Dokumentdetails
ID

doi:10.1007/s44197-024-00242-4...

Autor
Beeks, Victoria Virginia Achilleos, Souzana Quattrocchi, Annalisa Pallari, Chryso Th. Critselis, Elena Salameh, Pascale Rahmanian Haghighi, Mohammad Reza Rodriguez-Llanes, Jose Manuel Ambrosio, Giuseppe Artemiou, Andreas Gabel, John Bennett, Catherine Marie Cuthbertson, Joseph Zimmermann, Claudia Schernhammer, Eva Susanna Costa, Antonio José Leal Carvalho, Luciana Freire Lobato, Jackeline Christiane Pinto Athanasiadou, Maria Critchley, Julia Alison Goldsmith, Lucy Pollyanna Kandelaki, Levan Glushkova, Natalya Davletov, Kairat Semenova, Yuliya Erzen, Ivan Verstiuk, Olesia Alekkou, Dimos Polemitis, Antonis Charalambous, Andreas Demetriou, Christiana A. The C-MOR Consortium
Langue
en
Editor

Springer

Kategorie

Medicine & Public Health

Jahr

2024

Auflistungsdatum

29.05.2024

Schlüsselwörter
cause-specific mortality covid-19 cardiovascular diseases cancer respiratory tract infections public health measures countries georgia study cumulative and/or associated increased northern ireland excess cause-specific 2020 pneumonia respiratory 2021
Metrisch

Zusammenfassung

Background This study investigated cause-specific mortality rates in 12 countries during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 and 2021.

Methods We collected weekly cause-specific mortality data from respiratory disease, pneumonia, cardiovascular disease (CVD) and cancer from national vital statistic databases.

We calculated excess mortality for respiratory disease (excluding COVID-19 codes), pneumonia, and CVD in 2020 and 2021 by comparing observed weekly against expected mortality based on historical data (2015–2019), accounting for seasonal trends.

We used multilevel regression models to investigate the association between country-level pandemic-related variables and cause-specific mortality.

Results Significant reductions in cumulative mortality from respiratory disease and pneumonia were observed in 2020 and/or 2021, except for Georgia, Northern Ireland, Kazakhstan, and Ukraine, which exhibited excess mortality for one or both causes.

Australia, Austria, Cyprus, Georgia, and Northern Ireland experienced excess cumulative CVD mortality in 2020 and/or 2021.

Australia, Austria, Brazil, Cyprus, Georgia, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Slovenia, experienced increased crude cumulative cancer mortality during 2020 and/or 2021 compared to previous years.

Among pandemic-related variables, reported COVID-19 incidence was negatively associated with increased cancer mortality, excess respiratory, (2020) and pneumonia (2021) mortality, and positively associated with respiratory and CVD mortality (2021).

Stringency of control measures were negatively associated with excess respiratory disease, CVD, and increased cancer mortality (2021).

Conclusions This study provides evidence of substantial excess mortality from CVD, and notable reductions in respiratory disease and pneumonia in both years across most countries investigated.

Our study also highlights the beneficial impact of stringent control measures in mitigating excess mortality from most causes in 2021.

Beeks, Victoria Virginia,Achilleos, Souzana,Quattrocchi, Annalisa,Pallari, Chryso Th.,Critselis, Elena,Salameh, Pascale,Rahmanian Haghighi, Mohammad Reza,Rodriguez-Llanes, Jose Manuel,Ambrosio, Giuseppe,Artemiou, Andreas,Gabel, John,Bennett, Catherine Marie,Cuthbertson, Joseph,Zimmermann, Claudia,Schernhammer, Eva Susanna,Costa, Antonio José Leal,Carvalho, Luciana Freire,Lobato, Jackeline Christiane Pinto,Athanasiadou, Maria,Critchley, Julia Alison,Goldsmith, Lucy Pollyanna,Kandelaki, Levan,Glushkova, Natalya,Davletov, Kairat,Semenova, Yuliya,Erzen, Ivan,Verstiuk, Olesia,Alekkou, Dimos,Polemitis, Antonis,Charalambous, Andreas,Demetriou, Christiana A.,The C-MOR Consortium, 2024, Cause-Specific Excess Mortality During the COVID-19 Pandemic (2020–2021) in 12 Countries of the C-MOR Consortium, Springer

Dokumentieren

Öffnen

Teilen

Quelle

Artikel empfohlen von ES/IODE AI

Use of ileostomy versus colostomy as a bridge to surgery in left-sided obstructive colon cancer: retrospective cohort study
deviating 0 versus surgery bridge colon study left-sided obstructive stoma colostomy cancer cent