News December
A Flu Pandemic Today Could Kill As Many As 80 Million People
If the 1918 flu pandemic broke out today, it would likely kill
at least 62 million people, or slightly more than the number that
die in a single year from all other causes combined. The estimate
stems from a new tally of flu deaths from 1918 to 1920 in different
countries, which varied widely. Based on their findings, authors
of the study say that 96 percent of the victims of a present-day
pandemic would be in the developing world.
The report comes on the heels of fears that the H5N1 flu virus
currently circulating among birds in Southeast Asia and Africa may
be the precursor to a deadly global outbreak or pandemic. To gauge
the potential threat, researchers reviewed the toll of the most
severe previous case, which occurred in 1918 when a flu swept the
world, claiming at least 20 million lives. "It's the benchmark
against which we worry about future flu pandemics," says population
health researcher Christopher Murray of the Harvard Initiative for
Global Health.
To determine the number of deaths from the 1918 flu, Murray and
his colleagues reviewed the death registries from countries that
kept good records between 1915 and 1923. They calculated the number
of deaths from the flu in each country by subtracting the average
death rate during the pandemic years from those of the years before
and after. Most prior estimates relied on less credible figures,
including eyewitness accounts, Murray says.
The number of dead in a modern pandemic could range from 50 million
to 80 million, the group reports in a paper published online by
The Lancet. To estimate the death toll if a pandemic struck today,
they applied each country's 1918 death rate to its 2004 population.
Their figure sets a plausible upper limit on deaths from a similar
virus, Murray says. Researchers do not know, however, if the virus
that causes the next pandemic will be more or less deadly than the
one in 1918. As of late November the H5N1 virus had killed 154 people
out of 258 confirmed cases, suggesting to researchers that it may
be particularly deadly.
A country's income was the biggest predictor of its death toll,
the group found. The fraction of additional deaths per year varied
widely between locations, from 0.2 percent in Denmark to 7.8 percent
in central India, "That's almost 40-fold variation across countries,"
Murray says. "A very surprising fraction of the amount of variation
in the death rate is explained by one single variable--namely, income
per capita."
Current strategies for pandemic flu preparedness include vaccination,
antiviral drugs and antibiotics to treat pneumonia, which can set
in after flu. "Most of those things aren't really going to
reach the lowest income countries or even the poor in middle income
countries," Murray says. Accelerating the introduction of new
pneumonia vaccines to the developing world might help, he says.
England's Institute of Medicine is studying whether simpler steps
such as school closures and travel restrictions might also cut deaths.
Worried? You should be. If anything, the new estimate may be optimistic,
writes epidemiologist Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London in
an accompanying editorial. High incomes may not protect rich countries
as much as Murray's group predicts, he cautions. In poor countries,
he writes, the prevalence of diseases such as HIV/AIDS and malaria
might make them even more susceptible to flu than before.
Source http://www.sciam.com/
|