HomeNewsWorldLockdown may have averted over 3 million COVID-related deaths in Europe: Study

Lockdown may have averted over 3 million COVID-related deaths in Europe: Study

According to Dr Bhatt, the rate of transmission has declined from high levels to ones under control in all European countries they study.

June 09, 2020 / 13:04 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Non-pharmaceutical measures such as lockdown and school closures may have averted more than three million deaths in 11 European countries hit by the novel coronavirus pandemic, said researchers.

In a modelling study of lockdown from Imperial College London scientists, published online in Nature, the team used death data to infer changes in the course of the COVID-19 epidemic as a result of non-pharmaceutical interventions. They analysed data from 11 countries in Europe, including the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, Germany and Belgium, up until May 4.

Story continues below Advertisement

In the study, the team estimated that by that date between 12 and 15 million individuals in these countries had been infected with the novel coronavirus, which is 3.2 percent to 4 percent of the population, with large country-to-country fluctuations.

By comparing the number of observed deaths against those predicted by their model in the absence of interventions, the authors suggest that approximately 3.1 million deaths have been averted due to non-pharmaceutical measures.