AS CASES of coronavirus continue to rise across the country, a fresh wave of anxiety is spreading among the public.

Meanwhile, the World Health Organisation (WHO) and other global health agencies, have condemned the spread of misinformation via social media platforms, calling it an infodemic.

With the world teetering on the verge of a global pandemic, what are the true facts about the mortality rate of the coronavirus strain known as Covid-19?

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Researchers have suggested that the death rate for this viral disease is anywhere between five and 40 in 1,000.

But this is a wide data range, meaning an exact mortality rate - the rate at which cases of the disease lead to death - is difficult to pin down.

On Sunday, the UK government's health secretary, Matt Hancock, said that the "very best assessment" was that the mortality rate was "two per cent or likely lower". But this depends on a range of factors including sex, age, general health, and the condition of healthcare provision.

There are different levels of severity

The main issue with coronavirus is its 14 day incubation period. An infected person can have the virus and spread the disease without showing any symptoms themselves.

At this time of year, coughs and colds are common so very few people will go to the GP for such mild symptoms.

However, a worse case scenario would be everyone with a cough or a cold piling on extra strain to the NHS and other healthcare providers.

It is a constant challenge to try and raise awareness of the disease without spreading unnecessary panic.

Researchers from Imperial College have stated that differences in detecting the virus across the world are based on one country's ability to detect milder symptoms compared to another.

Counting the death rate

Scientists monitor the cases with mild symptoms from small groups - such as those trapped on the Diamond Princess ferry, or those returning on repatriated flights from China.

This allows them to analyse a data set to come up with a potential mortality rate.

Different findings combined across the world can be pulled together to try and identify differences between groups - men, women, children, elderly and the sick.

This leads to growing picture of whom the disease affects and how, but as yet it is extremely difficult to determine a single death rate for the whole population.

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Current evidence points towards men being affected more than women, and there have been fewer deaths in cases under 30 years old, compared to the elderly. 

But a group of older men in China may have a significantly different mortality rate to one in the UK.

Is it more dangerous than the flu?

The idea that coronavirus is better or worse than the common flu is yet unknown - and potentially not a fair comparison.

People with mild flu symptoms don't tend to go to the doctor, but flu does still kill people every year.

As the data evolves, scientists will be able to answer these questions in more depth.

What is important now is that people wash their hands, capture sneezes and coughs, and practice a strict hygiene regime.

According to the WHO, this is the best way to stop a respiratory illness, such as Covid-19.