• About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
Sunday, March 1, 2026
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
Epaper
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER
No Result
View All Result
Kashmir Images - Latest News Update
No Result
View All Result
Home OTHER VIEW

Everyone is now a statistician. Here are some of the things that armchair COVID experts are getting wrong.

Other View by Other View
August 7, 2022
in OTHER VIEW
A A
0
Lessons from Iraq
FacebookTwitterWhatsapp

By: Dr. RizwanYousuf, Dr.Manish Kumar Sharma

If we don’t analyse statistics for a living, it’s easy to be taken in by misinformation about COVID-19 statistics on social media, especially if we don’t have the right context. For instance, we may cherry pick statistics supporting our viewpoint and ignore statistics showing we are wrong. We also still need to correctly interpret these statistics. It’s easy for us to share this misinformation. Many of these statistics are also interrelated, so misunderstandings can quickly multiply.

More News

A Crown Earned, A Future Unlocked

The Pir Panjal Debate: When Geography enters the Assembly

Ramdan and Health: Science behind a sacred practice

Load More

Here’s how we can avoid five common errors, and impress friends and family by getting the statistics right.

  1. it’s the infection rate that’s scary, not the death rate

Social media posts comparing COVID-19 to other causes of death, such as the flu, imply COVID-19 isn’t really that deadly. But these posts miss COVID-19’s infectiousness. For that, we need to look at the infection fatality rate (IFR) — the number of COVID-19 deaths divided by all those infected (a number we can only estimate at this stage).While the jury is still out, COVID-19 has a higher IFR than the flu. Posts implying a low IFR for COVID-19 most certainly underestimate it. They also miss two other points. First, if we compare the typical flu IFR of 0.1% with the most optimistic COVID-19 estimate of 0.25%, then COVID-19 remains more than twice as deadly as the flu. Second, and more importantly, we need to look at the basic reproduction number (R₀) for each virus. This is the number of extra people one infected person is estimated to infect. Flu’s R₀ is about 1.3. Although COVID-19 estimates vary, its R₀ sits around a median of 2.8. Because of the way infections grow exponentially (see below), the jump from 1.3 to 2.8 means COVID-19 is vastly more infectious than flu. When you combine all these statistics, you can see the motivation behind our public health measures to “limit the spread”. It’s not only that COVID-19 is so deadly, it’s deadly and highly infectious.

  1. Exponential growth and misleading graphs

A simple graph might plot the number of new COVID cases over time. But as new cases might be reported erratically, statisticians are more interested in the rate of growth of total cases over time. The steeper the upwards slope on the graph, the more we should be worried. For COVID-19, statisticians look to track exponential growth in cases. Put simply, unrestrained COVID cases can lead to a continuously growing number of more cases. This gives us a graph that tracks slowly at the start, but then sharply curves upwards with time.

However, social media posts routinely compare COVID-19 figures with those of other causes of death that show: more linear patterns (figures increase with time but at a steady rate) much slower-growing flu deaths or low numbers from early stages of the outbreak and so miss the impact of exponential growth. Even when researchers talk of exponential growth, they can still mislead. Better visualisations truncate those erratic first cases, for instance by starting from the 100th case. Or they use estimates of the number of days it takes for the number of cases to double (about six to seven days).

  1. Not all infections are cases

Then there’s the confusion about COVID-19 infections versus cases. In epidemiological terms, a “case” is a person who is diagnosed with COVID-19, mostly by a positive test result. But there are many more infections than cases. Some infections don’t show symptoms, some symptoms are so minor people think it’s just a cold, testing is not always available to everyone who needs it, and testing does not pick up all infections. Infections “cause” cases, testing discovers cases. US President Donald Trump was close to the truth when he said the number of cases in the US was high because of the high rate of testing. But he and others still got it totally wrong. More testing does not result in more cases, it allows for a more accurate estimate of the true number of cases. The best strategy, epidemiologically, is not to test less, but to test as widely as possible, minimising the discrepancy between cases and overall infections.

  1. We can’t compare deaths with cases from the same date

Estimates vary, but the time between infection and death could be as much as a month. And the variation in time to recovery is even greater. Some people get really ill and take a long time to recover, some show no symptoms. So deaths recorded on a given date reflect deaths from cases recorded several weeks prior, when the case count may have been less than half the number of current cases. The rapid case-doubling time and protracted recovery time also create a large discrepancy between counts of active and recovered cases. We’ll only know the true numbers in retrospect.

  1. Yes, the data are messy, incomplete and may change

Some social media users get angry when the statistics are adjusted, fuelling conspiracy theories. But few realise how mammoth, chaotic and complex the task is of tracking statistics on a disease like this. Countries and even states may count cases and deaths differently. It also takes time to gather the data, meaning retrospective adjustments are made.We’ll only know the true figures for this pandemic in retrospect. Equally so, early models were not necessarily wrong because the modellers were deceitful, but because they had insufficient data to work.

Dr.RizwanYousuf is Research Scholar (Statistics)

SKUAST JAMMU and can be mailed at rizwanwar50@gmail.com

Dr.Manish Kumar Sharma, Prof and Head (Statistics)

SKUAST JAMMU

Previous Post

TEAM KHANQAH OF SHAHI HAMDAN IN MISSION AMRIT SAROVAR

Next Post

Need to counter headwinds against democracy: USAID Chief

Other View

Other View

Related Posts

A Crown Earned, A Future Unlocked

Emotional scenes in J-K after Ranji triumph; families, former players hail historic feat
March 1, 2026

With the historic Ranji Trophy triumph, the young men in sky blue have lifted more than silverware, they have lifted...

Read moreDetails

The Pir Panjal Debate: When Geography enters the Assembly

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
March 1, 2026

Recent political remarks questioning the existence of the “Pir Panjal region” have triggered widespread reaction across Poonch, Rajouri, and parts...

Read moreDetails

Ramdan and Health: Science behind a sacred practice

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
February 28, 2026

Fasting is one of the most ancient spiritual practices known to humanity. Across civilizations and religions, people have fasted for...

Read moreDetails

The health benefits of Ramdhan

Regional-bilateral significance of Nepal PM Dahal’s India visit
February 28, 2026

Ramdhan is a month of self-regulation and self-training. Though Muslims observe fast in accordance with religious requirements, but there are...

Read moreDetails

AI in Action: Startups Showcase Practical Solutions for India’s Everyday Challenges

New Delhi Declaration on AI Impact adopted
February 27, 2026

    The India AI Impact Summit 2026 unfolded as another energetic day at Bharat Mandapam. Thousands of visitors filled...

Read moreDetails

WHERE IS GOD? A QUESTION FOR OUR TIMES

WHERE IS GOD? A QUESTION FOR OUR TIMES
February 26, 2026

Some no longer believe there is a God. Others feel that even if He exists, He does not interfere in...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
The ‘Kantoreks’ of Kashmir

Need to counter headwinds against democracy: USAID Chief

  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Our team
  • Terms of Service
E-Mailus: kashmirimages123@gmail.com

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.

No Result
View All Result
  • TOP NEWS
  • CITY & TOWNS
  • LOCAL
  • BUSINESS
  • NATION
  • WORLD
  • SPORTS
  • OPINION
    • EDITORIAL
    • ON HERITAGE
    • CREATIVE BEATS
    • INTERALIA
    • WIDE ANGLE
    • OTHER VIEW
    • ART SPACE
  • Photo Gallery
  • CARTOON
  • EPAPER

© 2025 Kashmir Images - Designed by GITS.