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Premature mortality attributable to COVID-19: potential years of life lost in 17 countries around the world, January–August 2020

Version 3 2024-06-14, 06:21
Version 2 2024-06-03, 10:50
Version 1 2023-02-09, 22:15
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-14, 06:21 authored by MP Ugarte, S Achilleos, A Quattrocchi, J Gabel, O Kolokotroni, C Constantinou, N Nicolaou, JM Rodriguez-Llanes, Q Huang, O Verstiuk, N Pidmurniak, JW Tao, B Burström, P Klepac, I Erzen, M Chong, M Barron, TP Hagen, Z Kalmatayeva, K Davletov, I Zucker, Z Kaufman, M Kereselidze, L Kandelaki, N Le Meur, L Goldsmith, JA Critchley, MA Pinilla, GI Jaramillo, D Teixeira, LF Goméz, J Lobato, C Araújo, J Cuthbertson, Catherine BennettCatherine Bennett, A Polemitis, A Charalambous, CA Demetriou
Abstract Background Understanding the impact of the burden of COVID-19 is key to successfully navigating the COVID-19 pandemic. As part of a larger investigation on COVID-19 mortality impact, this study aims to estimate the Potential Years of Life Lost (PYLL) in 17 countries and territories across the world (Australia, Brazil, Cape Verde, Colombia, Cyprus, France, Georgia, Israel, Kazakhstan, Peru, Norway, England & Wales, Scotland, Slovenia, Sweden, Ukraine, and the United States [USA]). Methods Age- and sex-specific COVID-19 death numbers from primary national sources were collected by an international research consortium. The study period was established based on the availability of data from the inception of the pandemic to the end of August 2020. The PYLL for each country were computed using 80 years as the maximum life expectancy. Results As of August 2020, 442,677 (range: 18–185,083) deaths attributed to COVID-19 were recorded in 17 countries which translated to 4,210,654 (range: 112–1,554,225) PYLL. The average PYLL per death was 8.7 years, with substantial variation ranging from 2.7 years in Australia to 19.3 PYLL in Ukraine. North and South American countries as well as England & Wales, Scotland and Sweden experienced the highest PYLL per 100,000 population; whereas Australia, Slovenia and Georgia experienced the lowest. Overall, males experienced higher PYLL rate and higher PYLL per death than females. In most countries, most of the PYLL were observed for people aged over 60 or 65 years, irrespective of sex. Yet, Brazil, Cape Verde, Colombia, Israel, Peru, Scotland, Ukraine, and the USA concentrated most PYLL in younger age groups. Conclusions Our results highlight the role of PYLL as a tool to understand the impact of COVID-19 on demographic groups within and across countries, guiding preventive measures to protect these groups under the ongoing pandemic. Continuous monitoring of PYLL is therefore needed to better understand the burden of COVID-19 in terms of premature mortality.

History

Journal

BMC Public Health

Volume

22

Article number

ARTN 54

Location

England

ISSN

1471-2458

eISSN

1471-2458

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

BMC