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Arsenal scoop $2m prize for winning FIFA Women's Champions Cup
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Real Madrid's Bellingham set for month out with hamstring injury
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Nigeria's president pays tribute to Fela Kuti after Grammys Award
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Inter eight clear after win at Cremonese marred by fans' flare flinging
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England underline World Cup
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Guirassy brace helps Dortmund move six behind Bayern
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Sesko strikes to rescue Man Utd, Villa beaten by Brentford
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In-form Lyon make it 10 wins in a row
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Man Utd strike late as Carrick extends perfect start in Fulham thriller
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Van der Poel romps to record eighth cyclo-cross world title
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Mbappe penalty earns Real Madrid late win over nine-man Rayo
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Resurgent Pakistan seal T20 sweep of Australia
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Alcaraz sweeps past Djokovic to win 'dream' Australian Open
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Pakistan seeks out perpetrators after deadly separatist attacks
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Ukraine war talks delayed to Wednesday, Zelensky says
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Von Allmen storms to downhill win in final Olympic tune-up
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Carlos Alcaraz: tennis history-maker with shades of Federer
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Alcaraz sweeps past Djokovic to win maiden Australian Open title
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Israel says partially reopening Gaza's Rafah crossing
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French IT giant Capgemini to sell US subsidiary after row over ICE links
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Iran's Khamenei likens protests to 'coup', warns of regional war
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New Epstein accuser claims sexual encounter with ex-prince Andrew: report
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Italy's extrovert Olympic icon Alberto Tomba insists he is 'shy guy'
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Chloe Kim goes for unprecedented snowboard halfpipe Olympic treble
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Pakistan combing for perpetrators after deadly separatist attacks
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Israel partially reopens Gaza's Rafah crossing
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Iran declares European armies 'terrorist groups' after IRGC designation
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Denmark's Andresen swoops to win Cadel Evans Road Race
Covid's true death toll still elusive, three years in
The true global death toll of Covid-19 remains difficult to nail down three years after the first case was detected, though experts agree there have been far more fatalities than officially reported.
The difference between the official and real figures could diverge even further next year, with modelling predicting more than a million deaths in post-zero-Covid China, which recently narrowed how it counts fatalities.
There have been more than 6.65 million officially reported Covid deaths since the virus was first identified in China in December 2019, according to the World Health Organization.
However countries count Covid deaths differently and methods have changed throughout the pandemic.
Attributing deaths to Covid can be a very difficult exercise, said Antoine Flahault, director of the Institute of Global Health at the University of Geneva.
The death of a patient in a hospital in a developed country who had already been diagnosed with Covid could be straightforward but that is often not the case and doctors "usually do no have much information" to guide them, Flahault told AFP.
Instead researchers have sought to compare the total number of deaths from all causes recorded since 2020 to what would have been expected if there had been no pandemic.
Using these figures, researchers from the WHO reported in the journal Nature earlier this month that there were 14.83 million excess deaths from Covid in 2020 and 2021, updating a figure first released in May.
That is nearly three times higher than the 5.4 million officially reported Covid deaths over those two years.
Research from the US-based Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation estimated in March that the number was an even higher 18.2 million.
But Flahault said that even these figures could "perhaps still be an underestimate".
The toll has risen more slowly this year. A regularly updated tally from The Economist estimates that there have been 21 million excess deaths since the pandemic's start -- 3.1 times higher than the official number.
- Lacking data -
According to the WHO figures, India had by far the most excess deaths linked to Covid in 2020-2021 with 4.74 million, a figure the Indian government has sharply disputed.
Russia came next with a little over one million. However the biggest disparities between the expected number of deaths and the actual figure were in South America.
Peru, for example, recorded around twice as many total deaths in 2020-2021 as it had in normal times.
However Hanno Ulmer of Austria's Medical University of Innsbruck pointed out that there were "also strong dengue fever outbreaks during the pandemic years in Peru", which could have increased the number of excess deaths without being linked to Covid.
Another problem is that many nations have little or no data in the first place.
"For almost half the countries of the world, tracking excess mortality is not possible using the data that are available and for these we must rely on statistical models," the WHO researchers wrote in this month's study.
In Africa, monthly data on deaths was only available for six out of 47 countries.
- A million deaths in China -
Looking forward to 2023, China's lifting of its zero-Covid measures loom large as a possible source of new deaths.
With the first easing of strict measures in place the start of the pandemic, few of China's 1.4 billion population have immunity from previous Covid infection, and vaccination rates have lagged, particularly among the at-risk elderly.
Modelling by the IHME predicts more than 300,000 Covid deaths in China by April 1 -- and a total of over a million across 2023.
Last week China reclassified what it considers to be Covid deaths, which will now only count if they come directly from respiratory failure, in a move that analysts say will dramatically the number of officially recognised deaths.
Hospitals across China have been overwhelmed by an explosion of infections in recent weeks but just one new death was added on Thursday to a tally by a national disease control body.
Ali Mokdad, a professor of health metrics sciences at IHME, told AFP that good data was the only way "we can manage to stay ahead of the virus".
P.Hernandez--AT