Magnitude and determinants of excess total, age-specific and sex-specific all-cause mortality in 24 countries worldwide during 2020 and 2021: results on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic from the C-MOR project

Chryso Th. Pallari, Souzana Achilleos, Annalisa Quattrocchi, John Gabel, Elena Critselis, Maria Athanasiadou, Mohammad Reza Rahmanian Haghighi, Stefania Papatheodorou, Tianyu Liu, Andreas Artemiou, Jose M Rodriguez-Llanes, Catherine M Bennett, Claudia Zimmermann, Eva Schernhammer, Natalia Bustos Sierra, Reindert Ekelson, Jackeline Lobato, Laylla Macedo, Laust Hvas Mortensen, Julia CritchleyLucy Goldsmith, Gleb Denissov, Nolwenn Le Meur, Levan Kandelaki, Kostas Athanasakis, Binyamin Binyaminy, Tamar Maor, Fabrizio Stracci, Giuseppe Ambrosio, Kairat Davletov, Nataliya Glushkova, Cyndy Martial, Marie Chan Sun, Terje P Hagen, Mario Chong, Manuel Barron, Błażej Łyszczarz, Ivan Erzen, Pedro Arcos Gonzalez, Bo Burström, Nataliia Pidmurniak, Olesia Verstiuk, Qian Huang, Antonis Polemitis, Andreas Charalambous, Christiana A. Demetriou

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle in a journalpeer-review

Abstract

Introduction To examine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mortality, we estimated excess all-cause mortality in 24 countries for 2020 and 2021, overall and stratified by sex and age.Methods Total, age-specific and sex-specific weekly all-cause mortality was collected for 2015textendash2021 and excess mortality for 2020 and 2021 was calculated by comparing weekly 2020 and 2021 age-standardised mortality rates against expected mortality, estimated based on historical data (2015textendash2019), accounting for seasonality, and long-term and short-term trends. Age-specific weekly excess mortality was similarly calculated using crude mortality rates. The association of country and pandemic-related variables with excess mortality was investigated using simple and multilevel regression models.Results Excess cumulative mortality for both 2020 and 2021 was found in Austria, Brazil, Belgium, Cyprus, England and Wales, Estonia, France, Georgia, Greece, Israel, Italy, Kazakhstan, Mauritius, Northern Ireland, Norway, Peru, Poland, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Ukraine, and the USA. Australia and Denmark experienced excess mortality only in 2021. Mauritius demonstrated a statistically significant decrease in all-cause mortality during both years. Weekly incidence of COVID-19 was significantly positively associated with excess mortality for both years, but the positive association was attenuated in 2021 as percentage of the population fully vaccinated increased. Stringency index of control measures was positively and negatively associated with excess mortality in 2020 and 2021, respectively.Conclusion This study provides evidence of substantial excess mortality in most countries investigated during the first 2 years of the pandemic and suggests that COVID-19 incidence, stringency of control measures and vaccination rates interacted in determining the magnitude of excess mortality.Data are available in a public, open access repository. The data underlying this study, beyond what is available in the article and in its online supplemental material, along with statistical analysis codes, are available in a public repository: CTP, CD, SA, AA and MRRH (2023). Dataset and code for ’Magnitude and determinants of excess total, age-specific and sex-specific all-cause mortality in 24 countries worldwide during 2020 and 2021: results on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic from the C-MOR project’ (Data set).
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere013018
Number of pages14
JournalBMJ Global Health
Volume9
Issue number4
Early online date18 Apr 2024
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024.

© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

Keywords

  • Excess mortality
  • COVID-19 pandemic
  • Vaccination rates
  • Control measures

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