Title of article :
Measures of Mortality in Coronavirus (COVID-19) Compared with SARS and MERS
Author/Authors :
Allah Kalteh, Ehsan Infectious Disease Research Center - Golestan University of Medical Sciences, Gorgan , Sofizadeh, Aiuob Infectious Disease Research Center - Golestan University of Medical Sciences, Gorgan , Fararooei, Mohammad Department of Epidemiology - School of Health, HIV/AIDS Research Center - Research Institute for Health - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Ghelichi Ghojogh, Mousa Department of Epidemiology - Student Research Committee - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences , Aljalili, Somayeh Health Center of Kavar - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences
Abstract :
In late 2019, a novel coronavirus, now designated severe acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) was identified as the cause of an
outbreak of acute respiratory illness in Wuhan, a city in China. Mortality rate,
case fatality rate, and Years of Potential Life Lost can be measured by
determining death cases. Much of our information on mortality rates of diseases
can be obtained through a regular implementation of care plans that are often
developed to screen infectious diseases. In the YLL component, the higher the
individuals die at an earlier age, the longer their life is lost. For COVID-19, this
component refers to the simple subtraction of age at death due to COVID-19
from the standardized life expectancy for the same age in the same sex. A
potential application of health summary indices is to consider the non-fatal
consequences of diseases to ensure that they are taken into account in health
policy making. Given that COVID-19 has a non-fatal effect on a large number
of patients, the estimation of disease burden using the DALYs may be an
appropriate index for achieving this goal.
Keywords :
Coronavirus , Mortality rate , Case fatality rate , Covid-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , MERS
Journal title :
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Anesthesia