Some examples will suggest the range of possible CFRs for diseases in the real world: • The CFR for the
Spanish (1918) flu was greater than 2.5%, while the
Asian (1957–58) and
Hong Kong (1968–69) flus both had a CFR of about 0.2%. • As of ,
coronavirus disease 2019 has an overall CFR of %, although the CFRs of earlier strains of COVID-19 was around 2%, the CFRs for original
SARS and
MERS are about 11% and 34%, respectively. • The CFR for
yellow fever is about 5-6% (but 40-50% in severe cases). •
Legionnaires' disease has a CFR of about 15%. • Left untreated,
bubonic plague will have a CFR of up to 60%. With antibiotic treatment, the CFR for bubonic plague is 17%,
pneumonic 29% and
septicaemic 45%. • Active
tuberculosis, the infection with the highest mortality rate, has a CFR of 43% in the absence of
HIV. •
Ebola virus disease, one of the infections with the highest lethality, has a CFR as high as 90%. •
Naegleriasis (also known as primary amoebic meningoencephalitis), has a CFR greater than 95%, with a few of the survivors having been treated with
heroic doses of amphotericin B and other
off-label drugs. •
Rabies has a CFR greater than 99% in unvaccinated individuals. A few people have survived either by being vaccinated (but
after symptoms started, or else later than ideal), or more recently, by being put into a medically induced coma. ==See also==