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Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

The relentless pace of death due to Covid-19 is continuing and now being increasingly borne by the poorest places in the world.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations
Beds sit during the preparation of a 100 bed non-critical hospital for Covid-19 treatment at the the Nehru Science Centre in Mumbai, India. (Photographer: Dhiraj Singh/Bloomberg)

The relentless pace of death from the global Covid-19 pandemic is continuing unabated despite global vaccination efforts, and is now being increasingly borne by the poorest places in the world.

More than 3 million lives have been lost as a result of the novel coronavirus that emerged in 2019, with the latest 1 million recorded deaths coming even faster than the first two. It took about 8.5 months after the initial fatality in China to mark the first million, and just another 3.5 months to reach the second million.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

The death toll passed 3 million on Saturday, according to Johns Hopkins University data, only about three months since crossing the 2 million mark on Jan. 15. The shortening intervals, coupled with the increasing number of new cases worldwide, is dealing a blow to hopes that the end of the pandemic is in sight with the widespread deployment of vaccines.

The real death toll from Covid-19 is likely far higher than 3 million, due to under and patchy reporting around the world.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

The grim milestone underscores a widening disparity in combating the pandemic, which parallels the gap in vaccine access. While mortality rates have largely slowed in the U.S. and parts of Europe thanks to vaccine rollouts that promise a return to some semblance of a normal life, the developing world -- Brazil in particular -- is shouldering a rising death toll.

Just five places account for about half of the last million deaths. The U.S. alone claimed 18% of the world total, still the highest country share.

But the ground is shifting. The mortality burden is growing in less wealthy parts of the world, including those that are struggling to access vaccines. Among the last million fatalities, Brazil’s share grew by 9.5 percentage points compared to the previous million deaths, followed by Mexico and Peru.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

Other countries have reduced their share of the last million fatalities, with India, Iran and Argentina dropping the most. Developed countries from Italy and the U.S. to France and Belgium also had a smaller share in the new death toll compared to the previous million.

The findings underscore the need to get immunizations out to the world, public health officials said. About 40% of the Covid-19 vaccines administered have gone to people in 27 wealthy nations that account for just 11% of the world’s population, according to the Bloomberg Vaccine Tracker.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

“There are many countries where people haven’t received a single immunization,” said Bali Pulendran, a professor of microbiology and immunology at Stanford University in California. “It’s not sufficient to vaccinate everyone in a single country. Unless you vaccinate the entire population, you aren’t going to control the pandemic.”

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

Disparities in immunization pose a threat to the world. The more the coronavirus spreads unchecked, the more opportunity it has to develop dangerous mutations. Some existing vaccines have already been shown to be less effective against new variants like the one from South Africa. The chance of a mutation entering a highly-vaccinated country and igniting another wave of Covid cannot be discounted.

Covid Claims 3 Million Lives as Burden Shifts to Poorer Nations

“Vaccines are giving us light at the end of the tunnel but we’re not there yet,” said World Health Organization Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus in a briefing earlier this month. “We must all continue to protect ourselves and those around us by making the right choices.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.