Skip to content →

Ipotesi sulla mortalità da Coronavirus in Italia

Il CEBM dell’Università di Oxford pubblica un riassunto dei dati globali sulla mortalità da Coronavirus, paese per paese.

L’Italia svetta in testa alla classifica. Perché? Queste le risposte della scienza al momento attuale:

In Italy, there are several reasons why the CFR is higher. The age structure of the Italian population (2nd oldest in the world); highest rates of antibiotic resistance deaths in Europe (Italy tops the EU  for antibiotic-resistance deaths, with nearly 1/3rd  of the deaths in the EU). Smoking also seems to be a factor associated with poor survival –  in Italy, 24% smoke, 28% men. In the UK, for instance, 15% are current smokers.

 Coronavirus: Is Covid-19 the cause of all the fatalities in Italy? Sarah Newy reports  Italy’s death rate might also be higher because of how fatalities are recorded.  In Italy, all those who die in hospitals with Coronavirus are included in the death counts.

In this article, Professor Walter Ricciardi,  Scientific Adviser to, Italy’s Minister of Health, reports,  “On re-evaluation by the National Institute of Health, only 12 per cent of death certificates have shown a direct causality from coronavirus, while 88% patients who have died have at least one pre-morbidity – many had two or three.”

Recording the numbers of those who die with Coronavirus will inflate the CFR as opposed to those that died from Coronavirus, which will deflate the CFR.

Report from the Italian National Institute of Health: analysed 355  fatalities and found only three patients (0.8%)  had no prior medical conditions. See Table 1 in the paper; (99% who died had one pre-existing health condition):

  • 49%  had three or  more health conditions,
  • 26% had two other ‘pathologies’,
  • 25% had one.

The most common problems in the 355 who died were: 76% high blood pressure; 36%  diabetes, and 33%  ischemic heart disease.

The average age of deceased and COVID-19 positive patients was 79.5 years (median 80.5, range 31-103). The median age of those that died was >15 years higher than patients who contracted the infection (median age: died 81 years – infected 63 years). 

In breve: fumiamo troppo, siamo vecchi e usiamo male gli antibiotici, peggio che nel resto d’Europa.

via Euronews

Published in Formazione permanente

4 Comments

  1. Fumiamo e prendiamo antibiotici però siamo vecchi … quindi gli altri muoiono anche senza virus noi solo col virus? Non è semplicistica messa così? Forse ci sono altri fattori? CFR non valido come parametro se non si fanno tamponi? Ci sono farmaci che ‘aiutano’ virus?

  2. io ho sintetizzato così e ho scritto: ipotesi. Hai letto il testo in inglese? Le ipotesi sono suffragate da numeri e studi, che andrebbero letti prima di contestarli. Le tue domande richiedono studi scientifici in corso per essere risposte. Ci vuole tempo.

  3. Ne ho letto anche altrove e poiché sono in studio e campioni non chiari diventa tutto vero e non spostandosi di poco. Facevo riferimento alle medicine perché aifa è intervenuta a dare delle precisazioni su alcuni farmaci molto usati per ipertensione. Però ci sono studi contrari.

Comments are closed.