Relationship between economical and sociodemographic health indicators and social development with COVID-19 mortality in the first 120 days of the pandemic

Authors

  • Renato Ferrándiz Espadin Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia. Lima
  • Javier Cieza Zevallos Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia. Lima

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.20453/rmh.v32i1.3944

Abstract

Objective: To describe mortality of COVID-19 in relationship with social aspects, economical and sociodemographic indicators of health of the first countries affected at the beginning of the pandemic. Methods: A longitudinal descriptive study was carried-out, 63 countries affected at different magnitude were selected and followed from the first day they declare the first patient until May 31st 2020 with data gathered from WHO, PAHO, KNOEMA, DATOS MACRO, INDEX MUNDI and from the Johns Hopkins University. Results: At 60-days the mean day of conformation of the first case correlated with mortality, at 75-days of the pandemic obesity correlated with mortality. Conclusions: At the beginning of the pandemic, societies with higher life expectancies, where obese people and people with significant co-morbidities predominate, had higher mortality rates compared to less developed countries where transmissible diseases predominate. Fatal outcomes occur despite of having abundant economical resources, revealing the existence of elements that inevitable led to negative outcomes.

Published

2021-04-16

How to Cite

1.
Ferrándiz Espadin R, Cieza Zevallos J. Relationship between economical and sociodemographic health indicators and social development with COVID-19 mortality in the first 120 days of the pandemic. Rev Méd Hered [Internet]. 2021 Apr. 16 [cited 2024 Apr. 25];32(1):20-32. Available from: https://revistas.upch.edu.pe/index.php/RMH/article/view/3944

Issue

Section

ORIGINAL RESEARCH

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