By Gabrielle Pickard Whitehead
This article first appeared at Occupy.com.
One of the most remarkable statistics to emerge from the escalating coronavirus pandemic, is how the death rate from the virus in Germany is markedly lower than other countries.
As of March 26, 2020, Germany had recorded more than 35,000 COVID-19 cases, and just 181 deaths, putting the fatality rate at approximately 0.4%. This compares to Italy, where the death rate is 9%, and the UK, which, on March 26, had recorded 8,328 confirmed cases and a fatality figure of 4.6%.
The reason for the Italy’s high fatality rate and German’s comparatively low number of deaths in relation to confirmed COVID-19 cases have been the subject of much speculation and debate.
One theory behind Italy’s high mortality rate is related to older people’s greater susceptibility to the virus. In terms of the median age of the population, Italy is the second oldest country in the world and the oldest nation in the EU. Germany has the second oldest median age in the EU, standing at of 46.0 years, just behind Italy’s 46.3 years.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has called for countries to “test, test, test,” as large-scale testing enables health services to quickly identify who has the virus and arrange adequate care.
Unlike other countries, Germany has practiced early and persistent COVID-19 testing. Borrowing the strategy of widespread testing and quarantining from South Korea, where success in thwarting the spread of the virus has meant the South Koreans have become the envy of the world, Germany has been carrying out the highest levels of coronavirus tests than any other European country, at a rate of 300,000 to 500,000 a week.
Despite both Italy and Germany having the oldest populations in the EU, Germany’s low COVID-19 death rate is attributable to the pervasiveness of its testing and the quality of the nation’s healthcare system, which well-funded, staffed and modernised.
WHO’s emergency coordinator Michael Ryan affirmed that the better prepared hospitals are for pandemics and health emergencies, the more lives can be saved.
“When hospitals are overwhelmed by the number of patients, it’s a simple question of how far adequate care can be provided and whether you can respond to any change in the patient’s condition in the intensive care unit,” said Ryan.
Richard Pebody, an expert from WHO, describes three crucial factors in responding to this emergency as being the number of intensive care beds, well-trained staff in intensive care units and sufficient protective clothing.
According to Italian authorities, Italy had 5,000 intensive care beds before the pandemic to accommodate a population around 60 million. More beds have since been created. The UK’s National Health Service (NHS) had 4,100 intensive care beds, with a population of around 66 million.
Within the EU, Germany is the top healthcare spender. In 2015, Germany allocated 11.1% of its GDP on its healthcare system, well above the EU average of 9.9%. In the same year, when the then Prime Minister David Cameron pledged another round of austerity, the UK’s spending on healthcare was 9.8%, just below the EU average.
Austerity costs lives
Since 2010, when a Conservative/Liberal coalition was formed in Britain which announced a £40 billion austerity budget, the number of people waiting longer than four hours in Accident & Emergency (A&E) has soared. In 2016 – 17, 2.5m people waited in A&E for more than four hours. This compared to just over 350,000 in 2009 – 10.
The Conservative government’s relentless austerity measures continue to come at the expense of the NHS. For much of the past decade, NHS staff pay increases have been capped at just 1%, meaning many suffered a pay cut in real terms.
Alongside real term pay cuts, NHS staff have had to endure cuts to training and changes to pensions, while patient demand has been rising. In 2019, the Royal College of Nursing’s (RCN) acting chief executive, Dame Donna Kinnair, said the NHS was losing thousands of dedicated staff because chronic staff shortages meant care was being compromised.
As Tory austerity continues to overwhelm the NHS, saving the UK’s crumbling health service has been a primary focus of activists and political opposition.
In 2018, tens of thousands of protestors gathered in London to protest the government’s crippling cuts to the NHS. The demonstration was organised by the People’s Assembly and Health Campaigns Together and came in response to what was then touted as the “worse winter on record for the NHS.”
In early March 2020, Britain’s recently formed Tory government delivered its first budget. The new chancellor, Rishi Sunak, pledged billions of pounds to soften COVID-19 impact. In response to the March Budget, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn condemned the move as “too little too late” to make up for 10 years of budget cuts. Corbyn also claimed the budget was an acknowledgement by the Tories that austerity had failed.
In 1948, when the NHS was founded, the then health secretary, Aneurin Bevan, proudly boasted that the NHS would become “the envy of the world.” At the time, Bevan’s claim held sizeable substance, with few other nations having any kind of functioning healthcare is place, let alone one that was universal and free.
Today’s NHS tells a different story.
The UK’s overstretched health service is resorting to desperate measures to accommodate for the influx of sick patients as the COVID-19 epidemic intensifies. Millions of planned operations are being postponed, patients are being urgently discharged and tens of thousands of retired medics are being asked to return to the NHS to help tackle the coronavirus outbreak.
The government’s latest move to help the NHS cope with the crisis was calling upon volunteers to work at the NHS to help the vulnerable. More than half a million people signed up to the volunteer scheme in less than two days.
On the evening of March 26, millions of Britons took part in a “Clap for Carers” tribute, a mark of thanks and respect for frontline NHS and care workers dealing with the COVID-19 pandemic. As posts of the emotional tribute flooded social media, so too were angry reminders of a time when, in 2017 in the wake of the Grenfell disaster in London, which saw residents of a tower block lose their lives in a fire, the Tories cheered in the House of Commons when they defeated Labour’s motion to give the NHS and emergency service workers a long-overdue pay rise.
While no-one predicted that a deadly virus was to ravish the world in 2020, taking thousands of lives in the process, the COVID-19 crisis cruelly underlines that healthcare can’t be economised.