First COVID-19 Global Forecast: IHME Projects Three-Quarters of a Million Lives Could be Saved by January 1
PR85421
SEATTLE, Sept. 4, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
-- 'Deadly December' estimated with nearly 30,000 deaths each day as winter
returns to the Northern Hemisphere
In the first global projections of the COVID-19 pandemic by nation, the
Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of
Washington's School of Medicine is predicting nearly 770,000 lives worldwide
could be saved between now and January 1 through proven measures such as
mask-wearing and social distancing.
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Cumulative deaths expected by January 1 total 2.8 million, about 1.9 million
more from now until the end of the year. Daily deaths in December could reach
as high as 30,000.
"These first-ever worldwide projections by country offer a daunting forecast as
well as a roadmap toward relief from COVID-19 that government leaders as well
as individuals can follow," said IHME Director Dr. Christopher Murray. "We are
facing the prospect of a deadly December, especially in Europe, Central Asia,
and the United States. But the science is clear and the evidence irrefutable:
mask-wearing, social distancing, and limits to social gatherings are vital to
helping prevent transmission of the virus."
The Institute modeled three scenarios:
-- A "worse case" in which mask usage stays at current rates and
governments continue relaxing social distancing requirements, leading
to 4.0 million total deaths by the end of the year;
-- A "best case" of 2.0 million total deaths if mask usage is near-
universal and governments impose social distancing requirements when
their daily death rate exceeds 8 per million; and
-- A "most likely" scenario that assumes individual mask use and other
mitigation measures remain unchanged, resulting in approximately 2.8
million total deaths.
The references to 750,000 lives saved and 30,000 daily deaths in December
represent the differences between the "best case" and "most likely" scenarios.
Each of these scenarios represents a significant increase over the current
total deaths, estimated at nearly 910,000 worldwide. The increase is due in
part to a likely seasonal rise in COVID-19 cases in the Northern Hemisphere. To
date, COVID-19 has followed seasonal patterns similar to pneumonia, and if that
correlation continues to hold, northern countries can anticipate more cases in
the late fall and winter months.
"People in the Northern Hemisphere must be especially vigilant as winter
approaches, since the coronavirus, like pneumonia, will be more prevalent in
cold climates," Murray said.
Murray highlighted the unprecedented opportunity to save lives with rapid action.
"Looking at the staggering COVID-19 estimates, it's easy to get lost in the
enormity of the numbers," Murray said. "The number of deaths exceeds the
capacity of the world's 50 largest stadiums, a sobering image of the people who
have lost their lives and livelihoods."
Under the most likely of IHME's scenarios, the nations with the highest per
capita total deaths would be the US Virgin Islands, the Netherlands, and Spain.
By WHO region, this scenario projects 959,685 total deaths by January 1 in the
Region of the Americas, 667,811 in the European Region, 79,583 in the African
Region, 168,711 in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, 738,427 in the South-East
Asia Region, and 191,598 in the Western Pacific Region.
"We all must learn from those leaders of nations where the virus has been
contained, or where second waves of infections have occurred, and where swift
action has been taken to prevent loss of life," Murray said.
He also cautioned against pursuing the so-called "herd immunity" strategy,
which occurs when a large proportion of a community becomes immune to the virus
through infection and recovery. The "worse-case" scenario in these projections
reflects a situation where leaders allow transmission to run through their
population, resulting in significant loss of life.
"This first global forecast represents an opportunity to underscore the problem
with herd immunity, which, essentially, ignores science and ethics, and allows
millions of avoidable deaths," Murray said. "It is, quite simply,
reprehensible."
Here are the top 10 nations with highest per capita death forecasts with
worse-case scenario, most likely scenario, and best scenario:
-- Worse case: Netherlands, Spain, US Virgin Islands, Japan, Sweden,
Romania, Israel, Republic of Moldova, United States of America,
Montenegro
-- Most likely: US Virgin Islands, Netherlands, Spain, Belgium, Peru, San
Marino, Sweden, United States of America, Ecuador, France
-- Best case: US Virgin Islands, Spain, Peru, San Marino, Kazakhstan,
Ecuador, Belgium, Panama, Mexico, Colombia
Top 10 nations with the highest cumulative deaths on January 1:
Worse-case scenario
India: 916,688 (range of 562,203–1,431,708)
United States of America: 620,029 (range of 463,361–874,649)
Japan: 287,635 (range of 25,669–758,716)
Spain: 180,904 (range of 97,665–282,075)
Brazil: 177,299 (range of 166,656–189,259)
Mexico: 157,264 (range of 139,863–183,739)
Philippines: 117,721 (range of 27,525–176,324)
France: 116,415 (range of 51,021–342,047)
Russian Federation: 112,367 (range of 63,165–214,363)
Netherlands: 94,332 (range of 21,815–186,842)
Most likely scenario
India: 659,537 (range of 415,118–1,087,533)
United States of America: 410,451 (range of 347,551–515,272)
Brazil: 174,297 (range of 163,982–185,913)
Mexico: 138,828 (range of 125,763–156,493)
Japan: 120,514 (range of 10,301–492,791)
Russian Federation: 94,905 (range of 57,575–170,048)
France: 73,743 (range of 44,693–161,349)
United Kingdom: 69,548 (range of 59,680–96,669)
Spain: 69,445 (range of 43,306–122,913)
Philippines: 58,412 (range of 7,660–136,079)
Best-case scenario
India: 484,981 (range of 316,111–819,426)
United States of America: 288,381 (range of 257,286–327,775)
Brazil: 160,567 (range of 152,483–169,483)
Mexico: 130,545 (range of 118,201–147,963)
Japan: 104,808 (range of 7,971–456,224)
Spain: 66,508 (range of 41,980–117,239)
United Kingdom: 59,819 (range of 57,572–65,411)
Philippines: 58,030 (range of 7,552–137,358)
France: 46,623 (range of 38,070–69,559)
Peru: 46,528 (range of 44,161–48,557)
Top 10 nations with the highest cumulative death rate per 100,000 on January 1:
Worse-case scenario
Netherlands: 549.8 (range of 127.1–1,089.0)
Spain: 393.1 (range of 212.2–612.9)
US Virgin Islands: 364.7 (range of 51.0–520.1)
Japan: 225.1 (range of 20.1–593.7)
Sweden: 223.1 (range of 83.1–894.3)
Romania: 216.1 (range of 106.9–384.4)
Israel: 195.5 (range of 93.3–363.7)
Republic of Moldova: 192.3 (range of 105.4–312.8)
United States of America: 189.0 (range of 141.3–266.7)
Montenegro: 183.3 (range of 17.5–389.5)
Most likely scenario
US Virgin Islands: 349.8 (range of 42.4–516.3)
Netherlands: 204.5 (range of 64.1–595.7)
Spain: 150.9 (range of 94.1–267.1)
Belgium: 139.7 (range of 92.3–290.6)
Peru: 137.3 (range of 130.1–143.4)
San Marino: 137.2 (range of 132.4–151.2)
Sweden: 125.4 (range of 71.6–394.0)
United States of America: 125.1 (range of 106.0–157.1)
Ecuador: 118.3 (range of 109.8–129.8)
France: 111.4 (range of 67.5–243.7)
Best-case scenario
US Virgin Islands: 343.9 (range of 39.4–514.6)
Spain: 144.5 (range of 91.2–254.7)
Peru: 136.9 (range of 129.9–142.8)
San Marino: 132.1 (range of 130.9–134.2)
Kazakhstan: 121.4 (range of 53.4–183.5)
Ecuador: 117.4 (range of 109.4–128.4)
Belgium: 106.9 (range of 90.9–149.0)
Panama: 104.8 (range of 76.9–149.3)
Mexico: 104.5 (range of 94.6–118.4)
Colombia: 94.7 (range of 81.5–112.1)
IHME's projections for India are based on an epidemiological model that
includes data on cases, deaths, and antibody prevalence, as well as
state-specific COVID-19 testing rates, mobility, social distancing mandates,
mask use, population density and age structure, and pneumonia seasonality,
which shows a strong correlation with the trajectory of COVID-19.
The new projections, including additional forecasts of daily infections, are
available at https://covid19.healthdata.org/india , and will be regularly
updated moving forward.
About the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) is an independent global
health research organization at the University of Washington School of Medicine
that provides rigorous and comparable measurement of the world's most important
health problems and evaluates the strategies used to address them. IHME is
committed to transparency and makes this information widely available so that
policymakers have the evidence they need to make informed decisions on
allocating resources to improve population health.
SOURCE Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation
CONTACT: media@healthdata.org; For Europe-based journalists: Cathy Bartley,
cathy.bartley@bartley-robbs.co.uk
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