Sweden? Japan? UK? Debates over who had a ‘good’ Covid won’t end | Francois Balloux
by Francois Balloux from Science | The Guardian on (#5Z053)
The WHO has spoken but even its huge new report will not settle arguments about pandemic strategies
National Covid death rates are, inevitably, political. How could they not be when they are viewed as evidence for good or bad government on matters of life or death? How did the UK fare compared with, say, Germany? Should both countries have been more like Sweden? However, when new data arrives, far from settling arguments over which pandemic mitigation strategies worked best, it tends to further inflame disagreements or harden pre-existing positions.
So it is with the much-anticipated report by the World Health Organization (WHO) on Covid-associated deaths, released last week. The WHO estimates that around 15 million additional people died because of the pandemic in 2020-2021, about 2.7 times higher than officially recorded deaths.
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