China reports 59,938 Covid deaths in a month

Published January 15, 2023
Patients lie on beds next to closed counters at the emergency department of Zhongshan Hospital, amid the coronavirus outbreak in Shanghai, China, January 3. — Reuters
Patients lie on beds next to closed counters at the emergency department of Zhongshan Hospital, amid the coronavirus outbreak in Shanghai, China, January 3. — Reuters

BEIJING: China on Saturday reported almost 60,000 Covid-related deaths in just over a month, the first major toll released by authorities since Beijing loosened virus restrictions in early December.

The government has been widely accused of underreporting the number of coronavirus fatalities since the abandonment of its zero-Covid policy.

Only a few dozen deaths had been recorded officially in December before Saturday’s announcement, despite evidence of crematoriums and hospitals being overrun.

But a National Health Commission (NHC) official said that China had recorded 59,938 Covid-related deaths between Dec 8 and Jan 12. The figure refers only to deaths at medical facilities, with the total number likely to be higher.

The data includes 5,503 deaths caused by respiratory failure directly due to the virus, and 54,435 deaths caused by underlying conditions combined with Covid, Jiao Yahui, head of the NHC’s Bureau of Medical Administration, told a news conference.

Beijing revised its methodology for categorising Covid fatalities last month, saying it would count only those who die specifically of respiratory failure caused by the virus.

This was criticised by the World Health Organisation (WHO), which said the definition was “too narrow”.

WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the organisation was continuing to “ask China for more rapid, regular, reliable data on hospitalisation and deaths, as well as […] viral sequencing”. Beijing, however, has insisted it has been transparent with the international community about its data, urging the WHO to “uphold a scientific, objective and just position”.

Health officials had insisted on Wednesday it was unnecessary to dwell on the exact number of fatalities, and the NHC no longer releases an official daily Covid death toll.

“I don’t think it is necessary to look into the cause of death for every case at present. The key task during the pandemic should be treatment,” the head of a government-appointed expert panel said during a news conference.

Another expert suggested at the same press conference that China could determine the number of Covid deaths after the fact by looking at the overall excess mortality rate. Independent infection models have painted a grim picture of what the eventual toll might be.

University of Hong Kong researchers have estimated nearly one million Chinese people may die this winter. And health risk analysis firm Airfinity forecast 11,000 deaths and 1.8m infections per day, with a total of 1.7m fatalities by the end of April.

The Britain-based research firm has said its model is based on data from China’s regional provinces before changes to reporting infections were implemented, combined with case growth rates from other former zero-Covid countries when they lifted restrictions.

Health officials said the average age of those who had died was 80.3 years, with more than 90 per cent of fatalities above 65 years old. Most suffered from underlying conditions, they said.

Millions of the elderly in China are not fully vaccinated, with President Xi Jinping’s government criticised for not prioritising immunisation campaigns among the country’s most vulnerable citizens. During an outbreak in Hong Kong last year, vaccine hesitancy among older people was a major factor in the high death toll.

Published in Dawn, January 15th, 2023

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