학술논문

Excess Non-COVID-19 Mortality in Portugal: Seven Months after the First Death
Document Type
Report
Source
Portuguese Journal of Public Health. June 1, 2021, Vol. 38 Issue Suppl 1, p51, 7 p.
Subject
Health aspects
Forecasts and trends
Health care industry
Market trend/market analysis
Mortality -- Forecasts and trends
Health care industry -- Forecasts and trends
Epidemiology -- Forecasts and trends -- Health aspects
COVID-19 -- Health aspects -- Forecasts and trends
Language
English
Abstract
Author(s): André Vieira; Vasco Ricoca Peixoto; Pedro Aguiar; Paulo Sousa; Alexandre Abrantes Background On March 2, 2020, the first positive COVID-19 case in Portugal was recorded, i.e., 13 days before [...]
Background: On March 16, 2020, the first death from CO­VID-19 was recorded in Portugal. Since then, there has been a reorganization of health services, changing the normal approach for the different cases of public health. Excess deaths recorded without a COVID-19 diagnosis are called excess mortality without COVID-19 (EM non-COVID-19). This study aims to estimate the EM non-COVID in the 7-month period after the first registered Covid-19 death. Methods: The following 2 methods were used to estimate the excess mortality in this period: the daily historical average of reported deaths and an adapted auto regressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) model, considering the previous 5 years of records until October 16. For this model, after March 16, data was replaced with the daily historical average deaths from the previous 5 years, simulating the closest scenario possible as there was no pandemic. Only deaths from natural causes were selected for these estimations. For EM non-COVID-19 estimation, we subtracted the COVID-19 deaths from the overall excess mortality. Results: Between March 16, 2020, and October 16, 2020, there was an excess of 6,330 deaths from natural causes, i.e., nearly 12% more than expected. Both methods estimated an EM non-COVID-19 of around 66-67% in this period, with a greater relevance in mid-July and mid-September. Conclusions: Excess mortality was present almost every day during the study period. EM non-COVID-19 seemed to vary over time, showing some inadequacy of healthcare services in management of other patients free of COVID-19 in Portugal during periods with a greater patient volume. It is necessary to take care and monitor COVID-19 cases but also non-COVID-19 cases. Keywords: Excess mortality, COVID-19, Epidemiology, Public health surveillance, Portugal