Key info


Date:
1 May 2020

Authors:
Alexandra B. Hogan, Britta Jewell, Ellie Sherrard-Smith, Juan Vesga, Oliver J Watson, Charles Whittaker, Arran Hamlet, Jennifer Smith, Kylie Ainslie, Marc Baguelin, Samir Bhatt, Adhiratha Boonyasiri, Nicholas F Brazeau, Lorenzo Cattarino, Giovanni Charles, Laura V Cooper, Helen Coupland, Gina Cuomo-Dannenburg, Amy Dighe, Bimandra Djaafara, Christl A Donnelly, Ilaria Dorigatti, Jeff W. Eaton, Sabine L van Elsland, Richard FitzJohn, Han Fu, Katy Gaythorpe, Will Green, David J Haw, Sarah Hayes, Wes Hinsley, Natsuko Imai, Edward Knock, Daniel Laydon, John Lees, Tara Mangal, Thomas Mellan, Swapnil Mishra, Gemma Nedjati-Gilani, Pierre Nouvellet, Lucy Okell, Alison Ower, Kris V Parag, Michael  Pickles, Isaac Stopard, Hayley A Thompson, H. Juliette T Unwin, Robert Verity, Michaela Vollmer, Caroline Walters, Haowei Wang, Yuanrong Wang, Lilith  Whittles, Peter Winskill, Xiaoyue Xi, Neil M Ferguson, Thomas Churcher, Nimalan Arinaminpathy1, Azra Ghani1, Patrick Walker1 & Timothy B Hallett1

1Correspondence:
timothy.hallett@imperial.ac.uk
patrick.walker06@imperial.ac.uk
nim.pathy@imperial.ac.uk
a.ghani@imperial.ac.uk

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WHO Collaborating Centre for Infectious Disease Modelling, MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease Analysis, Abdul Latif Jameel Institute for Disease and Emergency Analytics, Imperial College London

Now published in Lancet Global Health; 13-07-2020, doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2214-109X(20)30288-6

Summary

COVID-19 has the potential to cause disruptions to health services in different ways; through the health system becoming overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients, through the intervention used to slow transmission of COVID-19 inhibiting access to preventative interventions and services, and through supplies of medicine being interrupted. We aim to quantify the extent to which such disruptions in services for HIV, TB and malaria in high burden low- and middle-income countries could lead to additional loss of life. In high burden settings, HIV, TB and malaria related deaths over 5 years may be increased by up to 10%, 20% and 36%, respectively, compared to if there were no COVID-19 epidemic. We estimate the greatest impact on HIV to be from interruption to ART, which may occur during a period of high or extremely high health system demand; for TB, we estimate the greatest impact is from reductions in timely diagnosis and treatment of new cases, which may result from a long period of COVID-19 suppression interventions; for malaria, we estimate that the greatest impact could come from reduced prevention activities including interruption of planned net campaigns, through all phases of the COVID-19 epidemic. In high burden settings, the impact of each type of disruption could be significant and lead to a loss of life-years over five years that is of the same order of magnitude as the direct impact from COVID-19 in places with a high burden of malaria and large HIV/TB epidemics. Maintaining the most critical prevention activities and healthcare services for HIV, TB and malaria could significantly reduce the overall impact of the COVID-19 epidemic.

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