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Monthly excess mortality across counties in the United States during the Covid-19 pandemic, March 2020 to February 2022.

Eugenio PaglinoDielle J LundbergZhenwei ZhouJoe A WassermanRafeya RaquibAnneliese N LuckKatherine HempsteadJacob BorSamuel H PrestonIrma T EloAndrew C Stokes
Published in: medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences (2022)
Excess mortality is the difference between expected and observed mortality in a given period and has emerged as a leading measure of the overall impact of the Covid-19 pandemic that is not biased by differences in testing or cause-of-death assignment. Spatially and temporally granular estimates of excess mortality are needed to understand which areas have been most impacted by the pandemic, evaluate exacerbating and mitigating factors, and inform response efforts, including allocating resources to affected communities. We estimated all-cause excess mortality for the United States from March 2020 through February 2022 by county and month using a Bayesian hierarchical model trained on data from 2015 to 2019. An estimated 1,159,580 excess deaths occurred during the first two years of the pandemic (first: 620,872; second: 538,708). Overall, excess mortality decreased in large metropolitan counties, but increased in nonmetro counties, between the first and second years of the pandemic. Despite the initial concentration of mortality in large metropolitan Northeast counties, beginning in February 2021, nonmetro South counties had the highest cumulative relative excess mortality. These results highlight the need for investments in rural health as the pandemic’s disproportionate impact on rural areas continues to grow.
Keyphrases
  • cardiovascular events
  • coronavirus disease
  • risk factors
  • mental health
  • type diabetes
  • body composition
  • climate change
  • quality improvement
  • social media
  • health information
  • data analysis
  • resistance training