Recent data suggests that the tolls from COVID-19 could be far higher in India than what the country has reported. Excess mortality has been assessed at nearly 1.2 million deaths for the year 2020 in the country—just showing a very real situation, much graver than what had come to the fore earlier. Thus, this grim figure gives rise to many questions about the actual impact of the pandemic in India and brings out a challenge: arriving at an appropriate estimate of its consequences.
The number of “excess deaths” refers to deaths reported in a period that are in excess of what might be predicted based on prior trends. It provides an indicator of the wider views of how a pandemic has affected society, covering not only the direct deaths attributed to the virus itself but also all indirect effects, which will include disruptions to health service delivery, delay of treatment for other conditions, and the psychological toll on populations.
The gross discrepancies between official COVID-19 death tolls and excess death estimates point to an underreporting of the true impact of the pandemic. The huge challenges with regard to testing and reporting of COVID-19 cases in India in the early period of the pandemic must have been contributing factors to the underestimation of the death toll. There were, besides logistic and infrastructural issues, serious problems with how the deaths were recorded and categorized. Many of the deaths, particularly those occurring outside hospitals or not directly attributed to confirmed cases of COVID-19, might have been miscounted.
Excess death figures give a death toll way above the officially declared count of COVID-19 deaths. This gap in reporting has deep implications for appreciating the actual extent of the losses caused by the pandemic and building appropriate responses to health crises in the future. This also requires better data collection and reporting systems that would provide for the correct capture and addressing of such information.
Among the various demographic groups in India, it was in the case of Muslims that there was a steep fall in expectancy. The data pegs the decline in life expectancy for Muslims at over five years due to the pandemic. This decline is indicative of the severe impact of the pandemic on marginalized communities and highlights the disparities in health outcomes that were exacerbated by the crisis.
This could have been caused by numerous reasons. Socioeconomic disparities, accessibility to healthcare, and pre-existing health conditions mainly determine health outcomes. In most cases, marginalized populations rarely get to access quality healthcare, in which category fall many Muslims in India. Therefore, in a health crisis such as COVID-19, this may result in further worsening of the situation.
The reduction in life expectancy amongst Muslims has to be understood within a larger set of system-wide problems affecting healthcare and public health infrastructure. The pandemic would expose and scale up inequities, underscoring the need for targeted interventions to meet needs specific to vulnerable populations. Of importance in dampening future health shocks are ways designed to improve access to health care, increase investment in public health infrastructure, and ensure proper resource distribution.
The issue of excess deaths and life expectancy decline also brought up the question of the long-term consequences of the pandemic. The immediate health effects of the pandemic notwithstanding, it has been proven to have a long-term impact on mental health, economic stability, and social well-being. Strategies to deal with such broader impacts require a comprehensive approach that incorporates, other than health-care responses, mental health services, economic recovery efforts, and social safety nets.
Transparent reporting and accurate data collection in the aftermath are needed in India. The real situation of the impact of COVID-19 has to be known so that effective shaping of public health policies and responses can be done. Such data would be very instrumental in designing interventions that are targeted and effective; this will help to ensure that resources are allocated to where they are needed most and that future health crises can be managed effectively.
The lessons from COVID-19 also offer an opportunity to strengthen preparedness against further health emergencies. This includes very critical components of health infrastructure, data collection systems, and the reduction of health disparities that all go toward building resilience against future pandemics. Such investment will not only help in responding to emergencies more effectively but also in enhancing people’s overall health and well-being.
In other words, the new data on excess deaths and the fall in the expected years of life among Muslims in India reiterates the ravages of COVID-19 and the challenges in ascertaining its toll. This huge gap between official death counts and excess death estimates is a pointer to the need for improved data collection and reporting. The broader impacts of the pandemic would have to be approached only in a comprehensive way in which health care responses, mental health support, and systemic inequalities are included. It is in this scenario that lessons learned from the experience of the pandemic could be applied to building an equitable and more efficient public health system for India and combating future challenges.