论文标题
估计联盟19日大流行期间全球和国家特定的过剩死亡率
Estimating Global and Country-Specific Excess Mortality During the COVID-19 Pandemic
论文作者
论文摘要
估计世界上每个国家的Covid-19的真正死亡率负担是一项困难但至关重要的公共卫生努力。将死亡(直接或间接的死亡归因于19岁)是有问题的。一个更可实现的目标是“多余的死亡”,特定时期的死亡人数,相对于“正常时间”期望的预期,我们对所有国家 /地区的每月时间范围估算了这一点。2020年和2021年每月的时间范围。多余的死亡率需要两个数字,总死亡和预期的死亡,但是对于许多国家而言,这些国家不可用,因此对于这些国家来说是不可能的。预期的死亡是基于历史数据,我们开发了一个用于生成所有国家 /地区预期估计的模型,我们在计算过量时允许建模的预期数字不确定性。我们描述了为产生世界卫生组织(WHO)过多死亡估计而开发的方法。为了达到可解释性和透明度,我们开发了一个相对简单的过度分散的泊松计数框架,可以在其中对各种数据类型进行建模。我们使用来自具有国家月度数据的国家 /地区的数据来建立一个预测的对数线性回归模型,该模型使用没有数据的国家 /地区的各个国家系数。对于许多国家 /地区,仅可用次国数据,我们基于以下假设,即子区域中死亡的分数随着时间的流逝而保持大约恒定。根据我们的建模,超过2020 - 2021年的全球过剩死亡率的点估计值为1,490万,可信间隔为95%(13.3,16.6)。这导致了多次死亡与报道的共同死亡率为2.75的比率的点估计值,这是一个巨大的差异。
Estimating the true mortality burden of COVID-19 for every country in the world is a difficult, but crucial, public health endeavor. Attributing deaths, direct or indirect, to COVID-19 is problematic. A more attainable target is the "excess deaths", the number of deaths in a particular period, relative to that expected during "normal times", and we estimate this for all countries on a monthly time scale for 2020 and 2021. The excess mortality requires two numbers, the total deaths and the expected deaths, but the former is unavailable for many countries, and so modeling is required for these countries. The expected deaths are based on historic data and we develop a model for producing expected estimates for all countries and we allow for uncertainty in the modeled expected numbers when calculating the excess. We describe the methods that were developed to produce the World Health Organization (WHO) excess death estimates. To achieve both interpretability and transparency we developed a relatively simple overdispersed Poisson count framework, within which the various data types can be modeled. We use data from countries with national monthly data to build a predictive log-linear regression model with time-varying coefficients for countries without data. For a number of countries, subnational data only are available, and we construct a multinomial model for such data, based on the assumption that the fractions of deaths in sub-regions remain approximately constant over time. Based on our modeling, the point estimate for global excess mortality, over 2020-2021, is 14.9 million, with a 95% credible interval of (13.3, 16.6) million. This leads to a point estimate of the ratio of excess deaths to reported COVID-19 deaths of 2.75, which is a huge discrepancy.