1/n
#Frailty is the MAIN #Covid19 risk
Swedish per capita excess mortality over 70 is almost EXCLUSIVELY in nursing homes ("särskilt boende") and home care ("hemtjänst").
Almost NO excess in no care ("ej").
@LTCcovid @MBattegay
socialstyrelsen.se/globalassets/1… ImageImage
2/n
baseline of previous years shows
1. per capita mortality risk is always much higher in elderly care settings. that means life expectancy is much shorter.
2. always MILD seasonality in deaths of all causes +/- 12.5%.
this year is different... cont. Image
3/n
Peak excess mortality in Sweden during 1st wave this year +~100% in nursing homes,
+~33% in at home elderly care.
maybe briefly in some weeks ~+25% in no care in 70+ years, this one is difficult to estimate from chart due to low baseline number. Image
4/n mortality data is for 1st wave
But: correlation between deaths ("avlidna") inside nursing homes ("äldereboende") vs outside ("ej") is incredibly stable in 2nd wave, too
NH bed capacity is just 1.3% of Swedish population, Covid19 death share is 50%
folkhalsomyndigheten.se/globalassets/s… ImageImage
5/n Exess mortality ("overdödlighet") during the 2nd wave in Sweden was LOWER than deaths with confirmed ("bekräftade") Covid19.
During the 1st wave it was slightly HIGHER. Some Covid19 deaths have a different cause ("dödsorak") of death folkhalsomyndigheten.se/globalassets/s… Image
6/n
Raw case and death data for Swedish elderly care settings is published continuously @LTCcovid
More cases ("labor...") and deaths ("avlidna") in institutional care ("särskilt") although much fewer people than at home care ("hemtjänst").
socialstyrelsen.se/statistik-och-… ImageImage
7/n
Frailty has been identified as a better predictor of Covid19 hospitalization outcomes than comorbidities and age.
thelancet.com/journals/lanpu…
8/n
Seroprevalence (per capita infection rates) in nursing homes is likely much higher than in age peers who live at home. But infection fatalities rates (IFR = individual outcome risk) are also much higher.
9/n
Per capita cases are lower in seniors than working age EXCEPT for the age group with many people who need elderly care: 80+. this is the same all over Europe. Mild/partial lockdowns do NOT solve that problem as illustrated by Germany this fall. Cases kept rising in 80+. Image
10/n other countries have similar patterns with >50% of C19 deaths in nursing homes and another signifcant share in at home elderly care. more data and analysis can be found in this thread:
11/n
Cumulative Swiss excess mortality in 2020 was almost exclusively in 80+ years (85%). Total: 6'509.
Data is not population growth adjusted, so it is OVERstated.
If >50% of Covid19 deaths are from nursing homes, excess mortality among non-residents is low in CH as well ImageImage
12/n 2020 excess mortality in Ticino nursing homes in months with Covid19 is also +~100% confirming the Swedish trend.
also notable: SUBmortality after spring wave in May and June.
www4.ti.ch/fileadmin/DSS/… Image
13/n Geneva had 84.7% of it's Covid19 deaths in some kind of elderly care. Consequently the burden of excess mortality is almost EXCLUSIVELY in elderly care.
details in this thread
14/n
Conclusion: SARSCoV2 infection risk AND Covid19 outcome risk have LONG TAIL DISTRIBUTIONS and are correlated with frailty
1. Frailty requires elderly care, putting persons at higher (nosocomial) infection risk.
2. Frailty weakens the immune system increasing outcome risk.
15/n
age specific models @keiserolivia @C_Althaus and antibody studies @silviast9 need to look at the special groups mentioned above in this thread:

1. nursing home residents
2. at home care recipients

Otherwise results are INACCURATE in seroprevalence, IFR, deaths, years lost.

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More from @CoronaReduit

21 Jan
1/n
Thread
Analysis of the political and practical naiveté of scientists calling for a pan-European response to Covid19.

@ViolaPriesemann @EckerleIsabella @TheLancet

2/n
the majority of solutions proposed in the paper are not new. TTIS, masks etc.
they just hope implementation timing and coordination become better (earlier) and execution more efficient. Why would it? No answer.
Politics by its very nature is REactive, not proactive.
3/n
if you overload bureaucracies with tasks, NO task will be executed well and ALL effects will diminish.
focus on a few important tasks. less is more.
understand entropy, it's principles apply to governments and populations.
Read 9 tweets
20 Jan
1/n
economics expert group of @SwissScience_TF asks for feedback on recent document on trade-offs.
here is ours.
@Marius_Brulhart @rlalive @MonikaBuetler
cc: @davidstadelmann
sciencetaskforce.ch/policy-brief/w…
2/n
vaccination is stimulus: yes.
the paper is built around the axiom of rapid vaccination of the vulnerable and everybody else.
is this realistic? prove it!
head of Swiss vaccination commission, Christoph Berger, expects herd immunity in 5-10 YEARS.
nzz.ch/schweiz/kurzin…
3/n
A. cantons HIDE vaccination data
B. anecdotal evidence show there is hesitance among the general population and nurses
C. low temperature logistics are complicated
D. elderly vaccination is complicated due to consent requirements from legal guardians
nzz.ch/zuerich/corona…
Read 6 tweets
19 Jan
1/n
Thread
SOLUTIONS to avoid the disproportionate burden of Covid19 on elderly care.
The vast majority of Covid19 deaths are in nursing homes and to a lesser degree in at home care.
@LTCcovid @SwissScience_TF @keiserolivia @MBattegay @eggersnsf @EicherManuela @curaviva_ch
2a/n nursing homes make up roughly ~1% of the overall population.
It MUST be possible to focus resources on this tiny population minority and achieve better outcomes.

We have 100'000 beds in Switzerland = 1.2% of population. Death share >>50%

gateway.euro.who.int/en/indicators/…
2b/n
we have made multiple threads with data and questions as to how and potentially why elderly care was/is hit so hard by Covid19

First: The patterns are similar all over the Western world and have WORSENED in many countries in the 2nd wave
Read 23 tweets
8 Dec 20
1/25 nursing homes make up ~50% of Covid19 deaths but just ~1% of the population all over the Western world. we are proposing an INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH to improve outcomes and understanding. a thread with questions and sources @LTCcovid @AdelinaCoHe @keiserolivia @samiahurst
2/n Terminology: why are we using "nursing home" instead of "long term care facility" in this thread. we are using NH as a synonym for LTCF in because 1. it is better understood by laypersons and 2. it is shorter. In some visualizations shown below the French acronym is EMS.
3a/n Nursing home residents make up ~1% of the overall population? yes, look at bed capacities published by WHO and national/local governments. in many countries it is even less gateway.euro.who.int/en/indicators/…
Read 25 tweets

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