spinoza577
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Thank you for the reminder.This has already been shown to be incorrect. I wrote this post about it earlier. On average more than 10 years of life are lost for each COVID death, and much more than 10 years for some.
The paper wants to specify:
Instead to say: If somebody has died from covid-19, he has lost his life.
They now say: If somebody has died from covid-19, he has lost 11.8 years (on average).
11.8 years, if I am allowed mix the numbers of women and men. They make even some more particulars. E.g.
If a 80 years old woman has died from covid-19 and had one morbidity, she has lost 8.92 years (on average).
If a 80 years old woman has died from covid-19 and had six morbidies, she has lost 2.6 years (on average).
They used ten year time frames, so for a 89 year old woman it´s the same, but one gets the idea.
So, in this manner they say that the statements, that people have lost only one or two years, are wrong.
They drew their numbers from a given WHO table and the new Italian deaths.
But is this really an accurate telling? I this capturing the empirical reality?
E.g. it could be that the deaths have occured not over the whole distribution of possible deaths, but at the side where they die quite soon. And because there is to date no data - if I am not wrong (they don´t elaborate) - which can tell if this is the case or not, their conclusion cannot reflect such an input either. If this were the case, they should have elaborate, though the paper is not very clear anyway.
But in accordance, they simply can compare their results with a table from the UK, which says for instance:
If one has died from asthma, he has lost 21.6 years (on average).
If one has died from pneumonia, he has lost 13.1 years (on average).
If one has died from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, he has lost 8.2 years (on average).
Asf. If one has died from a car accident - probably even far worse!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Years_of_potential_life_lost
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