Author: Jonathan A Michaels; Matt D Stevenson
Title: Explaining national differences in the mortality of Covid-19: individual patient simulation model to investigate the effects of testing policy and other factors on apparent mortality. Document date: 2020_4_6
ID: gkd1h8yi_48
Snippet: The modelling demonstrates that the large differences between countries in apparent Covid-19 mortality rates are compatible with the effects that might be expected with different testing policy in the early stages of a pandemic. While it is not possible to rule out differences in outcome due to demographic factors or aspects of the provision of health services, care is needed in drawing conclusions about such differences. The effects of more stri.....
Document: The modelling demonstrates that the large differences between countries in apparent Covid-19 mortality rates are compatible with the effects that might be expected with different testing policy in the early stages of a pandemic. While it is not possible to rule out differences in outcome due to demographic factors or aspects of the provision of health services, care is needed in drawing conclusions about such differences. The effects of more stringent testing regimes and tighter hospital admission policies are likely to exaggerate apparent fatality rates. High pressure on services, due to rapidly increasing demands, may affect both of these through limitations in staff, equipment and test kits for community testing as well as increasing the threshold of severity for hospital admission. Paradoxically, since the effect of incomplete case ascertainment is partly counter-balanced by the effect of right-censoring, successful attempts as suppression, which reduce the impact of right-censoring, may appear to exaggerate estimates of mortality.
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