H1N1 killed 10 times more than estimated
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The 2009 H1N1 "swine flu" epidemic killed up to 203,000 people across the globe - a death toll 10 times greater than initially estimated by the World Health Organization, researchers say.
In a study published Tuesday in the journal PLOS Medicine, epidemiologists used data on respiratory deaths in 20 nations to calculate a global mortality rate for the pandemic.
Prior to this research, the WHO counted just 18,631 lab-confirmed cases of H1N1, a viral infection of the airways.
"This study confirms that the H1N1 virus killed many more people globally than originally believed," read a statement from Lone Simonsen, a research professor in the Department of Global Health at George Washington University.
"We also found that the mortality burden of this pandemic fell most heavily on younger people and those living in certain parts of the Americas," Simonsen said.
The 2009 pandemic was far from the worst such outbreak. In 1918, the Spanish influenza pandemic killed 50 million people, roughly 2 percent of the world population at that time.
Nevertheless, researchers said it was important for health care providers to understand the full impact of recent flu pandemics.
The relatively modest number of deaths estimated by the WHO prompted some to question whether the overall response to the 2009 outbreak was excessive. However, Simonsen and her colleagues argued that lab-confirmed influenza deaths would underestimate the broad reach of the illness.
"Many influenza-related deaths result from secondary bacterial infections or from exacerbation of preexisting chronic conditions, and are not recorded as related to influenza infection," authors wrote.
Among the findings that surprised researchers was the age and geographic distribution of deaths. Most of the people who died - 62 per cent to 85 per cent - were younger than age 65. Traditionally, seasonal influenza hits seniors the hardest.
Researchers also calculated that flu-related deaths were 20 times greater in Central and South America than in European countries. That finding stood in sharp contrast to an earlier US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimate that heaviest mortality rates occurred in Africa and Southeast Asia, and that death rates in the Americas were lower.
The research was funded by the WHO and relied on viral illness and mortality data from 20 nations from 2005 to 2009. The sampled nations represented 35 per cent of the world's population, and researchers then used statistical methods to calculate mortality rates for all nations.
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