COVID mortality

Well, you can look at the grey lines which show the prior years.

I am going to re-do my numbers next week for %age increase in mortality by age group – the increase is actually very high for 25 - 44, but note that it’s a pretty constant increase in mortality, not spikes as with the “old” folks… and if you compare against COVID deaths by age, very low percentage of the excess for the 25-44 group is explained by COVID.

Step 1: Don’t get COVID.

Overweight (BMI between 25 and 30) didn’t make that list? Surprised.

Nope. I suppose that would make the list useless, since most of America is overweight.

Also, mildly overweight isn’t unhealthy. There’s zero evidence it’s worse for you than being lighter, and some evidence that it’s better for you. The “healthy weight” guidelines seem to have been set with esthetics in mind, with some pressure from the diet industry.

That being said, I’m annoyed. I have lost weight over the pandemic, because I’m no longer hanging out with friends in the evening with available food. And so my weight dropped from just barely obese to very overweight. So I fell out of a priority category. And I doubt that losing 10 pounds actually changes my risk much.

So I’m just under the “old” threshold, and just under the “obese” threshold, and also just under the “immune compromised” threshold, based on some blood tests I had done after my brother was found to be deficient in some types of white cells. So I’m pretty sure my risk is actually quite high, but I don’t quiiiiite hit any of the triggers to get ahead of “everyone else” in line for vaccination. And I dropped below one trigger due to the frigging virus.

I suppose you could take up smoking to put yourself into a higher risk category. :wink:

Or you could lie about your weight. Wear heavy clothes or something. It’s winter.

Yes, it’s very easy to “gain” 10 pounds for a doctor’s appointment or something else. Wish it were just as easy to shed it.

I’m not planning on seeing my doctor before I (hope) I can get vaccinated. I suppose I could complain to him via email about gaining the weight back. But that doesn’t feel right. Weirdly, wearing heavy shoes and leaving crap in my pockets for an actual appointment feels less wrong. I have no idea why they don’t ask me to remove my shoes and jacket, etc., but they don’t.

meep, is some of this article your work?

Also, could someone please paste it? I’m not a subscriber.

First, I don’t think any of my work went into this (first of all, none of the authors conacted me; second, this is about global impact)

Second… I don’t have the text yet; I may have that tomorrow.

OK, thanks.

I hope they didn’t rely on psychologists who “specialize” in left-handed mortality.

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Here is the article:

The Covid-19 Death Toll Is Even Worse Than It Looks

World-wide deaths are running far beyond what would have been expected without the pandemic

By

Paul Overberg

,

Jon Kamp

and

Daniel Michaels

| Graphics by

Lindsay Huth

clicky

The recorded death count from the Covid-19 pandemic as of Thursday is nearing 2 million. The true extent is far worse.

More than 2.8 million people have lost their lives due to the pandemic, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of data from 59 countries and jurisdictions. This tally offers the most comprehensive view yet of the pandemic’s global impact. Deaths in these places last year surged more than 12% above average levels.

Less than two-thirds of that surge has been attributed directly to Covid-19. Public-health experts believe that many, if not most, of the additional deaths were directly linked to the disease, particularly early in the pandemic when testing was sparse. Some of those excess deaths came from indirect fallout, from health-care disruptions, people avoiding the hospital and other issues.

To better understand the pandemic’s global toll, the Journal compiled the most recent available data on deaths from all causes from countries with available records. These countries together account for roughly one-quarter of the world’s population but about three-quarters of all reported deaths from Covid-19 through late last year.

The tally found more than 821,000 additional deaths that aren’t accounted for in governments’ official Covid-19 death counts.

Only about one in four countries world-wide track deaths on a running basis – and few of those have data more recent than November. The countries in the Journal’s tally would likely have counted about 15 million deaths through late fall without the pandemic, based on prior-year trends. Instead, they reported nearly 17 million deaths through that time period. The difference equals roughly the population of Nebraska.

Tracking all of these deaths, and doing it quickly, is vital to help understand the breadth of the crisis, public-health experts say.

“Measuring total deaths gives you a readout if things are getting better or worse,” said Colin Mathers, a retired coordinator of the World Health Organization’s Mortality and Health Analysis Unit. “If you see a sudden rise in heart disease, it may be linked to Covid-19, but if there’s a rise in cancer it may be because of people fearing to go to the hospital.”

Some countries, including New Zealand and Norway, are actually showing lower-than-expected deaths. This may be the effect of controlling the virus through behavior changes that tamp down other causes of death, such as increased hygiene and reduced social interactions that spread other diseases, researchers say.

Because vital statistics can miss connections between deaths and major events, epidemiologists often measure excess deaths – or death tolls above expected levels – to try to capture the fuller picture.

The Journal used the same simple method to calculate expected deaths by averaging death tolls for each country in recent years, then measuring the differences. Tallies for some countries may differ from those nations’ own calculations.

Studying excess deaths helped researchers link a heat wave in France to roughly 15,000 deaths in 2003, and nearly 3,000 fatalities to Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico in 2017, far above the island government’s original count of 64. Examining excess deaths helps incorporate those who perished over a longer period of time due to issues such as health-care disruptions and power outages.

The United Nations had projected that absent the pandemic, there would have been roughly 59.2 million deaths last year. It’s too early to say by how much the planet exceeded that.

The pandemic may have accelerated the deaths of some people who still would have died in 2020. Still, researchers who examined the impact early in the pandemic found even the oldest victims were losing almost a year of life on average.

In the U.S. alone, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data show more than 475,000 excess deaths through early December, a time frame that also included about 281,000 deaths linked to Covid-19, according to Johns Hopkins University.

The pandemic led U.S. deaths to climb at least 10% last year. Typically U.S. deaths grow about 1.6% a year as the population grows and ages.

Covid-19 has already taken third place on the list of top causes of death, after heart disease and cancer.

Prabhat Jha, who directs the Centre for Global Health Research, a nonprofit sponsored by the University of Toronto and St. Michael’s Hospital in Toronto, said future data and analysis will likely show most U.S. excess deaths are linked directly to Covid-19.

Testing shortages made it harder to catch the disease early in the pandemic, and some Covid-19 deaths may have been blamed on the flu and pneumonia instead, said Robert Anderson, chief of the mortality-statistics branch at the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.

The U.S. has seen other problems. Cerebrovascular diseases like strokes are up too, as are deaths from diabetes and high blood pressure; doctors say people avoiding hospitals and rationing medicine likely had an effect. A spike in deaths among patients with Alzheimer’s disease and dementia has been particularly acute, highlighting the risk of nursing home lockdowns on already fragile residents.

“There may be people dying for other reasons other than the virus, particularly in a situation where they are isolated for a length of time, they may not have access to care, they may be afraid to seek care,” Mr. Anderson of the National Center for Health Statistics said.

In the U.S., the virus has disproportionately hit minority groups. Issues like underlying health conditions, poorer access to health coverage and care, more crowded living conditions and virus exposure from front-line jobs have all contributed to higher death tolls for minorities.

This uneven impact is showing up, too, in excess deaths that haven’t been linked to Covid-19.

Excess death surges have struck around the U.S. at different times, tracking the intensity of Covid-19 outbreaks in different regions, CDC data show. New Jersey saw a spike in excess deaths in the spring, while in Texas, numbers began climbing this summer.

The makeup of excess deaths may wind up looking different around the world. France and Spain both reported roughly similar Covid-19 death rates through early December.

Yet in France, all excess deaths through that point were officially linked to Covid-19, while in Spain, only two-thirds were. European mortality experts say Madrid didn’t track Covid-19 deaths as assiduously as Paris did, including at nursing homes.

The excess-death toll will continue to grow as data emerges from many developing nations where compiling death statistics is a slower and more arduous task, such as India and Indonesia.

Epidemiologists there often rely on measures of population samples, or surveys conducted by visiting towns and villages to ask questions about who has died, to help build a fuller picture.

In Iran, which has been hit hard by the coronavirus, government officials have said total fatalities could be triple the official Covid-19 death toll, which was recently about 56,000. In Afghanistan, locals believe the actual death toll is many times the official figure of roughly 2,300 Covid-19 deaths.

Many countries, including Vietnam, Thailand and Costa Rica, plan to offer full-year figures later this year, and China could release data as soon as Monday.

The Journal’s tally didn’t include many countries in Africa, where the pandemic death toll remains largely unknown. South Africa, which tracks deaths weekly, has reported more than 22,000 Covid-19 deaths but more than twice that number of excess deaths.

Many other countries in Africa say they have fared better, based on local reports from hospitals and cemeteries across the continent. Several countries have refused to publish data on coronavirus deaths, and in others, limited statistics cloud the virus’s toll.

Early figures from the continent’s emerging second wave suggest the number of coronavirus deaths this year could rise significantly.

Other parts of the world that have yet to report data on all 2020 deaths may not move the needle much. China, where the virus first emerged, and with a population of roughly 1.4 billion, has officially recorded fewer than 5,000 Covid-19 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins. The most populous country’s coming 2020 mortality report will add a major piece to a still-incomplete global puzzle, and there are wide variations in how countries tally Covid deaths.

Meanwhile, the death toll marches on. Since the most recent total death reports, the countries analyzed by the Journal have collectively recorded more than 444,000 additional Covid-19 deaths stretching into early 2021.

In Europe, Germany’s known Covid-19 death toll has climbed to 43,881 from about 16,200 in late November, when total death numbers were available. Greece’s known virus deaths surged to 5,354 from 626 since late October.

“The last word won’t be known for a couple of years, when the full analysis of all causes of death is complete,” said Mr. Mather, the retired WHO official.


Juan Forero in Bogota, Ryan Dube in Lima, David Luhnow in Mexico City, Nonna Fomenko in Moscow, Luciana Magalhaes in Sao Paulo, Niharika Mandhana in Singapore and Miho Inada in Tokyo contributed to this article.


Methodology: To analyze the pandemic’s toll, the Journal compiled weekly or monthly death data for 2020 and for 2015-19, where available. Most of the data was collected from national statistical agencies, either directly or indirectly through inter-governmental or academic groups. In a handful of nations, data was collected by health data organizations or local analysts. Epidemiologists use several methods to calculate excess deaths, adjusting for age composition, incomplete data and other factors. The Journal used a straightforward method, summing deaths for the portion of 2020 available and subtracting from that total the average number of deaths that occurred in the same span of each year from 2015-19. When the result falls below zero – when the 2020 death total falls below the average – some countries adjust the result to zero, boosting excess death totals. The Journal did not adjust in those cases. All totals are based on actual counts and comparisons. For some nations, the average was based on three or four recent years, typically 2016-19.

Sources: National statistical agencies of Albania, Armenia, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and United Kingdom via Eurostat; national statistical agencies of Israel and South Korea via the Human Mortality Database (University of California-Berkeley and Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research); national statistical agencies of Australia, Canada, Colombia, Ireland, Japan, Malaysia, Mongolia, New Zealand, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Ukraine; selected municipal and regional data for Turkey via Guclu Yaman; health ministries of Chile, Mexico and Peru; National Council of Health Secretaries, Brazil; Civil Registry, Ecuador; Medical Research Council, South Africa; Interior Ministry, Taiwan; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S.

Credit: By Paul Overberg, Jon Kamp and Daniel Michaels

FWIW, the CDC has gone back and recorded some COVID deaths from January 2020 [not very many]

Thank you.
And your semi-professional opinion (meaning: I want your opinion, but I’m not paying for it)?

I’m including this in a blog post I’m writing right now, but here’s my nutshell:

  • yes, there was a lot of excess mortality in 2020, and a good percentage of that was direct COVID deaths
  • I will note that China was not included in their analysis (Taiwan was), nor India, the two most populous countries in the world. Good thing they included the U.S. (third most populous). Indonesia and Pakistan also missing.
  • So 2.8 million dead directly due to COVID seems like an okay order-of-magnitude guess

There were a lot of excess deaths indirectly due to COVID, as detailed in the piece. And I wonder how one dies of Alzheimers, exactly, and how one tells that differently from COVID deaths, when testing is sparse.

A nice video from Sky News on England & Wales mortality – taking trends back to 1840

My most recent mortality post – but it’s not only about COVID

That seems like a dumb chart. % Excess Years are always followed by % Dearth Years. Should determine expected deaths for each year after adjusting for spikes (or, for “Great Freeze,” drops).

Yeah, I have a similar issue with my year-over-year changes in death counts, but the reason I do it is that it’s a very easy number for people to understand. (in the freeze frame of the video, they compare against a 5-year average, but even there a “bad” year obviously makes thing deviate)

I could have a smoothed mortality trend and then look for deviations from that smoothness, but that’s harder to explain (and I mean something other than a 5-year moving average), and my best choice is age-adjusted mortality rate, but that’s pretty abstract because it’s based on a theoretical population distribution.

Using the CDC’s own dashboard:

Here’s the link to the CDC page:

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“Nobody reads the notes. Well, maybe I do”. Lol. Me too.

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