What are the risks of COVID? And what is meant by ‘the risks of COVID’?
As COVID-19 changes from being seen as a societal threat to a problem in risk management, it is essential that we get a handle on the magnitudes of the risk we face, and try to work out ways to communicate these appropriately. Note that I am only covering the lethal risks, not the potentially important consequences of illness or treatment.
When discussing the risks surrounding COVID, it is very important to carefully distinguish —
- The risks of dying from COVID-19, among people who get it (known as the Infection Fatality Rate IFR ). This will depend on your health, medical care and so on.
- The risk of dying from COVID-19, among people who do not currently have it (known as the Population Fatality Rate PFR). This will be influenced, of course, by the risk of getting it in the first place, as well as the factors influencing the Infection Fatality Rate.
Fortunately new data and analyses permit more insight into these quantities, and point the way to communicate these risks. I’m going to cover the Population Fatality Rate now, finish off with a rant, and return to the IFR in a future blog.
So everything from now on refers to the risks faced by people who were not currently infected.
Population Fatality Rates
The latest data from the Office for National Statistics covers deaths registered in England and Wales up to May 1st, and the table below presents COVID population fatality rates over the peak 5 weeks of the epidemic.
It’s a complex table but worth studying.
- Starting at the first row, 2 deaths have been recorded among over 10 million children under 15 (around 1 in 5 million), an extremely low risk that that represents only 1% of the normal risk faced by this group over this period (and it is worth noting that 95% of COVID deaths in hospital have underlying health conditions).
- At the other extreme, 1.2% (1 in 81) of the over-90s died with COVID in these five weeks. These 6,504 deaths can be compared to the average number over this period over the last five years, which is 10,644, so the ‘COVID risk’ represents 61% of normal risk. So living through this 35-day period of the epidemic is as if these people have on average been exposed to an extra 23 days risk (62% of 35). This represents roughly 3,000 times the risk to which 15–24s have been exposed.
- Taken as a whole, 1 in 1,807 of the population died and had COVID on their death certificate, which represents a 65% increase over the normal risk, equivalent to an extra 23 days over and above the 35 days to which they had been exposed.
The risks differ for men and women, and a full table is provided at the bottom of the blog, and shown in the graphs below.
The amazing linearity of the data on the logarithmic scale shows that COVID rates have a fairly precise exponential increase with age, increasing at around 11–12% each year, corresponding to a doubling every 6–7 years. This means that a 20-year age-gap increased the risk by around 8-fold. So, compared to a 20-year-old, an 80-year-old had 8 * 8 * 8 ~ 500 times the risk of dying.
Men had roughly double the risk compared with women of the same age.
The extra COVID population death rates are roughly proportional (ie parallel on a logarithmic scale) to ‘normal’ death rates for over 45s, but well below normal rates for younger ages. Note these are IN ADDITION to the normal rates.
The same data can be shown on a linear scale, which better displays the huge variation of population risk with age.
A simple interpretation of the population fatality rates.
Over this 5-week period covering the peak of the epidemic-
- Men had roughly double the risk of getting the virus and dying, compared with women of the same age.
- Fatal risks doubled for each 6–7 years extra age: compared to a 20-year-old, an 80-year-old had ~ 500 times the risk of dying from COVID.
- For over 45s, the possibility of catching the virus and then dying from COVID added a fatal risk roughly equivalent to an extra 3 weeks of normal risk to the 5 weeks being considered.
- For those between 15 and 45, the possibility of COVID added a fatal risk roughly equivalent to an extra 1 week of normal risk to the 5 weeks being considered.
- For under 15s, the possibility of COVID added a negligible fatal risk.
The lesser relative effect of COVID on younger groups could be partly because risks their ‘normal’ risk will be more strongly influenced by accidents and non-natural causes, whereas COVID seems to multiply your risk of ‘natural causes’ — it just seems to take any frailty and multiply it.
These are observed historical rates in the population, and cannot be quoted as the future risks of getting COVID and dying. In particular the risks of infection will be altered by factors that limit your exposure, and will be expected to drop massively as the epidemic is brought under control. In contrast we might expect the fatality rate if you become infected to remain fairly stable over time.
What do we mean by ‘the risks of COVID’?
Please permit me a rant. It is vital for journalists and everyone else (including me) to try and avoid phrases like ‘the risks of dying from COVID-19’, as this is deeply ambiguous. As I said at the start, it crucially depends on the group it refers to, as it could mean-
- The risks of dying from COVID-19, among people who get it (the Infection Fatality Rate IFR ).
- The risk of dying from COVID-19, among people who do not currently have it (Population Fatality Rate PFR).
These are so easily confused. An analysis last week by the Office for National Statistics reported that Black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) groups were about twice as likely, after adjusting for some contextual factors, of dying from COVID. But this clearly referred to the population fatality rate — in other words BAME groups had a higher risk of both getting the disease and then dying from it, and an unknown part of this excess risk could come from an increased risk of catching the virus, perhaps through coming in contact with more people in their daily lives. But in the BBC 10pm News on May 7th, this was reported as BAME individuals being “90% more likely to die, if they became seriously ill with COVID-19”, which is not at all what was being claimed and could be very misleading: ethnicity was not an important risk factor for COVID patients who were hospitalised.
Data sources:
- Weekly occurrence data from the 12th May bulletin from the Office for National Statistics release Deaths registered weekly in England and Wales, provisional: week ending 1 May 2020, and can be downloaded as a spreadsheet. The tab Weekly Figures 2020, Column 18 provides total, five-year average and COVID deaths.
- Average 5-year deaths from Five-year average weekly deaths registered in England and Wales, by gender and age groupings
- Population from All data related to Population estimates for the UK, England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, provisional: mid-2019, tabs MYE2, MYE3.