Affiliation:
1. Demographic Research Centre, Institute of Social Sciences Belgrade, Serbia
Abstract
The 2020 pandemic came at a huge demographic cost, particularly regarding the
increase in mortality. In this paper we examine excess deaths in Serbia and
34 other European countries in 2020. Methodological inconsistencies and big
differences in how COVID-19 deaths were recorded across different countries
make it difficult to make any cross-country comparisons, even with the scope
limited only to Europe. Since the number of total deaths is a
methodologically solid indicator, we looked at the differences between the
total number of deaths in 2020 and compared that to deaths in 2019. The
lowest increase in mortality - below 5% - occurred in countries in the north
of Europe (Norway, Denmark, Finland, Latvia), while the highest increase -
over 18% - was recorded in the southern and central parts of the continent
(Albania, Northern Macedonia, Spain, Belgium, Poland, Slovenia, Russia).
There is no clear geographical regularity. In 2020, Serbia had 12.6% more
deaths compared to 2019, which was close to the European average. Within
Serbia, statistical differences between regions were not large. Measuring
the contribution of COVID-19 deaths to excess mortality is much more
problematic. The excess death ratio is more helpful for understanding
methodological and data-gathering issues than finding evidence about
composition and divergence in mortality. According to this indicator (based
on preliminary data), only 25% of excess deaths in Serbia in 2020 were
caused by COVID-19, while the European average was 54%. However, in many
(primarily Eastern European) countries in 2020, the indirect consequences of
COVID-19 on the health of the population were more significant than the
direct ones. It is precisely the ratio of COVID-19 diagnoses that led to
death in total mortality that shows this. The final results may confirm this
statement or indicate potential data manipulation. While this paper focuses
only on the year 2020, as of Q1 of 2021, the pandemic is not nearing its
end. Based on preliminary data published daily, Serbia had more COVID-19
deaths in the first four months of 2021 than for the whole of 2020. This
indicates that the consequences of the pandemic for Serbia will be dire in
2021, regardless of the course the pandemic takes.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
6 articles.
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