The article about the controversial study in Heinsberg is now finished:
link
The authors estimate the mortality rate between 0.29% and 0.45%. However, their result is only based on 7 deaths so there is a lot of uncertainty (which is not included in the given confidence interval!)
I made a rough calculation. If you also assume the number of deaths as random and apply an very easy model you get a mortality rate between 0.21% and 0.60%.
There are also some additional interesting results.
It is assumed that a carnival celebration spread the virus and this is confirmed by the data. Interestingly only 19% of the infected people who attended the carnival were asymptomatic whereas 55% of the infected people who didn't attend were asymptomatic.
Does anyone have a good explanation for that? Was the virus load extremely high during the carnival celebration, which was indoors? Was the immune system of the guests unusually weakened?
It is confirmed that the infection risk increases if one member of the household is infected. Surprisingly this risk increases if the infected person is a child. However this result is not significant. There are two few cases to get reliable results.
This would be in agreement with the study of Christian Dorsten (link), which finds similar virus concentration in children and adults but was critized as Jagartrott wrote.
Another study (https://t.co/XfpT7Iu3ym?amp=1) finds that children have a significantly lower risk to get an infection.
So maybe children are as infectious as adults, but fewer get infected and so there are not the main source of spread.
link
The authors estimate the mortality rate between 0.29% and 0.45%. However, their result is only based on 7 deaths so there is a lot of uncertainty (which is not included in the given confidence interval!)
I made a rough calculation. If you also assume the number of deaths as random and apply an very easy model you get a mortality rate between 0.21% and 0.60%.
There are also some additional interesting results.
It is assumed that a carnival celebration spread the virus and this is confirmed by the data. Interestingly only 19% of the infected people who attended the carnival were asymptomatic whereas 55% of the infected people who didn't attend were asymptomatic.
Does anyone have a good explanation for that? Was the virus load extremely high during the carnival celebration, which was indoors? Was the immune system of the guests unusually weakened?
It is confirmed that the infection risk increases if one member of the household is infected. Surprisingly this risk increases if the infected person is a child. However this result is not significant. There are two few cases to get reliable results.
This would be in agreement with the study of Christian Dorsten (link), which finds similar virus concentration in children and adults but was critized as Jagartrott wrote.
Another study (https://t.co/XfpT7Iu3ym?amp=1) finds that children have a significantly lower risk to get an infection.
So maybe children are as infectious as adults, but fewer get infected and so there are not the main source of spread.