Monday, August 31, 2020

We all die. COVID makes it sooner

We die one at a time. A tragedy and a cause to mourn.


A close look at mortality research and the big picture: "Demographic perspectives on the mortality of COVID-19 and other epidemics."

Age 93. High risk.

On a national scale, COVID just changes the mortality tables a little. Very little.

This post has the potential of offending readers, and not for the usual reasons. Trump-haters tell me they don't like it when I describe Trump's adroit messaging; progressive Biden-haters say they don't like it when I write that Biden did, after all, get lots more votes than Bernie Sanders; Biden-supporters don't like that I give Thad Guyer space to call Biden senile. Lots to hate here.

Today I risk offense because I acknowledge death. Worse, I "normalize" it by putting it into the context of other deaths for other reasons--background mortality--and describe it from the point of view of actuaries and demographic researchers, as statistics, not as human tragedies involving loved ones.

The key factor about COVID is that is that it primarily kills older, unwell people and usually spares the young.

This blog post is drawn from a research paper published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of the USA, a paper written by Joshua Goldstein and Ronald Lee, both from the Department of Demography at University of California, Berkeley. Here is their paper: https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2020/08/19/2006392117

Demgraphers think big picture. The big picture is that COVID may be shaping up to be approximately equivalent to the HIV/AIDS epidemic and the opioid epidemic in its overall affect on Americans' life expectancy generally, but it differs in that those two epidemics have played out over two or more decades, and this one is concentrated in a few months so far. It is not as significant as was the Spanish Flu. The Spanish Flu affected more people in a smaller population, and its effect was primarily on young people entering their most productive years.

Observations and insights from the paper:

1. Risk of death at any age across all developed countries increases by about 10% per year after age 30, compounding from a very low number and growing higher as one ages. The United States is somewhat of an outlier among developed countries, with an increase of 8.6% per year over people younger than 30 because we have an unusually high death rate among young people in America due to underserved populations accessing health care. In the US and elsewhere, however, the 10% increase per year after age 30 settles into an increase of 11% trend, because of COVID.

2. The net effect, if a new wave of infections brought us 1 million COVID deaths in 2020, would be to reduce the life expectancy of Americans by 2.9 years. That is significant but it is not a return to some remote otherworld of misery. That would mean a return to the life expectancies that were in place in 1995. At the current target of 250,000 deaths in 2020, Americans' life expectancy drops 0.84 years.

3. In a population of 330 million Americans, about 3 million of us die every year, a death rate of 9.1 per 1,000. Again, if a million of us were to die this year from COVID, that would increase to 12.1 per thousand. At current rates of about 180,000 COVID deaths so far this year, and 1,000 a day new ones, we might expect 250,000 COVID accelerated deaths, which means the figure increases to 9.9 per 1,000.  

4. About 70% of COVID deaths are from people age 70 and above. The normal percentage of deaths by that group would be 64%. Because COVID deaths are concentrated in the same place that deaths are normally, COVID doesn't really change the pattern of deaths. It just accelerates it. More older people dying than usual.

5. Among deaths of people ages 35-54, more men than women die, at a ratio of 1.44 to 1, but this gender discrepancy erodes to 1.12 to 1 by age 85+

6. A big picture way to think of COVID deaths as "temporary aging." At 1,000,000 deaths in 2020, again, a figure that would imply a major new wave of infections, the temporary age shift is 8.5 years. That means a 30 year old would have the normal risks of dying that year of a 38 year old, and an 80 year old would have the risk of dying that year of an 88 year old. Of course, the risk of dying at both 30 and 38 is absolutely small. Thirty year olds don't dread the mortality risks of being 38.  However, with the compounding of death risks, the absolute risk for an 80 year old are high and the 88 year old much, much higher. That is where the consequences of this virus concentrate. However, we are currently targeted at 250,000 deaths, not a million. At the current rate target of 250,000, the age shift is 2.9 years. Still, more 83 year olds die than do 80 year olds.

7. The Social Security Administration calculates that the American population of 330 million has an average of 45.8 years of life still to live--14.9 billion person-years. If a million people were to die early from COVID in 2020, that number would be reduced by 11.7 million years of life expectancy, i.e. the years taken away early by COVID.  Note that this reduces the overall American life expectancy by only about 1/1000th. 

Why so small? Because the people who do die skew old, and taken as a group only have 11.7 years of life expectancy lost, and there are few in the cohort of the elderly compared to the broader population, and fewer still who die. COVID has huge consequences for people who get sick from it and die, but looked at big picture on its effect on the total overall years of life still to be lived by Americans, it is almost invisible. And, again, these people dying are rarely the parents of young children or people in early or mid career, as was the Spanish Flu. It kills old people, people like me. 

Note: The research paper is dense, but filled with observations and data like these. Worth reading.

Policy implications

Politicians of both parties have called this a war on COVID.

There may be lots more casualties than deaths. We don't know the possible health effects on people who get the virus and stay alive. 

Looked at as a whole nation, and recognizing that people are being born and dying all the time, COVID could be viewed as simply one of the "costs of doing business", unfortunate but inevitable in a large country in the real world. Orchardists expect insect damage, retailers some shrinkage. Donald Trump attempted that attitude early on, abandoned it, then returned to it. The cure is worse than the disease, he said.  A few people die and "it is what it is" he said recently.

Democrats make an issue of the death count. Trump has led GOP voters to treat COVID as a manageable, inevitable problem, like the flu or high blood pressure, something to live with.

"It is what it is" sounded cold and un-empathetic to many Americans, and Democrats have jumped on it. Trump is, in fact, singularly un-empathetic. He was thinking about his popularity and re-election, not the lives of others.  Being coldly rational about people dying is not what a president is supposed to say aloud, but it is the way a general fighting a war needs to think. Commanders told troops landing at Normandy in 1944 that they were heroes and that they expected 2% of them to die, now go in and serve your country. The army ordered a million body bags in preparation for the invasion of Japan in 1945.

Trump's behavior is not irrational, and indeed it may be too rational for the circumstances. Selling you the benefit of your death on behalf of the economy and his re-election may be beyond  even Trump's ability. Still, from a broad, national perspective, the 250,000 deaths don't change the overall years left to live very much.

As Bob Warren wrote here on March 10, to the alarm and angry disapproval of commenters, older people had their turn and might serve everybody by getting out of the way. Click: Time for us old people to get out of the way  No one wants to hear that. I certainly don't.

Seniors aren't volunteering, but COVID may be drafting them. There are a lot of draft resisters, and they vote.


12 comments:

Anonymous said...

Comparing the response to Covid19 deaths as a tactical decision by a general omits one glaring omission - the objective. When you commit soldiers to battle there is an objective and there is preparation. We see nothing approaching an overall objective let alone preparation. To put a fine point on what I mean is to look at our own Revolutionary War of Independence and Washington's decision to winter in Valley Forge. The British troop had been inoculated against smallpox but the disease was sweeping through the rebel forces. Washington chose to withdraw his main force and inoculate them against smallpox away from the colonists since they were using a live virus for that purpose and could cause an outbreak in local towns.

Trump's response was insular - raise the drawbridges - and isolate. The disease was already here. He didn't know how deadly it would be. He made no plan to slow it or combat it. The effect on society infected was unknown. That Covid19 was most deadly to older people and minorities wasn't immediately apparent.

Going back to tactical language - the survey of the battlefield showed the deaths and causalities were among the most expendable. What a relief! But like Agent Orange and mustard gas the effect on those exposed left them disabled and chronically ill.

People are still being infected and the modeling varies widely in projecting the long-term outcome. What the actuarial tables are showing is a snapshot of a moving pandemic. Don't delude yourself and believe the numbers derived mean it is of little consequence for our country or build a case that Trump planned it this way. There was no plan there was chaos from the Trump Administration.

Curt said...

https://www.wbir.com/article/news/health/coronavirus/cdc-statistic-on-covid-19-deaths-does-not-mean-only-6-percent-died-of-the-virus/51-fa6bcf24-5f2a-44fb-9b2d-5bc9e499242a

There's a report out there that indicates that only about 6%, or 9,000 people have died solely from Covid-19. Most of the 170,000 who have died had contributing conditions, like diabetes, or cancer and they would have eventually died anyways. People who had Covid-19 who were in fatal auto accidents were misreported as dying from Covid-19. The Covid-19 death rate numbers have been grossly inflated.

To me, Covid-19 is similar to pneumonia, in that if you're young and healthy, then it probably won't hurt you, but if you're old and sickly (or overweight), then it could help kill you. We don't close-down society for pneumonia, and we shouldn't do it for Covid-19. Young people should be able to work, and the old and sickly can quarantine themselves.

John Flenniken said...

Curt you're mislead. The Trump administration has ordered the CDC to scrub the death certificates and minimize the numbers. Trump did that with testing too. If we don't test we don't know how many cases there are. He did that with the Diamond Princes cruise ship, counting the cases aboard as an isolated event and not related to the Covid outbreak in the US. Trump's response to the pandemic is all showmanship and no substance. Down play the issues and magnify his "efforts" a classic PR job. Disgusting!

Curt said...

John....
Why does it matter how many testing cases there have been? To me, all that matters are the number of deaths. Many people have caught Covid-19, and they were asystematic, and they got over it quickly. I had a short fever and chills for less than a day, and then it went away. Our best defense is the "herd immunity". So far there have been about 180,000 deaths in America, and that's an inflated number, and in a population of 330 million people, 180,000 deaths is a drop in the bucket. More people die from cigarettes, booze, and car wrecks than Covid. Nobody wants to die or to see others die, but the number of Covid deaths doesn't warrant a close-down of the economy.

Diane Newell Meyer said...

Nope not volunteering to sacrifice for my country that way! I am 77, and I have many of the pre-conditions, but I am not getting worse, as I manage them. Covid-19 would probably kill me painfully and fairly quickly. It would be correct to say that the cause of death was the corvid, not the pre-existing conditions.
Nope, not ready yet! I have a message, am not done yet, and wish to remain alive to keep contributing to society.

I will volunteer for any vaccinations, and will get the others (pneumonia and flu) soon.
A good point was made that more people are having relapses and lingering consequences of this disease than with other diseases.

Rick Millward said...

I personally think that the point of view that older people are expendable because they have had "more life" is ridiculous. A long life is a gift given to few of us and it should be cherished as such, following the metaphysical concept of the present moment being the only one, i.e., age is irrelevant to the experience of existence.

It's an individual's responsibility to find meaning for their lives right up to the last instant, which includes a reverence for our physical bodies, and certainly not for anyone else to judge its value.

In other cultures older people are respected for their wisdom, humanity and experience. Perhaps our society has strayed from this value.

Rick Millward said...

I personally think that the point of view that older people are expendable because they have had "more life" is ridiculous. A long life is a gift given to few of us and it should be cherished as such, following the metaphysical concept of the present moment being the only one, i.e., age is irrelevant to the experience of existence. It's an individual's responsibility to find meaning for their lives right up to the last instant, which includes a reverence for our physical bodies, and certainly not for anyone else to judge its value.

In other cultures older people are cherished for their wisdom, humanity and experience. Perhaps our society has strayed from this value.

Herbert Rothschild said...

I appreciate the data and the analysis based on it. But concentrating only on the death toll of the virus and suggesting that it is an acceptable number (so far) overlooks the total toll of the virus. Even if people don't die, large numbers get sick. That means that if the contagion is let largely unchecked, the economy and schools and the arts and entertainment can't function normally.
The numerous nations that have done so much better than Trump's America have not only cut the death toll by containing the spread of COVID-19, they have gotten their lives back on track much more quickly. . By containing the spread of the virus, they were able to open their economy and schools quite quickly. Trump was wrong to think that he could protect the economy (and his re-election prospects) by downplaying the virus. First containment, then re-opening.
I think experience has confirmed the truth of that last statement.

Sally said...

Recommend this explainer, in short video or transcript form.

https://zdoggmd.com/covid-death-stats/

Sally said...

Btw, that’s from a doctor whose personal politics are quite conservative, as you might discern from his take on the response.

But he’s a DOCTOR and he knows how deaths and death certificates work.

Dave Sage said...

Got a flu shot, shingles shot and pneumonia shot yesterday. As a 67 year old man who is healthy, I hope to see my 2 year old granddaughter graduate from high school. Maybe I can teach her something along the way. Sure hope so. Society can be measured by how they care for children and old people. How would you measure the USA in that regard? How would you measure Trump in that regard?

Ralph Bowman said...

Covid deaths are preventable not inevitable . Trump the powerhouse is tested multiple times a day because he is afraid, very afraid . He retreats to his bunker, gets his test and comes back out. It is not what it is, but what it is when steps are not taken to test, distance, mask, wash, trace and isolate. Poor healthcare has created morbidity, the under lying reason the virus is effective. Poor Americans understand this fact...they must go to work to eat. Most have very poor health care insurance plans...large deductibles so cant afford Dr visits. Look at South Korea..their death rate is close to Oregons because theY reacted and acted. Your Argument is specious. Die by the numbers...it’s inevitable. Who wants to go out onto the ice flow? Save the economy, die by suffocation! Put a plastic bag over your head so your son and his little wifey can buy a new couch for the living room. Be my guest.



Sent from my iPad