Our latest analysis of excess mortality is now out, covering all cause mortality to the end of June 2022, plus COVID-19 only mortality for July-Sept. #COVID19Aus#excessdeaths
TLDR: +11,200 excess deaths in first half of 2022 (13%) actuaries.digital/2022/10/06/cov…
Our excess deaths are measured relative to pre-pandemic expectations of mortality.
Includes allowance for continuation of mortality improvement/decline for each cause of death.
Allows for changes in the size and age composition of the population.
Excess mortality in the month of June 2022 was again very high, almost as bad as January 2022.
Needed to change my y-axis for this one.
Total excess deaths in June of 2,400 (16%):
- a lower share of excess deaths were due to COVID-19 (about a third, compared with 54% earlier in 2022);
- there were more flu deaths in June than predicted, reflecting an early flu season; we do not expect a bad flu year
- dementia deaths were much higher than predicted, possibly impacted by the reappearance of flu in the community and high COVID-19 cases in aged care homes in June;
- ischaemic heart disease and other causes also made a significant contribution.
In the six months to June, total excess of 11,200 deaths (13%):
- half due to COVID-19 (98 from long Covid)
- respiratory down, despite flu deaths in May and June
- deaths from all other causes significantly higher than predicted.
Here's weekly deaths from COVID (doctor-certified only). About 200 per week in May and June.
For context, in Australia we have about 1,200 deaths from motor vehicle accidents PER YEAR.
Here's weekly respiratory deaths (flu, pneumonia, chronic lower, other - not COVID).
Deaths were higher than predicted in June - a first since March 2020.
Flu surveillance indicates this is due to an earlier flu season rather than an indication of excess mortality for the year.
Here's all non-Covid, non-respiratory.
Another one where I needed to change my y-axis. Terrible.
This shows the excess before and after removing deaths "with" Covid.
It is unclear how many people with COVID-19 would have died during this period anyway, and how many may have had their death hastened by COVID-19.
Thus, the table may ...
... overstate the contribution of COVID-19 to excess mortality from other causes.
However, it indicates that after removing with COVID-19 deaths:
•there remains significant excess from heart disease, dementia and other diseases; but
•excess for diabetes is very low.
This shows the breakdown of excess deaths into those due to COVID-19, those from COVID-19, and those where COVID-19 was not a cause listed on the death certificate.
June 2022 has the highest number of excess deaths not involving COVID-19.
What could be causing the non-COVID excess?
Multiple factors are likely in play, and different factors may be more or less pronounced at various times.
The blog in my first tweet discusses these potential factors in more detail.
What about beyond June?
In the last three months there have been about 5,300 surveillance COVID deaths (including an estimate for the last 1-3 days of Sept).
Of these, we expect 74% to be "from" rather than "with" COVID, resulting in a estimated 3,900 deaths from COVID-19 in Q3 2022. Equivalent to 8% excess, before we include any excess from other causes.
Estimated excess deaths across the pandemic are 13,800 (3%).
This shows the cumulative age standardised mortality rates for each year since 2015, expressed relative to the 2019 year.
Noting that, pre-pandemic, mortality was falling by 1.5%-2% pa, experience for the first half of 2022 is higher than for any other year shown.
Covid is expected to be the third leading cause of death in 2022. Behind dementia and ischaemic heart disease. Above strokes, lung cancer, colon cancer.
The end. Any questions?
Pre-emptively, no, we cannot do good analysis by age or state as we dont have data by age&cause or state&cause. So it makes it hard to interpret.
Here's a thread from last month on age, and I'll do something by state this month.
In advance of our June excess mortality work coming out tomorrow, here is a thread on the latest COVID-19 data in Australia. #COVID19Aus
Here's a table showing the various bits of data we know about COVID-19 deaths.
Note with the change to weekly reporting, I have needed to estimate surveillance deaths for the last day of Sept (last 3 days for Qld).
This thread might be a good read for some of my new followers, explaining how Covid deaths are recorded in Australia, concentrating on the difference between daily surveillance reports and the ABS statistics.
The Ministry of Health (MoH) in Singapore released this very interesting report on excess deaths over the weekend. moh.gov.sg/docs/libraries…
The report covers excess deaths from the start of the pandemic until 30 June 2022.
Covid deaths in Singapore and Australia per head of population have been broadly similar.
In measuring excess deaths, the MoH have used the 2019 standardised death rate as their baseline. Their measurement allows for changes in the size and age distribution of the population. Any excess represents a worse mortality RATE compared with 2019. This is good.
The NSW epi report for the week ending 10 Sept is now out. Note that this is the week ending just before they switched from daily to weekly reporting, so nothing new on that front. #Covid19Aus#Covid19NSW
You can find the full report here... health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/cov…
Cases are down another 29% this week. Excellent.
While PCR testing is down again (-15%), so is positivity (at 7% this week). Good.
Only a few highlights this week as trajectories haven't changed, and I'm a bit fried after the excess deaths stuff this week:
- cases are down 21% and all age groups moving similarly; good
- PCR testing is down, but positivity rate is also down; good
- hospital admissions down 15%; excellent. The biggest % fall we've seen in a long time
- people in hospital down 6%; good. Hopefully this % will be even bigger next week as the lower admissions flow through
- 126 deaths; never good. But the lowest number in the seven weeks
Our latest estimates of excess deaths are out, covering all cause mortality to the end of May 2022, plus COVID-19 only mortality for Jun-Aug. #COVID19Aus#excessdeaths
TLDR: +8,500 excess deaths in 5 months to May (12%) actuaries.digital/2022/08/31/cov…
Note our excess deaths are measured relative to pre-pandemic expectations of mortality.
Includes allowance for continuation of mortality improvement/decline for each cause of death.
Allows for changes in the size and age composition of the population.
Another month of huge excess deaths in May. Only one week in 2022 to date has been within our 95% confidence interval