Every day, statistics on COVID-19 instances and deaths make headlines and continue to echo the annoying message that the Philippines has the “worst” performances in Southeast Asia.
Use population unit-consistent numbers to compare countries of other sizes. That worldometer. info is the most useful source because cases, deaths and evidence are already consistent with millions of inhabitants (short for here “/M”).
“Cases” are not equivalent to “infections” because the latter concept also includes other inflamed people who have been invisible to the physical fitness government that have not been controlled. In Singapore, the case rate is 9,757/M, well above the overall rate of 3,592/M, perhaps because Singapore performed 1 check for 3 other people, which is a massive check. To rather estimate the rate of infection, I presented random clinical controls of the population, which require only several thousand, not several million, controls at a time.
For our neighbors, the existing rates (9/10/20) of consistency with M are: Indonesia 742, Brunei 331, Malaysia 295, Thailand 49, Myanmar 35, Cambodia 16, Vietnam 11.
For me, the main indicator of functionality is low mortality. The number of deaths divided into instances is equivalent to the mortality rate. In the Philippines, this is 1. 61 consistent with percent, meaning that 98. 39 consistent with percentage of instances have survived so far. , some instances are still active.
For Southeast Asia, the existing mortality rates are: Indonesia 4. 04%, Vietnam 3. 64%, Brunei 2. 11%, Thailand 1. 63%, Philippines 1. 61%, Malaysia 1. 36%, Myanmar 0. 57%, Singapore 0. 05% (no knowledge of deaths for Cambodia). This indicates that health care in Indonesia and Vietnam is below global standards. Health care in Thailand, the Philippines and Malaysia is decent; Singapore looks amazing.
By the way, the United States, as of September 11, 20, has a case rate of 19765/M and a mortality rate of 589/M, implying a mortality rate of 2. 98% of cases, below the global average and well above that of the Philippines.
The philippines’ Oxford. La austerity index in pandemic-opposing combat has been very expensive for the Filipino people, measured through SWS welfare indicators, due to strict government policies.
The Oxford Austerity Index (OxSI in summary) is a number of 0 to one hundred, which has been available for all countries since January 2020, updated daily. The OxSI of the Philippines began on 11 on 24/01/20 and grew in February and March to one hundred from March 22 to April 30. It dropped to 96 in May, 83 in mid-June and 81 at the end of July; it was in the 1970s in August and at 56 august.
No Southeast Asian country has ever reached an OxSI of 100. The last OxSI and its ancient peaks (max. ) Are: Vietnam 74, max. 95; Indonesia 60, maximum 80; Malaysia 57, maximum 75; Singapore 52, maximum 85; Thailand 46, maximum 75.
By the way, america’s latest OxSI, the U. S. But it’s not the first time It is August 68 (August 28); peak 73 from 21/03 to 14/06/20.
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