HomeNewsOpinionCOVID-19 Deaths | WHO report questionable, but India needs to improve data systems

COVID-19 Deaths | WHO report questionable, but India needs to improve data systems

The argument that India’s stance on these modelled estimates are entirely political, does not hold water. But numbers have to be rebutted by numbers; and the government needs to come up with its own comprehensive data, if it hopes to denounce the estimates published by WHO 

May 10, 2022 / 10:29 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

The release of the modelled estimates for excess deaths during the Covid19 pandemic by the World Health Organization has raised a lot of hackles within the corridors of power in New Delhi. Though it’s only in the form of data compilations and a final report is awaited, it gives India the unenviable crown of being the epicentre of Covid-19 deaths in the world.

The official tally of Covid19 deaths in the country stands at 0.52 million at the time of writing this piece; the WHO estimate puts the figure at 4.7 million during the period till the end of 2021. This implies that India had the highest mortality due to Covid-19 in the world and that our reporting systems are inefficient or fudged the data. These are unpalatable figures for a government which has been trying to champion a narrative around how the country was able to ‘successfully defeat Covid19’. It is true that the government was able to launch an extremely ambitious vaccination programme which has administered more than 1.9 billion doses since its roll-out, but the new revelations about the undercounting of deaths were not entirely unexpected.

Story continues below Advertisement

In the middle of 2021, some activists had come out with accusations of massive undercounting of Covid-19 deaths in the country’s most populous state Uttar Pradesh. Most public health experts agree that there has been some undercounting of deaths, due to the political pressure on states to perform and the challenges in the Civil Registration System (CRS), but the scale of under counting mentioned in the WHO report has surprised many.

The Press Information Bureau (PIB) of the government published a rebuttal immediately after the modelling estimates were released. The biggest argument was about the methodology followed for the estimates. The methodology was established by the WHO in collaboration with the United Nations Department of Economic & Social Affairs (UN DESA) through a Technical Advisory Group on Covid-19 Mortality Assessment. The group incidentally had Prof Anand Krishnan of All India Institute of Medical Science, New Delhi, as one of its members.