Our monthly report on covid (click on the coronavirus tag at the bottom to read prior reports). Unfortunately, the situation is deteriorating globally. We are in a race to see how quickly we can vaccinate while hoping that none of the new covid variants prove vaccine resistance.
My prior three monthly summaries reported on countries above a benchmark of 400 deaths per million of population but for this report I've increased it to 800 deaths per million because of the rapidly growing toll of the virus and because it provides some context for the United States. As mentioned previously there is great variation in how countries count covid deaths, some related to understandable differences in how a covid death is defined, others impacted by the comprehensiveness of country reporting systems, and some due to more deliberate government interventions. I consider any country above 800 as in the same general ballpark as the U.S. As before, countries with populations below one million are excluded from this summary.
To illustrate how much things have changes since my first monthly report on October 22, on that date there were 19 countries with death rates of 400 per million or above; today there are 49. On October 22, 2 countries surpassed 800; today it is 31; and on October 2, only one country exceeded 1,000 (or 0.1% of its population) while today 21 are in that category.
Europe
Belgium (1775), Slovenia (1592), Czech Republic (1411), UK (1410), Italy (1402), Bosnia & Herzogovinia (1393), North Macedonia (1329), Bulgaria (1272), Hungary (1224), Spain (1186), Croatia (1166), France (1112), Sweden (1086), Switzerland (1040), Portugal (974), Lithuania (959), Poland (923), Romania (920), Moldova (827), Austria (811).
Exceeding 800 within next 30 days: Netherlands, Slovakia, Germany, Ireland
North America
USA (1277), Panama (1144), Mexico (1127)
South America
Peru (1182), Argentina (1025), Brazil (1009), Colombia (988), Chile (926), Bolivia (835), Ecuador (818)
Africa
None
Exceeding 800 within next 30 days: South Africa
Asia
Armenia (1021)
Exceeding 800 within next 30 days: Georgia, Iran
The above is based on officially reported figures. However, we've recently had examples of potential major discrepancies. For instance, Russia's mortality rate is 469 based on official data. However, earlier this month two Russian government officials publicly stated the death toll is much higher. The two officials used different definitions for covid deaths, in one case stating the current death toll was an underestimate by 60,000, while the other stated the proper death toll should be 130,000 higher. The lower estimate would result in a mortality rate around 900 while the higher would give a rate of about 1350.
Another recent study of excess mortality in Indonesia finds it running 71% higher than average since March but the official covid death count is only 27,453 with a rate of 100. If a significant amount of the excess mortality is due to covid the rate would be much higher.
Something else I've noted in the data that does not involve misreporting but may be significant. Japan had been relatively unscathed by covid despite doing limited testing and very little on closing of businesses. However, since late November cases and deaths have been steadily rising. In both instances the numbers are still relatively small by USA or Europe standards but very high compared to earlier in 2020. We are also hearing that China is quarantining large populations again. Something may be up.
A country I continue to find puzzling is Turkey which ranks 9th in the world in confirmed cases with 2.4 million but with a Case Fatality Rate (CFR) of only 1.0%, the lowest of any country among those in the top twenty. I would like to understand how Turkey defines and reports covid deaths and whether its covid treatment protocols differ in any respect from other countries at the top of the case list.
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I've complained before about the politicization of covid, not just between Left and Right in the USA but even between countries, with people across the political spectrum grabbing onto whatever data or theory they can use that best conforms with their political outlook. One of the most striking to me has been the lionization of Governor Cuomo of New York and the unceasing attacks on Governor DeSantis of Florida. We are now ten months into this and New York's death rate is still almost double that of Florida and while New York remains mostly shut down, Florida has imposed many fewer restrictions.
Despite having the second highest mortality rate of any state, Governor Cuomo has received an Emmy Award for his press conferences, did a victory tour of late night talk shows, where he was received with adoration, to promote his book on how he beat covid in New York, and most recently received the Edward M Kennedy Award for Inspired Leadership for his covid response. I find the whole thing ghoulish.
What follows is an extended excerpt from a Patreon newsletter I subscribe to which discusses the contrast. The author is a conservative Never Trumper.
The media’s reporting on Covid-19 was awful all of last year, as was regularly noted in this newsletter. One of the most actively dishonest narratives was how the press covered the pandemic in New York compared to Florida.
There are two distinctive metrics for analyzing the quality of a state’s Covid-19 response: 1) The extent to which a state prevents virus spread/harm; 2) The ability of a state to balance actions associated with #1 with the inevitable economic and health ramifications. The national press made it clear early on that they placed insufficient value on #2 and often ignored the data related to #1 when it did not fit certain pre-developed narratives.
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo has received constant praise, despite having one of the worst records in the country in both categories. New York ranks second in the country in deaths per capita and no other state will catch them any time soon, as they’re currently in the midst of a growing outbreak of cases and deaths. Meanwhile, the state remained under strict and excessive lockdowns throughout 2020. In-person instruction in schools was shut down for most of the year, countless businesses have been destroyed, and restaurants and bars have been consistently restricted. Cuomo has repeatedly lost in court for infringing on religious rights with restrictions, and a record number of people have fled the state (many to Florida). Now Cuomo is undermining efforts to get as many people the vaccine as possible by shelving the vaccine preparation in the state and focusing on punishingpeople for administering the vaccine out of order. All of that earned Cuomo an Emmy and a celebration book tour.
Meanwhile, the national press has spent every single month since March promoting the idea that Florida, and specifically DeSantis, were mishandling the virus and headed for disaster. Just look at some stories from CNN and NBC News, which were hardly unique among news outlets:
March CNN: The Florida governor just got called out over his handling of coronavirus
April CNN: DeSantis risked the lives of Floridians
May CNN: States continue to ease coronavirus restrictions ahead of expert recommendations
June CNN: Pressure mounts on DeSantis as coronavirus cases spike in Florida
July CNN: DeSantis' earlier bravado fuels Florida's pandemic crisis
August NBC News: Florida teachers battle Gov. DeSantis over return to classrooms
September NBC News: Fauci says it's 'very concerning' that Florida is re-opening bars and restaurants at full capacity
October CNN: Florida will be 'like a house on fire' in weeks with loose coronavirus restrictions, infectious disease expert says
November CNN: Since Gov. Ron DeSantis reopened Florida in late September, the number of reported Covid-19 cases per week in the state has tripled.
December CNN: “Putting 'politics in front of lives': DeSantis faces criticism over Florida's Covid-19 response”
After all that time, Florida is 19th in deaths per capita and didn’t rank in the top 25 states in cases or deaths per capita over the last week. Meanwhile, the state has been mostly open since late September. DeSantis was excoriated for it, but it turned out that beaches do not present a big risk for virus spread and it allowed socialization that was missing in many states. DeSantis also took a lot of heat for pushing for schools to reopen, but once again was proven correct in his decision. Schools have not been a substantial source of virus spread, and keeping them closed did a lot of damage to children in other states.
DeSantis also did something unique in specifically targeting the state’s older population to protect those in nursing homes while Cuomo and several other governors chose to send Covid-19 patients back to those facilities. In addition, Florida has often focused actions at the county level, thereby better balancing the need to keep businesses open with the need to protect against the virus. As a result, while Florida’s record on virus spread (#1) is average (although significantly better than that of NY), their record on balancing it with preventing the harms that result from restrictions (#2) is among the best in the country.
DeSantis has also recently expanded vaccine administration to 7 days a week for seniors and healthcare workers, set up drive-thru vaccination sites to expand access, and launched a pilot program aimed at providing vaccinations specifically to underserved communities. News outlets have spent the last week complaining about seniors waiting in line for vaccinations in Florida while completely ignoring the reality that those same seniors wouldn’t even be eligiblefor vaccinations right now under Cuomo’s rules. The press has kept their false narrative going despite the data since March, and has shown no signs of reconsidering. Part of that is clearly because of how popular DeSantis was pre-Covid and the threat he posed as a future presidential contender. DeSantis has made some mistakes, but it’s rather clear that the press owes him an apology and the narrative they promoted about his handling of Covid-19 compared to other governors is completely backwards.
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I've thought since early last year that a distinct possibility for the origin of Covid-19 was from sloppy handling practices at a bio lab in Wuhan, China that allowed the virus to escape into the public (there is a history of such mishaps at labs in China since the early 2000s). The State Department recently issued the statement below:
Excerpts from State Department Statement on Origins of Covid-19, issued on January 15, 2021
You can find the entire statement here.
"The U.S. government does not know exactly where, when, or how the COVID-19 virus—known as SARS-CoV-2—was transmitted initially to humans. We have not determined whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals or was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan, China.
The virus could have emerged naturally from human contact with infected animals, spreading in a pattern consistent with a natural epidemic. Alternatively, a laboratory accident could resemble a natural outbreak if the initial exposure included only a few individuals and was compounded by asymptomatic infection. Scientists in China have researched animal-derived coronaviruses under conditions that increased the risk for accidental and potentially unwitting exposure.
1. Illnesses inside the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV):
- The U.S. government has reason to believe that several researchers inside the WIV became sick in autumn 2019, before the first identified case of the outbreak, with symptoms consistent with both COVID-19 and common seasonal illnesses. This raises questions about the credibility of WIV senior researcher Shi Zhengli’s public claim that there was “zero infection” among the WIV’s staff and students of SARS-CoV-2 or SARS-related viruses.
- Accidental infections in labs have caused several previous virus outbreaks in China and elsewhere, including a 2004 SARS outbreak in Beijing that infected nine people, killing one.
2. Research at the WIV:
- Starting in at least 2016 – and with no indication of a stop prior to the COVID-19 outbreak – WIV researchers conducted experiments involving RaTG13, the bat coronavirus identified by the WIV in January 2020 as its closest sample to SARS-CoV-2 (96.2% similar). The WIV became a focal point for international coronavirus research after the 2003 SARS outbreak and has since studied animals including mice, bats, and pangolins.
- The WIV has a published record of conducting “gain-of-function” research to engineer chimeric viruses. But the WIV has not been transparent or consistent about its record of studying viruses most similar to the COVID-19 virus, including “RaTG13,” which it sampled from a cave in Yunnan Province in 2013 after several miners died of SARS-like illness.
Despite the WIV presenting itself as a civilian institution, the United States has determined that the WIV has collaborated on publications and secret projects with China’s military. The WIV has engaged in classified research, including laboratory animal experiments, on behalf of the Chinese military since at least 2017."
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