The age distribution of mortality from novel coronavirus disease (COVID‐19) suggests no large diference of susceptibility by age
Abstract
Among Italy, Spain, and Japan, the age distributions of COVID-19 mortality show only small variation
even though the number of deaths per country shows large variation. To understand the determinant
for this situation, we constructed a mathematical model describing the transmission dynamics and
natural history of COVID-19 and analyzed the dataset of mortality in Italy, Spain, and Japan. We
estimated the parameter which describes the age-dependency of susceptibility by ftting the model to
reported data, including the efect of change in contact patterns during the epidemics of COVID-19,
and the fraction of symptomatic infections. Our study revealed that if the mortality rate or the fraction
of symptomatic infections among all COVID-19 cases does not depend on age, then unrealistically
diferent age-dependencies of susceptibilities against COVID-19 infections between Italy, Japan, and
Spain are required to explain the similar age distribution of mortality but diferent basic reproduction
numbers (R0). Variation of susceptibility by age itself cannot explain the robust age distribution in
mortality by COVID-19 infections in those three countries, however it does suggest that the agedependencies of (i) the mortality rate and (ii) the fraction of symptomatic infections among all COVID19 cases determine the age distribution of mortality by COVID-19.
Palabras clave
Distribution of mortality; Coronavirus disease; COVID‑19Link to resource
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-73777-8Collections
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