- The Media Line - https://themedialine.org -

Estimated 67% of COVID-19 Deaths in MENA Region, 55% Worldwide, Go Unreported

The novel coronavirus continues to ravage the world and has caused a reported 4.7 million deaths since the disease was first identified in December 2019.

This is the number of deaths officially reported to be due to COVID-19. But the actual number of fatal cases is known to be far higher. For example, where testing is inadequate, many people contract the disease and die without any official diagnosis. Those who don’t make it into the statistics because they never tested positive for the coronavirus before dying are thought to be the majority of fatalities in countries where testing is rare.

The concept of “excess deaths” gets around the problem of underreporting in official statistics by comparing the number of people who have died in a particular region and period to a historical baseline from recent years, and in some cases, also taking into consideration other factors known to be affecting the death rate compared to the historical average, such as war and famine. Thus, excess deaths are the number of deaths estimated to be due to COVID-19, including unreported deaths.

While the official worldwide death toll from COVID-19 now stands at 4.7 million, the number of excess deaths is estimated to be around 10.5 million.

According to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME), an independent population health research center at UW Medicine, part of the University of Washington, it is currently projected, based on reported deaths alone, that by January 2022, the reported worldwide death toll will be around 5.6 million.

This is based on a number of assumptions, such as vaccine distribution continuing at the expected pace, and continued use of masks at around the current rate. But in another, worse scenario, if for example vaccinated individuals stop wearing masks, mobility increases regardless of vaccine coverage, and the speed of the spread of variants doubles, the projected death toll could reach 6.5 million by January.

Projections based not on reported deaths but excess deaths show that by January, an estimated 12.5 million, or in a worse scenario 14.4 million, will have died from the disease.

The IHME has also looked at the death toll from COVID-19 in North Africa and the Middle East. Unlike The Media Line, it does not include in the region Afghanistan, Cyprus, Djibouti, Israel, Mauritania, Pakistan, Somalia, or Sudan. Thus, while The Media Line reports 362,770 deaths in the MENA region due to COVID, the IHME shows 326,000 reported deaths. It projects that by January, the region will see 402,000 deaths, or in a worse scenario 447,000 deaths.

Projections based not on reported deaths but excess deaths show that an estimated 982,000 people have already died, and by January, an estimated 1.3 million, or in a worse scenario 1.4 million, will have died in the MENA region from the disease.

Iran has experienced by far the highest reported cumulative COVID-19 death toll in the region –118,508 deaths over the course of the pandemic.

But relative to population size, Tunisia’s death toll has been far higher, with about 2,066 deaths per million people, compared to Iran’s 1,390 per million.

The IHME estimates that, based on excess deaths, Iran’s real death toll from COVID-19 is more like 285,000.

Iran now has 4.32 reported new deaths per day per million population based on a seven-day rolling average – currently the highest number of new deaths relative to population size in the region. This is followed by Tunisia (3.79), the Palestinian territories (3.06), Turkey (2.8) and Israel (2.27).

The concept of excess deaths is particularly important in countries like Somalia, Yemen, Sudan and Syria, where official statistics drastically underreport the actual situation. In Somalia, 1,079 people are reported to have died from the disease, while the IHME estimate of excess deaths is 3.8 times that number – 4,067. Yemen’s 1,664 reported COVID-19 deaths are only 23% of its estimated 7,220 excess deaths from the disease. Sudan reports 2,881 deaths from COVID-19 but is estimated to have actually experienced about 3.9 times as many excess deaths from the disease (11,122). Syria’s 2,158 reported deaths from the coronavirus are less than 30% of the 7,265 estimated excess deaths from the disease.

In Israel, nearly all COVID-19 deaths make it into the official statistics, so there is little difference between the reported number of COVID-19 deaths (7,602) and the estimated number of excess deaths (8,192) due to the disease.

Here are the latest COVID-19 numbers for the Middle East and North Africa as of 7:30 pm Greenwich Mean Time (UTC±0) on Thursday.

 

Country Confirmed Cases Deaths Recovered Active Cases
Afghanistan 154,960 7,198 123,497 24,265
Algeria 202,283 5,748 138,501 58,034
Bahrain 274,524 1,388 272,387 749
Cyprus 117,759 551 90,755 26,453
Djibouti 12,253 162 11,838 253
Egypt 298,988 17,043 251,902 30,043
Iran 5,493,591 118,508 4,872,865 502,218
Iraq 1,987,352 21,993 1,882,596 82,763
Israel 1,253,724 7,602 1,180,403 65,719
Jordan 817,487 10,645 794,569 12,273
Kuwait 411,316 2,442 408,159 715
Lebanon 619,950 8,253 583,910 27,787
Libya 335,055 4,569 252,463 78,023
Mauritania 35,661 768 33,967 926
Morocco 925,507 14,076 893,272 18,159
Oman 303,551 4,093 295,168 4,290
Pakistan 1,232,595 27,432 1,143,605 61,558
Palestinian Territories 390,369 3,968 356,031 30,370
Qatar 235,907 604 233,728 1,575
Saudi Arabia 546,792 8,684 535,783 2,325
Somalia 19,235 1,079 9,250 8,906
Sudan 38,077 2,881 31,952 3,244
Syria 31,426 2,158 23,223 6,045
Tunisia 702,503 24,654 671,488 6,361
Turkey 6,960,297 62,524 6,432,743 465,030
United Arab Emirates 733,972 2,083 726,035 5,854
Yemen 8,830 1,664 5,456 1,710
Total 24,143,964 362,770 22,255,546 1,525,648