Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators

Objectives Following well-established practices in demography, this article discusses several measures based on the number of COVID-19 deaths to facilitate comparisons over time and across populations.Settings National populations in 186 United Nations countries and territories and populations in fi...

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Main Authors: Patrick Heuveline, Michael Tzen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2021-03-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e042934.full
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spelling doaj-c516b7bb83e048f384b9b3023d75efd82021-07-02T13:04:04ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552021-03-0111310.1136/bmjopen-2020-042934Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicatorsPatrick Heuveline0Michael Tzen1California Center for Population Research (CCPR), University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA California Center for Population Research (CCPR), University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USAObjectives Following well-established practices in demography, this article discusses several measures based on the number of COVID-19 deaths to facilitate comparisons over time and across populations.Settings National populations in 186 United Nations countries and territories and populations in first-level subnational administrative entities in Brazil, China, Italy, Mexico, Peru, Spain and the USA.Participants None (death statistics only).Primary and secondary outcome measures An unstandardised occurrence/exposure rate comparable to the Crude Death Rate; an indirectly age-and-sex standardised rate that can be derived even when the breakdown of COVID-19 deaths by age and sex required for direct standardisation is unavailable; the reduction in life expectancy at birth corresponding to the 2020 number of COVID-19 deaths.Results To date, the highest unstandardised rate has been in New York, at its peak exceeding the state 2017 crude death rate. Populations compare differently after standardisation: while parts of Italy, Spain and the USA have the highest unstandardised rates, parts of Mexico and Peru have the highest standardised rates. For several populations with the necessary data by age and sex for direct standardisation, we show that direct and indirect standardisation yield similar results. US life expectancy is estimated to have declined this year by more than a year (−1.26 years), far more than during the worst year of the HIV epidemic, or the worst 3 years of the opioid crisis, and to reach its lowest level since 2008. Substantially larger reductions, exceeding 2 years, are estimated for Panama, Peru, and parts of Italy, Spain, the USA and especially, Mexico.Conclusions With lesser demand on data than direct standardisation, indirect standardisation is a valid alternative to adjust international comparisons for differences in population distribution by sex and age-groups. A number of populations have experienced reductions in 2020 life expectancies that are substantial by recent historical standards.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e042934.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Heuveline
Michael Tzen
spellingShingle Patrick Heuveline
Michael Tzen
Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
BMJ Open
author_facet Patrick Heuveline
Michael Tzen
author_sort Patrick Heuveline
title Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
title_short Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
title_full Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
title_fullStr Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
title_full_unstemmed Beyond deaths per capita: comparative COVID-19 mortality indicators
title_sort beyond deaths per capita: comparative covid-19 mortality indicators
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open
issn 2044-6055
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Objectives Following well-established practices in demography, this article discusses several measures based on the number of COVID-19 deaths to facilitate comparisons over time and across populations.Settings National populations in 186 United Nations countries and territories and populations in first-level subnational administrative entities in Brazil, China, Italy, Mexico, Peru, Spain and the USA.Participants None (death statistics only).Primary and secondary outcome measures An unstandardised occurrence/exposure rate comparable to the Crude Death Rate; an indirectly age-and-sex standardised rate that can be derived even when the breakdown of COVID-19 deaths by age and sex required for direct standardisation is unavailable; the reduction in life expectancy at birth corresponding to the 2020 number of COVID-19 deaths.Results To date, the highest unstandardised rate has been in New York, at its peak exceeding the state 2017 crude death rate. Populations compare differently after standardisation: while parts of Italy, Spain and the USA have the highest unstandardised rates, parts of Mexico and Peru have the highest standardised rates. For several populations with the necessary data by age and sex for direct standardisation, we show that direct and indirect standardisation yield similar results. US life expectancy is estimated to have declined this year by more than a year (−1.26 years), far more than during the worst year of the HIV epidemic, or the worst 3 years of the opioid crisis, and to reach its lowest level since 2008. Substantially larger reductions, exceeding 2 years, are estimated for Panama, Peru, and parts of Italy, Spain, the USA and especially, Mexico.Conclusions With lesser demand on data than direct standardisation, indirect standardisation is a valid alternative to adjust international comparisons for differences in population distribution by sex and age-groups. A number of populations have experienced reductions in 2020 life expectancies that are substantial by recent historical standards.
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/11/3/e042934.full
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