Disability advocates criticise use of underlying health conditions in COVID-19 death reporting

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"There was supposed to be a 1a and 1b rollout, where all of the people who were in the higher-risk category would be vaccinated. And they [the federal government] just kind of de-prioritised it and didn't worry about them," she said.

A graphic recently shared on Twitter by the director of the Grattan Institute's health program, Professor Stephen Duckett, showed around 11 million Australians - or more than 40 per cent of the population - are at higher risk of complications from COVID-19.

Some 1.8 million people have three or more health conditions that put them at higher risk of death from the disease.

"It is obviously important that the public know that certain conditions such as diabetes, or being overweight or over 75, put you at higher risk of dying from COVID-19," Professor Duckett said.

"That's an epidemiological question."

When people talk dismissively that someone who died from COVID 'had underlying medical conditions', besides being ethically reprehensible, remember this includes about 40% of the population pic.twitter.com/BF2N4AnSn5

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But he said the way it is being disclosed during press conferences is "ethically reprehensible".

"It is more or less dismissing the importance of that death and excusing the death because they had an underlying condition," he said.

"It is about [the government] trying to avoid accountability for the failures of managing the pandemic or the failures of managing the vaccine rollout by saying that this death, although it occurred, isn't a really important death."

Professor Duckett said it is important to remember that regardless of the age of the person who died or their underlying health condition, they had an expectation to live longer than they did.

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"Those years of additional life might have been five years, they might have been 25 years. And they don't talk about the missed life that these people have lost because of the failures of government in the vaccine rollout," he said.

Samantha Connor said there is a need for good quality data to be made available to help disabled people assess their individual COVID-19 risk, but it shouldn’t be included in the public reporting of the deaths.

"We need to have an understanding of the factors that make us more at risk. So it's probably useful to know if people are in institutional settings or aged care settings - that we have an understanding that that might be contributory," she said.

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