Study examines infection fatality rates for COVID-19
Dartmouth College
COVID-19 has been spreading rapidly over the past several months, and the U.S. death toll has now reached 400,000.
As evident from the age distribution of those
fatalities, COVID-19 is dangerous not only for the elderly but for middle-aged
adults, according to a Dartmouth-led study published in the European
Journal of Epidemiology.
"For a person who is middle-aged, the risk of dying from COVID-19 is about 100 times greater than dying from an automobile accident," explains lead author Andrew Levin, a professor of economics at Dartmouth College.
"Generally
speaking, very few children and young adults die of COVID-19. However, the risk
is progressively greater for middle-aged and older adults. The odds that an
infection becomes fatal is only 1:10,000 at age 25, whereas those odds are
roughly 1:100 at age 60, 1:40 at age 70, and 1:10 at age 80."
These findings represent the culmination of a systematic review of all available studies of COVID-19 prevalence in countries with advanced economies; this review encompassed more than 1,000 research papers and government documents disseminated prior to September 18, 2020.
The research team identified 27
studies where the survey design was representative of the general population,
covering 34 geographical locations in the U.S., Canada, Asia, and Europe. Using
those prevalence data, the researchers investigated the age-specific ratio of
COVID-19 fatalities to infections and found a very clear exponential
relationship.
An initial version of this study was posted online in July 2020 as an NBER Working Paper and was regularly updated on the medRxiv preprint server prior to being published as an open-access article in the European Journal of Epidemiology.
The findings remain highly relevant as the total number of COVID-19 deaths in the U.S. continues to climb. "Our findings are consistent with the CDC's Weekly Updates by Select Demographic and Geographic Characteristics, which report on COVID-19 deaths by age group," says Levin.
"Nearly 40 percent of U.S. COVID-19 deaths have occurred among
those ages 45 to 74 years, while almost 60 percent have occurred among those
over 75 years old. By contrast, children and young adults (less than 45 years
old) account for less than 3 percent of U.S. COVID-19 deaths."
Levin also emphasized the urgent practical implications of his team's research findings. "While COVID-19 vaccines are now being distributed, several more months are likely to pass before these vaccines have been fully disseminated to the public," says Levin.
"We need get through this period as safely
as possible. Taking basic precautions -- including wearing a mask, practicing
social distancing, and washing your hands often -- is critical to protecting
yourself, family, friends, and community members from this very deadly
disease."