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Excess Deaths During the Coronavirus Pandemic

The New York Times is releasing data that documents the number of deaths from all causes that have occurred during the coronavirus pandemic for 24 countries. We are compiling this time series data from national and municipal health departments, vital statistics offices and other official sources in order to better understand the true toll of the pandemic and provide a record for researchers and the public.

Official Covid-19 death tolls offer a limited view of the impact of the outbreak because they often exclude people who have not been tested and those who died at home. All-cause mortality is widely used by demographers and other researchers to understand the full impact of deadly events, including epidemics, wars and natural disasters. The totals in this data include deaths from Covid-19 as well as those from other causes, likely including people who could not be treated or did not seek treatment for other conditions.

We have used this data to produce graphics tracking the outbreak’s toll and stories about Ecuador, Russia, Turkey, Sweden and other countries. We would like to thank a number of demographers and other researchers, listed at the end, who have provided data or helped interpret it.

Country and City-Level Data

The number of all-cause deaths recorded in each area, by week or month, can be found in the deaths.csv file. (Raw CSV) For weekly data, the first and last weeks of the year, which are often partial weeks, were excluded.

country, placename, frequency, start_date, end_date, year, month, week, deaths, expected_deaths, excess_deaths, baseline
France,,weekly,2020-04-27,2020-05-03,2020,4,18,10498,10357,141,2010-2018 weekly average

Some of the data is only available at the city level.

country, placename, frequency, start_date, end_date, year, month, week, deaths, expected_deaths, excess_deaths, baseline
Turkey,Istanbul,weekly,2020-04-06,2020-04-12,2020,4,15,2193,1429,764,2018-2019 weekly average

The deaths fields have the following definitions:

  • deaths: The total number of confirmed deaths recorded from any cause.
  • expected_deaths: The baseline number of expected deaths, calculated from a historical average. See expected deaths.
  • excess_deaths: The number of deaths minus the expected deaths.

The time fields have the following definitions:

  • frequency: Weekly or monthly, depending on how the data is recorded.
  • start_date: The first date included in the period.
  • end_date: The last date included in the period.
  • month: Numerical month.
  • week: Epidemiological week, which is a standardized way of counting weeks to allow for year-over-year comparisons. Most countries start epi weeks on Mondays, but others vary.
  • baseline: The years used to calculate expected_deaths.

Methodology

The data is the product of journalists in a number of countries who monitor official data releases and ask government officials for information. We have consulted with demographers, medical officials and local sources to confirm that this data is broadly representative of how many people have died. In some countries, the number of burials, hospital deaths or other factors are used to confirm that the underlying trends are representative.

But mortality data in the middle of a pandemic is not perfect. Many countries have not yet published any data on all-cause mortality. And during a pandemic, normal patterns of death registration may be disrupted, which could lead to changes in how many deaths are captured.

Most of the countries in this dataset have widespread vital statistics coverage. But many low-income countries have unreliable death registration systems, making it very difficult to assess their levels of excess mortality. A rough guide to the historical completeness of death registration systems by country is available from the United Nations: https://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic-social/crvs/documents/Website_final_coverage.xls

Some countries are publishing mortality data faster than normal in order to understand how mortality is changing. That means data, especially for recent time periods, may be revised. It is usually revised upwards as more deaths are reported.

Other than for New York City, this dataset does not include mortality statistics for the United States. Elsewhere, we have analyzed excess mortality for the American states where mortality data is sufficiently complete. Mortality data at the state level is available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

See Data Sources below for the source of data for each country in this dataset.

Expected Deaths

We have calculated an average number of expected deaths for each area based on historical data for the same time of year. These expected deaths are the basis for our excess death calculations, which estimate how many more people have died this year than in an average year.

The number of years used in the historical averages changes depending on what data is available, whether it is reliable and underlying demographic changes. See Data Sources for the years used to calculate the baselines. The baselines do not adjust for changes in age or other demographics, and they do not account for changes in total population.

The number of expected deaths are not adjusted for how non-Covid-19 deaths may change during the outbreak, which will take some time to figure out. As countries impose control measures, deaths from causes like road accidents and homicides may decline. And people who die from Covid-19 cannot die later from other causes, which may reduce other causes of death. Both of these factors, if they play a role, would lead these baselines to understate, rather than overstate, the number of excess deaths.

Data Sources

Austria

Source: Statistics Austria
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Belgium

Source: Sciensano publishes a weekly report. More historical mortality data is from the Belgian Mortality Monitoring dashboard.
Baseline years: 2016-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Brazil

Source: Data for five cities in Brazil — São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza, Manaus and Recife — is from the Registro Civil and the Ministry of Health.
Baseline years: 2016-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Denmark

Source: Statistics Denmark
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Ecuador

Source: General Direction of Civil Registry
Baseline years: 2017-2019. 2019 data is only available for Jan.-April.
Data frequency: monthly

Finland

Source: Statistics Finland
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

France

Source: INSEE (2018-2020 data can be found here)
Baseline years: 2010-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Germany

Source: Federal Statistics Office
Baseline years: 2016-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Jakarta, Indonesia

Source: Jakarta’s Department of Parks and Cemeteries
Baseline years: 2010-2019
Data frequency: monthly burials

Israel

Source: Population and Immigration Authority
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: monthly

Italy

Source: The Italian National Institute of Statistics
Baseline years: 2015-2019 monthly average. Historical data is only available as a four-year average from January 1 through March 31.
Data frequency: monthly

Netherlands

Source: Statistics Netherlands
Baseline years: 2016-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Norway

Source: Statistics Norway
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Peru

Source: Mortality Information System (Sinadef) for 2017-2020; Health Ministry for 2016.
Baseline years: 2017-2019
Data frequency: monthly

Portugal

Source: Eurostat
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Moscow, Russia

Source: Moscow City Government
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: monthly

Sweden

Source: Statistics Sweden
Baseline years: 2015-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Switzerland

Source: Federal Statistics Bureau
Baseline years: 2016-2019
Data frequency: weekly

United Kingdom

Sources: Office for National Statistics; National Records of Scotland; Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency.
Baseline years: 2010-2019
Data frequency: weekly

New York City, United States

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
Baseline years: 2017-2019
Data frequency: weekly

Other Collections of All-Cause Mortality Data

The Human Mortality Database includes recent all-cause deaths collected by demographers at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research and other institutions. The Economist has collected all-cause deaths and has made its data publicly available. And the Financial Times has also collected all-cause deaths data.

License and Attribution

This data is licensed under the same terms as our Coronavirus Data in the United States data. In general, we are making this data publicly available for broad, noncommercial public use including by medical and public health researchers, policymakers, analysts and local news media.

If you use this data, you must attribute it to “The New York Times” in any publication. If you would like a more expanded description of the data, you could say “Data from The New York Times, based on reports from national and municipal health agencies.”

If you use it in an online presentation, we would appreciate it if you would link to our graphic tracking these deaths https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/04/21/world/coronavirus-missing-deaths.html.

If you use this data, please let us know at [email protected].

See our LICENSE for the full terms of use for this data.

Contact Us

If you have questions about the data or licensing conditions, please contact us at:

[email protected]

Contributors

Allison McCann and Jin Wu have been leading our data collection efforts.

Josh Katz contributed reporting from New York, Elian Peltier from Paris, Muktita Suhartono from Bangkok, Carlotta Gall from Istanbul, Anatoly Kurmanaev from Caracas, Venezuela, Monika Pronczuk from Brussels, José María León Cabrera from Quito, Ecuador, Irit Pazner from Jerusalem, Mirelis Morales from Lima and Manuela Andreoni from Rio de Janeiro.

Thank you to Stéphane Helleringer, Johns Hopkins University; Tim Riffe, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; Lasse Skafte Vestergaard, EuroMOMO; Vladimir Shkolnikov, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research; Jenny Garcia, Institut National d'Études Démographiques; Tom Moultrie, University of Cape Town; Isaac Sasson, Tel Aviv University; Patrick Gerland, United Nations; S V Subramanian, Harvard University; Paulo Lotufo, University of São Paulo; and Marcelo Oliveira.