“…In Brazil, three large population-based studies including 522,167 [age 61 (IQR 47–73) years], 254,288 (age 60 ± 17 years) (232,036 of whom had a defined outcome), and 228,196 [age 61 (IQR 48–73) years] COVID-19 patients reported 30.7% 8 , 38% 4 and 37% 6 in-hospital mortality, respectively, whereas two smaller cohorts (mean/median ages not reported) of 46,285 and 11,321 in-hospital patients (6882 of whom had a defined outcome) found much higher mortality rates of 46.2% 9 and 47.3% 7 , respectively (Supplementary Table 10 ). None of these studies, however, discriminated the in-hospital mortality between public and private hospitals 4 , 6 – 10 . In fact, a lower (24.4%) in-hospital mortality was found in a cohort of 89,405 patients (age 58.9 ± 16.8 years) attended exclusively by the Brazilian unified public healthcare system 15 .…”