March 2022, ScientificAmerican.com 59
AfricaAfrica
Western PacificWestern Pacific
SouthEast Asia
Eastern
Mediterranean
Eastern
Mediterranean
Americas
Europe
Southeast Asia
Europe
Americas
Reported Lives Lost from COVID per Week
100,000100,000 50,00050,000
March 11,
2020
Global pandemic declared by the
World Health Organization
Week starting: Dec. 30, 2019
Mar. 8, 2021
Sept. 6, 2021
Sept. 7, 2020
Spain (F) big dropNorway (F) riseFinland (F) riseDenmark (F) riseNorway (M) riseU.S. (F) big dropBulgaria (F) big dropU.S. (M) big dropBulgaria (M) big dropLithuania
(M) big drop
Denmark (M) rise
Life Expectancyat Birth for 29 Countries (years)
2015*
2019
2020
84 80 76 72
Female (F)Male (M)
Informationon nonbinarycategorieswas not published*Data forChile, Germany, and Greecefrom 2016
Superlatives (2019–2020)
World Asia AfricaLatin America and the Caribbean
Projections for the COVID-19 scenarioProjections for the no-COVID-19 scenario
656.8624 .1
418.0281.6 59.7
2016
2019
2020
2030
768.0
Number of UndernourishedIndividuals (millions) 600 400 200
0
299.5(Africa)299.3290.8283.0(Africa)52.245.4
80 76 72
Life
Expectancy
at Birth,
U.S.
(years,
all sexes)
No-COVID-19
scenario
COVID-19scenario
LatinoNon-LatinowhiteTotalpopulationNon-LatinoBlack
1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4
Jul. 2020
Nov. 2020
Estimated ChildhoodVaccine DisruptionPatterns(diphtheria-tetanus-pertussisor measles)
Baseline(no-COVID-19scenario)
Index values over1.0 indicate more doses than baseline were administered during that month. An index value of zero would indicate complete disruption of vaccine deliveryduring that month.
Nepal
Australia
Nigeria
India
U.S.
Tinted panels
represent ranges
of uncertainty
Nearly
5,412,000
COVID deathsreported to the World Health Organization as of Dec. 29, 2021
Mar. 2020
Overall life expectancy in the U.S. has plummeted, but some populations suffered more than others. The pan
demic’s
disproportionate impact on communities
of color underscores the serious
health effects of racial and
ethnic inequality. Source: “Reductions in 2020
U.S. Life Expectancy Due to COVID-19 and the Dispropor
tionate Impact on the Black
and Latino Populations,”
by Theresa Andrasfay and Noreen Goldman, in
PNAS
,^
Vol. 118; February 2, 2021 (
data
)
HEALTH
Birth Rates
Globally, COVID’s impact on
birth rates has been mixed. In many high-income nations, people had fewer babies than expected in 2020, perhaps because of high levels of stress and financial uncertainty. But in low- and middle-income countries, pandemic restrictions disrupted access
to contraceptives for an estimated 12 million women, resulting in nearly 1.4
million unintended pregnancies.
Loss of Caregivers
In October 2021
the CDC reported that one in four COVID deaths in
the U.S. deprived a child of a primary or secondary caregiver. From April 2020 to June 2021, this amounted to 140,000 children affected, a disproportionate number of whom were kids of color.
Life Expectancy A useful measure of population health and longevity, the indicator known as “life expectancy at birth” has been on the rise in most places for the past century. In a recent study of 29 countries,
COVID single-handedly reversed that trend in
27 of them. Life expectancy is typically measured separately for males and females; overall, the pandemic’s toll was greater among males. Source: “Quantifying Impacts of the
COVID-19 Pandemic through Life-
Expectancy Losses: A Population-Level Study of 29 Countries,” by José Manuel Aburto et al., in
International Journal of Epidemiology;
September 26, 2021 (
data
)
Childhood Vaccinations Despite ubiquitous talk of vaccines, rates of immunization against diseases
other
than
COVID have recently fallen.
A^
study tracking children due for their third dose of the
diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine and their first dose of
the measles vaccine estimated that between eight
million
and nine
million more doses of each vaccine were
missed globally compared with what was expected, with coverage dipping lowest in April 2020. Numbers have improved since then, but in some countries, coverage remains lower than it would be without
COVID.
Source: “Estimating Global and Regional Disruptions to Routine Childhood Vaccine Coverage during the COVID-19 Pandemic in 2020: A Modelling Study,” by^
Kate Causey et al., in
Lancet,
Vol. 398; July 14, 2021 (
data
)
Food Insecurity Factors such as climate change and pervasive inequality
were already contributing to high rates of food insecurity.
A recent report found that the pandemic caused an immediate spike in undernourishment both globally and regionally
in 2020, primarily related to people losing their jobs or experiencing a
reduction in work hours amid lockdowns.
It also compared projected numbers of undernourished
people over the next decade with what those values would be without
COVID. The data suggest that these seemingly acute
disruptions will have a long tail:
COVID scenario projections
largely exceed no-
COVID ones as far out as 2030.
Source:
The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World 2021.
“Transforming
Food Systems for Food Security Improved Nutrition and Affordable Healthy Diets for All,” by FAO, IFAD, UNICEF, WFP and WHO, 2021
Globally, COVID has changed people’s health in ways that go far beyond the acute impact of the disease. Efforts to limit the virus’s spread, as well as
the death toll itself, have generated widespread fear, isolation and economic hardship, the effects of which will be felt for generations.