A critique of estimates of excess mortality from COVID-19 pandemic

In the past, The Lancet has published papers which have often enjoyed media attention with an enduring announcement effect which may continue to influence the public and health
authorities.

Recently, widely reported in the media, a paper [1] with 95 authors was published on “Estimating excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic analysis of COVID-19-related mortality, 2020-2021”. Computer modelling which is central to the paper [1] may overestimate the COVID-19 mortality threat, as happened frequently during the pandemic, causing disproportionate policy responses.

Introduction

The main conclusion of the paper [1] per its modelling, is that world COVID-19 deaths are estimated to total 18 million to the end of 2021, about 3 times the 6 million reported mortality. The authors call this estimate “excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic”, which will be explained in this critique as misleading. To put this estimate in perspective, based on historical data [2] since 1950, the excess mortality over 2020-2021 would be less than 1.5 million, assuming a maximum historical 2-year excess of 2.56 percent above expected all-cause mortality, currently at 57 million per annum.

The 18-million excess mortality estimate for 2020-2021 seems extremely high at 12 times the maximum historical excess mortality.

Excess mortality is observational data defined in standard statistics by: Excess mortality = All-cause mortality – expected mortality. In this equation, all-cause mortality is data collected for all deaths observed for the year and expected mortality is an average, usually of the previous five years calculated from past mortality data. Expected mortality is known and easily calculated. Once all-cause mortality data are known from observations, excess mortality is simply an empirical fact, calculated straightforwardly from data.

The general purpose of calculating excess mortality is to quantify unexpected deaths leading to efforts to investigate causes which may explain the deviations.

Methods

The paper [1] accepts this definition stating “Excess mortality over time was calculated as observed mortality, after excluding data from periods affected by late registration and anomalies such as heat waves, minus expected mortality.” Therefore, to calculate excess mortality for COVID-19 pandemic till the end of 2021, it is essential to have observed all-cause mortality data to 2021, which are not available to the authors, at least not yet for most countries.

Without adequate collection of observational all-cause mortality data, excess mortality cannot be calculated.

To predict observations, the authors have developed a computer model (with adjustable parameters and covariates) which uses all-cause mortality data pre-2020, before the COVID-19 pandemic, as input to predict all-cause mortality data post-2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Given its model projections of all-cause mortality, the paper then estimates the excess mortality due to the COVID-19 pandemic: Excess mortality due to the COVID-19 pandemic, defined as the net difference between the number of deaths during the pandemic (measured by observed or estimated all-cause mortality) and the number of deaths that would be expected on the basis of past trends in all-cause mortality, is therefore a crucial measure of the true toll of the COVID-19 pandemic.

That is, a model estimate of the “excess mortality during COVID-19 pandemic” is simply considered by the authors as an estimate for the “excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic”.

Results

The results of computer modelling of all-cause mortality for 191 countries are presented as estimated excess mortality in the 2020-2021 two-year period for each country and aggregated sub-region. The estimated excess mortality for all countries totalled 18 million triples the 6 million reported COVID-19 mortality.

The main result can be explained by a de facto assumption of substantial undercounting of mortality in major regions which has been adjusted by computer modelling. The levels of undercounting have been expressed by the “ratio of excess mortality to reported COVID-19 mortality” for each country as seen in Figure 4 of the paper:

Regions with high estimated ratios of excess to reported mortality (RERM) are coloured red/orange in the above figure which are predominately in Africa, India and China. These regions have large populations, accounting for more than half of global population, and yet they have some of the lowest reported COVID-19 mortality. By modelling these countries with very high RERM exceeding 20, global excess mortality would increase substantially.

For example, RERM were estimated at 35.0 and 36.4 for Eastern and Western sub-Saharan Africa respectively. The average RERM for India was estimated at 8.33, with the province of Uttar Pradesh at 22.6, where 22,900 reported deaths were increased to an estimate of 517,000.

Oddly, estimated RERMs in Australia and New Zealand are negative, indicating 2020-2021 all-cause mortality in those countries are predicted to be less than expectation despite increases from reported COVID-19 mortality. That is, the modelling suggests that the COVID-19 pandemic in those countries appears to have saved lives. Placing the modelling results in historical context, we note the expected global all-cause mortality average over 2015-2019 [2] is about 57 million per annum.

Since 1950, OWID data [2] show the maximum excess mortality over any two-year period was 2.56 percent or 1.5 million above expected mortality. The model estimated 2020-2021 excess mortality of 18 million would imply an all-cause mortality of 75 million or about 32 percent above expectation and 12 times the maximum of historical deviations.

Critique

The modelling of the paper lacks transparency, typical of COVID-19 models [3]. With insufficient technical details (even with computer codes) to replicate and potentially falsify the modelling, it is not possible to critique exactly how the model can predict all-cause mortality during COVID-19 pandemic from historical data without COVID-19 pandemic. Without possibilities of replication and potential falsification, the paper lacks the essential elements of science [4].

The computer model estimates 2020-2021 all-cause mortality for 191 countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, using past all-cause mortality data which have no similar historical precedence. The COVID-19 pandemic saw unprecedented public health interventions, including near universal vaccination which vary between countries. The COVID-19 pandemic did not preclude mortality due to natural disasters such as floods, droughts, cyclones etc.

Out-of-sample testing in the paper is problematic when data collected during COVID-19 pandemic are already uncertain subject to revision. It is difficult to glean from the paper how all-cause mortality in 2020-2021 can be estimated by computer models with any confidence. The regression model estimate of a global 2020-2021 all-cause mortality implies, from the above equation, the excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic.

By calling this excess mortality estimate the “excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic”, the authors have attributed all excess mortality to the COVID-19 pandemic, based on the assumption that “The full impact of the pandemic has been much greater than what is indicated by reported deaths due to COVID-19 alone.” This statement is not always true, as the paper itself shows excess mortality was negative in Australia and New Zealand, during COVID-19 pandemic.

The paper does not explain how the 12 million excess mortality in addition to the six million reported was related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The 18 million estimated excess deaths translate to an estimated global excess mortality rate of 228 per 100,000, not 120.3 per 100,000 as stated in the main table of the paper — a significant internal inconsistency. Theestimated global excess mortality rate of 228 per 100,000 is improbably higher than 180 per100,000 for the US, which is likely most vulnerable in the COVID-19 pandemic [5].

The low reported COVID-19 mortality e.g. in Africa, India and China, may not be due to undercounting, but may be accurate due to ignored factors such as effective prevention, early treatment, warmer climates, lower latitudes, higher vitamin D sufficiency, younger population, lower body-mass-index, etc. which may provide genuine scientific explanations for the low COVID mortality in some countries [5].

The main criticism of the paper is that it has conjectured an estimate of the “excess mortality during COVID-19 pandemic” and misleadingly called it “excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic.”

This may mislead the public and health authorities into the belief that the COVID-19 disease in 2020-2021 was deadlier than it really was.

Conclusion

In conclusion, the paper published in The Lancet may likely mislead journalists, fact checkers and health authorities to assume that the true death toll due to the COVID-19 disease is 18 million, tripling the reported 6 million death toll which arguably may already be an over-estimate due to overcounting of deaths with COVID [6]. Model is not reality — not observational data.

It should be cautioned that the model may have neither accurately estimated excess mortality nor correctly attributed it to COVID-19. The 18 million estimated excess mortality due to COVID-19 is likely an exaggerated conjecture, not an observational fact.

References

  1. Wang H, Paulson KR, Pease SA et al. Estimating excess mortality due to COVID-19 pandemic: a systematic analysis of COVID-19-related mortality, 2020-2021, The Lancet , March 10, 2022. Retrieved from: https://www.thelancet.com/action/showPdf?pii=S0140-6736%2821%2902796-3 (accessed March 18, 2022).
  2. Roser M, Ritchie E, Ortiz-Ospina E. World population growth. Published online at OurWorldInData.org. Retrieved from: https://ourworldindata.org/world-population-growth#how-many-people-die-and-how-many-are-born-each-year (accessed March 18, 2022).
  3. Jalali MS, DiGennaro C, Sridhar D. Transparency assessment of COVID-19 models, The Lancet , October 27, 2020. Retrieved from: https://scholar.harvard.edu/files/jalali/files/transparency_assessment_covid19.pdf (accessed March 18, 2022).
  4. Popper K . Conjectures and refutations: the growth of scientific knowledge . Routledge Classics, London and New York, 2002 (Page 48).
  5. Sy W. Randomized controlled trial limitations: a case study of vaccine efficacy in COVID-19 epidemiology. March 27, 2022. Retrieved from: http://www.asepp.com/randomized-controlled-trial-limitations-a-case-study-of-vaccine-efficacy-in-covid-19-epidemiology/ (accessed March 27, 2022).
  6. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (U.S.) Provisional death counts for coronavirus disease (COVID-19), National Center for Health Statistics. Retrieved from: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/tech_notes.htm (accessed March 19, 2022).

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Comments (6)

  • Avatar

    Ken Hughes

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    ‘Meaningless drivel !

    There was no All cause excess mortality in 2020 compared to the previous twenty one years. In fact, 2020 came 9th when adjusted for population growth. Figures from ONS.

    Clearly, a fake pandemic was created by “stealing” deaths from other causes, (flu was a prime example as it disappeared altogether, rebranded as Covid 19).

    I don’t see how this can be dismissed as “conspiracy theory” when the facts are so clear.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Alan

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      I make 2020 the 12th lowest mortality rate on record for England and Wales from the ONS. But 2018 was supposed to be a bad flu year and that also does not show any significant increase in mortality. I suspect when monthly data is used it might show an increase in excess deaths but these are people who were close to death anyway and when annual data are used there is no obvious increase.

      Reply

  • Avatar

    hooligan

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    the UN estimates that life expectancy INCREASES by 3 months a year – no change in the rate of increase between 2019 and 2022 inclusive.
    https://www.macrotrends.net/countries/WLD/world/life-expectancy
    it was 72.46 years in 2019 for around 7.7 billion people
    https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/world-population-by-year/
    a simplifying assumption would be that 7.7 billion people live 72.5 years, meaning that instead of the 57 million per annum “expected” deaths, the annual deaths should be 7.7 billion divided by 72.5 years = 106 million people die a year – almost twice that 57 million assumed in the lancet article.
    in any event, it has been estimated that increases in all cause mortality are roughly double that of deaths with covid present. deferred and cancelled health treatment such as cancer screenings, suicides, new conditions resulting from sedentary behaviour and so on and so forth contributed twice the number of deaths as covid19.
    what is missing is an attribution to deaths by the lethal injections of the very cyto-toxic spike proteins in the deadly virus.
    this also pre-supposes that those that died with covid19 present were correctly ascribed to covid19 rather than the 2-6 other co-morbidities (which were not properly treated during the pandemic). the average age at death of ALL those that died is 1-2 years older than life expectancy – get covid19 live an extra year or two?

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Saeed Qureshi

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    Most, if not everything, of the past two years related to viruses and the pandemic have been based on guesses (named differently, such as “science,” modeling, virus, testing, vaccines, hospitalization, extra-deaths, etc.). However, they all have been based on the opinions of individuals in high places presented with computer pictures and jargon. All guesses (“predictions”) are shown to be incorrect in the past and will be in the future.

    Regarding reports about COVID-19 deaths, it was clear from the beginning (as described) that the reported death data lacked accuracy and validity.

    (1) Is Coronavirus really causing abnormally higher number of deaths? (https://bioanalyticx.com/is-coronavirus-really-causing-abnormally-higher-number-of-deaths/, April 12, 2020)
    (2) Did COVID cause “excess deaths?” (https://bioanalyticx.com/did-covid-cause-excess-deaths/, January 25, 2021)
    (3) COVID deaths as per science (https://bioanalyticx.com/covid-deaths-as-per-science/, November 6, 2021)

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Frank S.

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    The Lancet has become the new “Enquirer”, where Big Money, high dollar pharmaco-medicos can peddle their propaganda.
    Did the study adjust for lockdown-induced suicides, drug ODs and domestic assaults?
    Or, how about hospital-induced murders due to national health authority protocols?
    And what about vax deaths for a virus that has a 99.95% survival rate if untreated.
    In conclusion: Who says there’s a shortage of “fertilizer”?

    Reply

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