Epidemiology of COVID‐19 mortality in Nepal: An analysis of the National Health Emergency Operation Center data

Author:

Adhikari Samir Kumar1,Ranabhat Kamal12ORCID,Bhattarai Suraj34ORCID,Saud Bhuvan5ORCID,Paudel Kiran67,Bhandari Rabindra2,Khanal Pratik89ORCID,Keene Claire Marriott10,Khanal Vishnu1112ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Health Emergency Operation Center Ministry of Health and Population, Ramshah Path Kathmandu Nepal

2. Institute of Medicine Tribhuvan University Kathmandu Nepal

3. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London UK

4. Global Health Research & Medical Interventions for Development (GLOHMED) Kathmandu Nepal

5. Department of Medical Laboratory Technology Janamaitri Foundation Institute of Health Sciences Lalitpur Nepal

6. Department of Allied Health Sciences University of Connecticut Storrs Connecticut USA

7. Nepal Health Frontiers Kathmandu Nepal

8. Nepal Public Health Association Lalitpur Nepal

9. Bergen Centre for Ethics and Priority Setting in Health (BCEPS), Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care University of Bergen Bergen Norway

10. Health Systems Collaborative NDM Centre for Global Health Research Nuffield Department of Medicine University of Oxford Oxford UK

11. Nepal Development Society (NeDS) Bharatpur Nepal

12. Menzies School of Health Research Alice Springs Northern Territory Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionCOVID‐19 had caused nearly 12,000 deaths in Nepal by March 2023. In this study, we compare COVID‐19‐associated mortality in the first (September 15 to November 30, 2020) and second (April 15 to June 30, 2021) waves of the pandemic in Nepal and investigate the associated epidemiological factors.MethodsWe disaggregated the COVID‐19‐related deaths between the first and second waves of the pandemic using the national COVID‐19 database and evaluated the association of independent variables with the deaths in the first versus second waves.ResultsOut of 8133 deaths, 25% died in the first wave and 75% in the second. Overall, 33.5% of the deceased were female, and 52% of the deaths were in those 60 years or older. A vast majority (92%) of deaths occurred in hospitals. Geographically, the middle “Hill” region (58.3%) witnessed the most significant number of deaths. About two thirds (64%) had at least one comorbid condition. Multivariable logistic regression showed a difference in the reported deaths by province (state) and geography (ecological region) between the first and second waves. Those in the age groups “19–39 years” and “40–59 years” were more likely to die in the second wave than in the first wave compared to the younger age group.ConclusionsOverall, deaths were concentrated among older age groups, males, in the Hill regions, in the western provinces, and those with comorbidities. Therefore, the country must focus on these areas to ensure an efficient and effective pandemic response in the future.

Publisher

Wiley

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