But is it really no worse than flu?

By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley

Some commenters responding to this daily series providing some information about the Chinese virus have repeated what seems to have become something of a mantra among libertarians who, understandably, dislike the idea of widespread lockdowns, with the loss of freedom and the economic damage that they entail. That mantra is that the Chinese virus is no more infections or no more fatal than flu, and that if we had allowed everyone to acquire immunity by catching the infection and throwing it off all would be well.

Look at today’s graph. Though the downtrend in the daily compound growth rate in total confirmed cases now appears well established, that growth rate is still very high, averaging around 8% globally outside China and occupied Tibet, where the numbers are unreliable.

Fig. 1. Mean compound daily growth rates in confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection for the world excluding China (red) and for several individual nations averaged over the successive seven-day periods ending on all dates from March 14 to April 7, 2020.
Fig. 1. Mean compound daily growth rates in confirmed cases of COVID-19 infection for the world excluding China (red) and for several individual nations averaged over the successive seven-day periods ending on all dates from March 14 to April 7, 2020.

The red curve shows the case growth rate for the world excluding China. If the 8% daily growth rate were to continue, yesterday’s 1,430,919 confirmed cases (many of which tend to be those serious enough to have come to the authorities’ attention, since testing is still occurring on a tiny scale in most countries) would have risen to nearly 8 million by the end of April, and more than 80 million by the end of May.

It is important, therefore, to ensure that the now well established downtrend is maintained. That is why, for the time being, governments will be keeping lockdowns in place. It would be irresponsible to do otherwise.

Of course, one might legitimately argue that, if the Chinese virus were really no worse than flu, the crippling social and economic cost of lockdowns would be unjustifiable.

Fig. 2. Monckton’s outdoor personal protective equipment
Fig. 2. Monckton’s outdoor personal protective equipment

But governments cannot afford to make policy on the assumption, perhaps a little too carelessly made by some commenters here, that the virus is no more dangerous and no more infectious than flu.

Here, then, to help us to begin to answer that important question, are some tolerably reliable, real-world data. I am grateful to the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Center in London for having made details from its Case Mix Programme Database available. The Case Mix Programme is the national clinical audit of patient outcomes from adult critical care.

The Center has recently issued a report on all confirmed UK cases reported to it up to midday on 3 April, just a few days ago. Critical care units notify the Center as soon as they have admitted any patient with confirmed Chinese virus, together with demographics, initial physiological state, organ support and eventual outcome.

The report concerns 2249 patients, whose mean age at admission was 60 years, compared with 58 years for 4759 patients with non-COVID-19 viral pneumonia, most of them caused by flu, over the three complete years 2017-2019.

Of the 2249 patients, 346 (15%) have died, 344 (15%) have been discharged alive, and 1559 (69%) are still in critical care. The case fatality rate, as a fraction of all closed cases admitted to intensive care, is thus a little over 50%, compared with only 22% for the non-COVID viral pneumonias of the past three years. In each age-group (under 50, 50-69 and 70+), the percentage of patients admitted to critical care with the Chinese virus and subsequently dying in hospital is at least twice the percentage of critical-care patients with other viral pneumonias over the previous three years.

Among those requiring ventilation, two-thirds die by the end of their critical care and only one-third survive. Therefore, the case fatality rate for closed cases where ventilation was required is more than 67%, compared with only 16% for non-COVID viral pneumonia cases requiring ventilation.

Worse, advanced respiratory support for Chinese-virus cases is typically maintained for between 4 and 9 days (average 6 days), while it is not needed at all in non-COVID-19 viral-pneumonia cases, which require only basic respiratory support, and require it only for 2-4 days (average 3 days). The data are similar for cardiovascular support, and for renal support. The Chinese-virus cases tend to require advanced rather than basic support, and to require it for twice as long. And yet, even after all that extra care, the case fatality rate is many times higher than for non-COVID viral pneumonias.

On the assumption that about half of all this year’s critical cases of seasonal viral pneumonia would have occurred by now, and making no allowance for any further exponential growth in Chinese-virus cases in intensive care, and assuming that the summer will stop the virus causing critical cases (an assumption that the authorities, rightly, do not regard themselves as being in any position to make yet), there are approximately three times as many serious Chinese-virus cases than all other viral pneumonias combined, including those caused by flu, in a typical year, and at least twice as many of these will die than with other serious viral pneumonia cases.

Thus, the Chinese virus is six times more fatal than pre-existing viral pneumonias, including those caused by flu.

In the past three years, some 46% of viral-pneumonia cases were female and 54% male. With the Chinese virus, however, only 27% are female and 63% are male.

The report also considers ethnicity. About four-fifths of the UK population is White, but only two-thirds of the critical cases to date are Whites. Blacks, in particular, are three times over-represented in intensive care: they represent one case in seven, but are only one in 20 of the population.

Body mass index was also studied, but the number of cases in the below-normal, normal, overweight, obese and morbidly obese categories is not far out of line with the general population, two-thirds of whom are overweight or obese. Some 72% of intensive-care Chinese-virus cases are overweight or obese.

Interestingly, the number of cases with cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, hepatic, cancerous or immunocompromised comorbidities was quite small. In all these categories, it was less than for the usual viral pneumonias over the past three years.

In the past three years, non-COVID viral pneumonias have put 43% of patients on to ventilators within the first 24 hours. The Chinese virus, however, is worse: it puts 63% on to ventilators within the first 24 hours. Therefore, governments planning hospital capacity for Chinese-virus cases must make extra allowance for the greater demands, both in advanced rather than basic care and in days of treatment, than other viral-pneumonia cases.

The doctor through whom I came upon these figures, who has himself suffered with the Chinese virus and has recovered, is very angry that for political reasons those who understandably dislike lockdowns have been maintaining, contrary to the evidence, that the Chinese virus is “no worse than flu”.

Be in no doubt. This disease is a lot worse than flu. It puts more people into intensive care, where they require costlier and more advanced treatment, where they will be in intensive care for twice the time required by other viral pneumonia-patients, and where they are more than twice as likely to die as those other patients.

So don’t dismiss it lightly. Not any more. Wash hands often. Wear full-face masks when out of doors or away from home. Take Vitamin D3 daily. Be safe.

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StubbornlyRational
April 10, 2020 11:22 am

Thanks for this very thoughtful and informative article. Is there a typo in the following paragraph?
———–
In the past three years, some 46% of viral-pneumonia cases were female and 54% male. With the Chinese virus, however, only 27% are female and 63% are male.
———–

It seems the last phrase should be either “27% are female and 73% male” or “37% female and 63% male”. The former is a much more significant difference from the viral-pneumonia pattern than the latter.

April 10, 2020 12:40 pm

Excellent analysis Christopher Monckton of Brenchley!
Easily the best and most open analysis I’ve read since January.

Though, I must warn you that some of the alleged conservative news sites are very sensitive to COVID-19 reality discussions.
The Gateway Pundit banned me and erased my comment/likes/dislikes history there for pointing out TGP’s stating COVID-19 is less deadly than the flu is incorrect.
No warnings. No corrections. No advice to tone the comments down; just a leap to full tyrannical censorship.

Requests for an appeal review were flatly ignored.
There is no such thing as the First Amendment at “The Gateway Pundit”.

Recent studies about the infectiousness of COVID-19 support the supposed the more outrageous claims about infection rates.
In regards to researchers demonstrating COVID-19 is highly infectious from the moment the infection starts for at least eight days while the throat infection progresses.
Patients remain infectious as long as the virus remains active in the patient’s lungs.

The saving grace appears to be significant portions of the population who were exposed to a less deadly coronavirus recently; greatly preventing pre-exposed populations from getting seriously sick during their COVID-19 infection.

Reply to  ATheoK
April 11, 2020 6:58 am

The saving grace appears to be significant portions of the population who were exposed to a less deadly coronavirus recently; greatly preventing pre-exposed populations from getting seriously sick during their COVID-19 infection.

This is interesting, do you have any more details?

Pete C
April 10, 2020 12:59 pm

Monkton, with your stated love of WHO (/sarc), is there a reason why they named CoViD-19 as a “Disease” containing two viruses rather than calling out the virus that is causing the deaths? Its full code name is SARS-CoV-2. Coronavirus is the infectious common cold that is milder than influenza, but COVID-19 has an attached virus called Sudden Acute Respiratory Syndrome. Asia (SARS 2002) and the Middle East (MERS 2012 which should be called ME-SARS) are already aware of the procedures needed to limit casualties.

Can the coronavirus part of COVID-19 infect without SARS or are some already immune to SARS? Are they testing for SARS/COVID-19 or only coronavisus?

Pete C
Reply to  Pete C
April 10, 2020 1:19 pm

I mentioned to my neighbors that it is SARS that is killing people. They gave me that “fake news” look because it has not been mentioned in news they are watching.

ak in vt
April 10, 2020 2:10 pm

My friend who has been tested for the “virus” and is now on day 13 of ventilator, waiting for tracheotomy said before he went into ICU and was induced to sleep that he “Would not wish this on anyone.” However, he added that he thought it was wrong for the Vermont state government to protect us. He believed it was our choice if we wanted to self-isolate or take the risk of becoming infected. Most will survive, some will die, and the chances of my friend surviving are about 33%. I am sure he would still insist that government does not have the right to protect us from our own selves.

The statistics don’t matter regarding the lockdown. Freedom is what matters: for what is life without freedom? What is life if we live in fear?

Regards
AK in VT

Reply to  ak in vt
April 10, 2020 9:32 pm

If he was in my family I would try to get him into remdesivir expanded usage trials.
Only 18% of patients getting it died who were on a mechanical ventilator.
The average time for all patients in the study was 12 days…not so different from your friend.
Best of luck to him.

SurferDave
April 10, 2020 9:28 pm

Given that this virus originated in a US biodefence facility, why are you calling it ‘chinese’, is that some latent racism?
Google ‘mysterious vaping lung disease’, I guess they don’t have that anymore because now it is called ‘chinese virus’? The ‘vaping disease’ predated the ‘chinese’ disease, and the ‘vaping disease’ is clearly the same thing, so clearly it originated in the USA and was taken to China by Americans.

gbaikie
Reply to  SurferDave
April 11, 2020 12:36 am

“so clearly it originated in the USA and was taken to China by Americans.”
Sounds quite unlikely, but let’s say it’s true. It still spread all over the world from China – hence it’s the Chinese Flu.
I blame Chinese govt and WHO.
If you want to call it the WHO flu, that sounds ok with me.
Or the party which one might expect to be responsible is WHO.
If are actually expecting CCP to be responsible, you have serious delusional problems.

Gator
Reply to  gbaikie
April 11, 2020 7:26 am

If are actually expecting CCP to be responsible, you have serious delusional problems.

Surfer proves beyond any reasonable doubt that he has delusional issues with this upthread comment…

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/04/09/but-is-it-really-no-worse-than-flu/#comment-2962282

Too many cool waves! LOL

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