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Thursday, 29 April 2021

16 Apr 21: Brazil on the brink

 One in four global COVID-19 deaths is reported from Brazil with a health care system on the verge of collapse

Mar 17Apr 157-day averageDaily new deaths2,0004,000December 15Earliest detected P1 variant cases

Brazil leads the world in the average number of new COVID-19 deaths, accounting for about one in every four reported each day.

The surge comes amid the outbreak of the P1 coronavirus variant first discovered in Brazil and inadequate social distancing requirements in the country.

The local variant, first detected in December 2020, is mutating in ways that could make it easier to evade antibodies, according to scientists. Studies have shown the variant to be as much as 2.5 times more contagious than the original coronavirus and more resistant to antibodies.

The country’s overall death toll is second only to the United States despite Brazil having two-thirds the population, and experts expect the nation could catch up to the U.S. as vaccinations curtail the outbreak in America while Brazil’s healthcare system faces major capacity issues.

A strained healthcare system

More than 80% of ICU beds in 24 of Brazil’s 26 states and its federal district were occupied as of March 15, 2021, according to the Brazilian public health research institution, Fiocruz.

ICU bed occupancy level

 High: >80%  Medium: 60–80%  Low: <60%

July 17, 2020

At the peak of last summer’s COVID-19 wave in Brazil, 3 states were experiencing high ICU bed occupancy rates.

Sao PaoloBrasiliaRio de Janeiro

October 5, 2020

By October, the summer surge had gone down and no states were experiencing high ICU bed capacities.

Sao PaoloBrasiliaRio de Janeiro

January 4, 2021

But by the beginning of the new year, the P1 variant had been detected and cases were surging again.

Sao PaoloBrasiliaRio de Janeiro

March 15, 2021

By mid-March, nearly the entire country was experiencing critically high levels of ICU bed occupancy.

Sao PaoloBrasiliaRio de Janeiro

Source: Fiocruz COVID-19 Observatory

The outbreak is also increasingly affecting younger people, with hospital data showing that last month the majority of those in intensive care were aged 40 or younger, according to a new report released by the Brazilian Association of Intensive Medicine (AMIB).

In addition to hospital capacity, new reports have surfaced of dwindling supplies to treat critically ill patients.

Brazil’s richest and most populous state, Sao Paulo, warned its ability to care for seriously ill COVID-19 patients was on the verge of collapse as it ran perilously low on key drugs, according to a letter to the federal government seen by the Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper.

The health minister, Marcelo Queiroga, said on Thursday Brazil is negotiating with other countries, including Spain, to receive emergency medications needed for intubated COVID-19 patients.

Latin American countries lead the world in excess mortality

Brazil’s surge comes amid a crisis that spans Latin America — cases are surging in nearly every country. Mortality rates show Latin American countries have suffered the most excess deaths — deaths above the average recorded in previous years — throughout the pandemic.

Among countries where data were available, five of the top 10 were Latin American nations cracked the top ten in terms of average percent excess mortality from January 2020–February 2021 (compared to the average death rate from 2015–2019):

Total % excess deaths reported, Jan. 2020 – Feb. 2021


 +62% Ecuador

Mexico

57 Mexico

Bolivia

53 Bolivia

San Marino

33 San Marino

Armenia

29 Armenia

Brazil

24 Brazil

Oman

22 Oman

United States

21 United States

Liechtenstein

21 Liechenstein

Czechia

20 Czechia

Chile

20 Chile

Poland

19 Poland

Slovakia

18 Slovakia

Spain

17 Spain

Slovenia

17 Slovenia

England & Wales

16 England & Wales

Russia

16 Russia

United Kingdom

16 United Kingdom

Portugal

16 Portugal

Northern Ireland

14 Northern Ireland

Source: Our World in Data

A “failed response”

Brazil’s Senate has launched a probe into President Jair Bolsonaro’s handling of the pandemic, including downplaying the disease’s severity, promoting dubious treatments and repeatedly opposing social distancing measures.

Aid group Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said Brazil’s “failed response” had led to thousands of avoidable deaths and created a humanitarian catastrophe that could still get worse.

Note

Data is current as of April 15, 2021.

Sources

Fiocruz COVID-19 Observatory; Our World in Data

Edited by

Jon McClure and Diane Craft


https://graphics.reuters.com/HEALTH-CORONAVIRUS/BRAZIL/rlgvdzjlxvo/index.html