anyway. In other words, he suggests that the crude figure for ‘Covid deaths’ is three times higher than the number who
have actually been killed by Covid-19. (Even the two-thirds figure is an
estimate – it would not surprise me if the real proportion is higher.)
This nuance is crucial ¬– not just in understanding the disease, but for
understanding the burden it might place on the health service in coming days. Unfortunately nuance tends to be lost in the numbers quoted
from the database being used to track Covid-19: the Johns Hopkins Coronavirus
Resource Center. It has compiled a huge database,
with Covid-19 data from all over the world, updated daily – and its figures are
used, world over, to track the virus. This data is not standardised and so
probably not comparable, yet this important caveat is seldom expressed by the
(many) graphs we see. It risks exaggerating the quality of data that we have.
The distinction between dying ‘with’ Covid-19 and dying ‘due to’
Covid-19 is not just splitting hairs. Consider some examples: an 87-year-old
woman with dementia in a nursing home; a 79-year-old man with metastatic
bladder cancer; a 29-year-old man with leukaemia treated with chemotherapy; a
46-year-old woman with motor neurone disease for 2 years. All develop chest
infections and die. All test positive for Covid-19. Yet all were vulnerable to
death by chest infection from any infective cause (including the flu). Covid-19
might have been the final straw, but it has not caused their deaths. Consider
two more cases: a 75-year-old man with mild heart failure and bronchitis; a
35-year-old woman who was previously fit and well with no known medical
conditions. Both contract a chest infection and die, and both test positive for
Covid-19. In the first case it is not entirely clear what weight to place on
the pre-existing conditions versus the viral infection – to make this judgement
would require an expert clinician to examine the case notes. The final case
would reasonably be attributed to death caused by Covid-19, assuming it was
true that there were no underlying conditions.
It should be noted that there is no international standard method for
attributing or recording causes of death. Also, normally, most respiratory
deaths never have a specific infective cause recorded, whereas at the moment
one can expect all positive Covid-19 results associated with a death to be
recorded. Again, this is not splitting hairs. Imagine a population where more
and more of us have already had Covid-19, and where every ill and dying patient
is tested for the virus. The deaths apparently due to Covid-19, the Covid trajectory, will approach the overall death rate. It
would appear that all deaths were caused by Covid-19 – would this be true? No.
The severity of the epidemic would be indicated by how many extra deaths (above
normal) there were overall.
3. Covid-19 and a time period
Finally, what about the time period? In a fast-moving scenario such as
the Covid-19 crisis, the daily figures present just a snapshot. If people take
quite a long time to die of a disease, it will take a while to judge the real
death rate and initial figures will be an underestimate. But if people die
quite quickly of the disease, the figures will be nearer the true rate. It is
probable that there is a slight lag – those dying today might have been
seriously ill for some days. But as time goes by this will become less
important as a steady state is reached.
Let me finish with a couple of examples. Colleagues in Germany feel sure
that their numbers are nearer the truth than most, because they had plenty of
testing capacity ready when the pandemic struck. Currently the death rate is
0.8 per cent in Germany. If we assume that about one third of the recorded
deaths are due to Covid-19 and that they have managed to test a third of all
cases in the country who actually have the disease (a generous assumption), then
the death rate for Covid-19 would be 0.08 per cent. That might go up slightly,
as a result of death lag. If we assume at present that this effect might be 25
per cent (which seems generous), that would give an overall, and probably upper
limit, of death rate of 0.1 per cent, which is similar to seasonal flu.
Let’s look at the UK numbers. As of 9 a.m. on Saturday there were 1,019
deaths and 17,089 confirmed cases – a death rate of 6.0 per cent. If one third
of the deaths are caused by Covid-19 and the number of cases is underestimated
by a factor of say 15, the death rate would be 0.13 per cent and the number of
deaths due to Covid-19 would be 340. This number should be placed in
perspective with the number of deaths we would normally expect in the first 28 days
of March – roughly 46,000.
The number of recorded deaths will increase in the coming days, but so
will the population affected by the disease – in all
probability much faster than the increase in deaths. Because we are looking so
closely at the presence of Covid-19 in those who die – as I look at in more
detail in my article in the current issue of The Spectator – the fraction of
those who die with Covid-19 (but not of it) in a population where the incidence
is increasing, is likely to increase even more. So the
measured increase in numbers of deaths is not necessarily a cause for alarm,
unless it demonstrates excess deaths – 340 deaths out of 46,000 shows we are
not near this at present. We have prepared for the worst, but it has not yet
happened. The widespread testing of NHS staff recently announced may help
provide a clearer indication of how far the disease has already spread within
the population.
The UK and other governments have no control over how their data is
reported, but they can minimise the potential for misinterpretation by making
absolutely clear what its figures are, and what they are not. After this
episode is over, there is a clear need for an internationally coordinated
update of how deaths are attributed and recorded, to enable us to better
understand what is happening more clearly, when we need to.
John Lee is a recently retired professor of pathology and a former NHS
consultant pathologist.
WRITTEN BY Dr John Lee