Acute Mortality
Cross-source consensus on Acute Mortality from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
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Highlighted claims
- Excess infection fatality rate was defined as the excess probability of death during disease compared with a no-disease control. — Modelling lifespan reduction in an exogenous damage model of generic disease
- In the GNM, excess acute mortality increased monotonically with onset age for tested disease durations. — Modelling lifespan reduction in an exogenous damage model of generic disease
- Older individuals have worse short-term outcomes because higher baseline frailty makes the same imposed damage produce greater immediate hazard. — Modelling lifespan reduction in an exogenous damage model of generic disease
- Short-term excess mortality increases with age in the weak-disease limit because mortality rises faster than frailty. — Modelling lifespan reduction in an exogenous damage model of generic disease
- The results qualitatively align with high short-term mortality in older adults for several infectious diseases, including COVID-19 and influenza. — Modelling lifespan reduction in an exogenous damage model of generic disease