Change in country-level COVID-19 lethality is associated with improved testing: no apparent role of medical care or disease-specific knowledge
Aim: Reductions in the case fatality rate of COVID-19 in the unvaccinated have been credited to improvements in medical care. Here I test whether either of these factors predicts reductions in the case fatality rate, and whether observed reductions are better explicable by improved ascertainment of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scandinavian journal of public health 2022-08, Vol.50 (6), p.782-786 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Aim:
Reductions in the case fatality rate of COVID-19 in the unvaccinated have been credited to improvements in medical care. Here I test whether either of these factors predicts reductions in the case fatality rate, and whether observed reductions are better explicable by improved ascertainment of mild cases.
Methods:
Using weighted log–log regression, I compute the association between changes in the case fatality rate and test density between 3 July 2020 and 5 January 2021 in 162 countries; and check whether case fatality rate change is associated with either per capita medical spending (proxy for critical care access) or timing of the pandemic (proxy for COVID-specific knowledge).
Results:
The median test density increased from 175 tests per thousand population to 1200, while the median case fatality rate dropped from 4.1% to 2.0%. While the case fatality rate was higher at both timepoints in Europe/North America than Africa / Asia, its association with test density was similar across countries. For each doubling in test density, the mean case fatality rate decreased by 18% (P0.10).
Conclusions:
Declines in the case fatality rate were adequately explained by improved testing, with no effect of either medical knowledge or improvements in care. The true lethality of COVID-19 may not have changed much at the population level. Prevention should remain a priority. |
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ISSN: | 1403-4948 1651-1905 |
DOI: | 10.1177/14034948221080672 |