From the MT:
“1 in 4 Russian WWII Vets Died
During Pandemic – Vedomosti”
One-quarter of Russia's World War
II veterans have died during the pandemic, according to an analysis by the
Vedomosti business daily published Monday. Some 312,600 veterans of what Russia
calls the Great Patriotic War have died between April 2020 and October 2021,
Vedomosti reported, citing Labor Ministry data. Russia’s total excess fatality
count since the start of the coronavirus pandemic — and before the latest and
deadliest wave of the virus — is at least 723,000. The rapidly accelerating
decline of Russia’s World War II veteran population from 1.21 million last year
to 896,800 this year, amounts to a 26% decrease. Among Russians 85 and over,
mortality rates have increased from 165 per 1,000 in 2019 to 190 per 1,000 in
2020 — and are likely to reach 209 per 1,000 this year, Vedomosti cited
demographer Alexei Raksha as saying. Experts attribute the veterans’
disproportionately high death rate to them being at higher risk of developing
serious illness from coronavirus. The Russian Association of Gerontologists and
Geriatricians places the likelihood of adverse reactions to vaccines across all
age groups at 2%, and higher among the elderly. Authorities say Russians aged
60 and over are at least 5.5 times more likely to be hospitalized with Covid-19
and account for 83% of the country's total pandemic death toll. Only around one-third of Russian retirees have
received a Covid-19 vaccine despite efforts to incentivize vaccinations with
cash handouts and other gifts. Elderly Russians “are at a loss and don’t know
whether to vaccinate or not, for fear of side effects,” Valery Ryazansky, the
chairman of Russia’s Pensioners Union, told Vedomosti. He called for increased
efforts in providing consulting services to seniors as well as wider research
and testing of the vaccine's effects on this age group. “Someone who is over 85
years old needs to be thoroughly examined prior to vaccinating them,” added
Vladimir Chekhonin, the vice president of Russia’s Academy of Sciences.
^ Russia’s World War 2 Veterans
are not part of the “Greatest Generation” (the same way Germany’s and Japan’s
World War 2 Veterans aren’t. The Greatest Generation Veterans are Americans,
Canadians, Brits, Australians, New Zealanders and those in the Resistance that
fought against Nazism and Communism to retain Democracy. With that said Russia
doesn’t do a whole lot to help their Elderly (Veterans or non-Veterans.) Russia
focuses its attention on outside its borders (hacking, poisoning, starting wars
– Ukraine, Georgia – and other destabilizing efforts) rather than focusing on helping
their own. Of course this doesn’t mean that anyone – old or young – should have
to suffer or die alone. ^
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