Last updated on 12-6-2024 by Natalia Bustos Sierra
Auteurs
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; Lobato, Jackeline; Laylla Macedo; Mortensen, Laust Hvas; Julia Critchley; Lucy Goldsmith; Denissov, Gleb; Le Meur, Nolwenn; Kandelaki, Levan; Kostas Athanasakis; Binyamin Binyaminy; Tamar Maor; Fabrizio Stracci; Giuseppe Ambrosio; Kairat Davletov; Nataliya Glushkova; Martial, Cyndy; Marie Chan Sun; Terje P Hagen; Mario Chong; Manuel Barron; Łyszczarz, Błażej; Ivan Erzen; Peter Arcos Gonzalez; Bo Burström; Nataliia Pidmurniak; Olesia Verstiuk; Huang, Qian; Antonis Polemitis; Andreas Charalambous; Christiana A DemetriouTrefwoorden
Article written during project(s) :
Samenvatting:
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 2015-2021 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 (2015-2019), accounting for seasonality, and long-term and short-term trends. Age-specific weekly excess mortality was s…