Kitty
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
So what I'm still trying to fathom is why higher population density seems to increase the ratio of deaths to cases? Once someone is infected with Covid 19, why would population density then influence their chances of survival, given that somewhere like the UK has relatively high population density, very high deaths to cases ratio, yet an extremely good health system.
I wonder if one factor could be that people living in areas with the highest population densities are more likely to be housed in overcrowded accommodation, poorer, and in worse health (e.g., living with obesity and/or diabetes) to begin with? Obviously this doesn't work in every case – in London there are high rise buildings where apartments cost millions – but in most cities it is generally the rule.
Language barriers may also be a factor. Locally the provision of information in South Asian languages seems to have been reasonably good, but a Polish neighbour told me she's worried that there is little or no provision in European languages. I suspect the same applies to languages spoken by some refugee communities.
Apologies if you're actually talking about global death ratios, @Barry, rather than communities in the UK. I've been away a few days, and am still catching up...