Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA
2. Section of Cardiovascular Research Baylor College of Medicine Houston Texas USA
3. Department of Medicine Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina USA
4. Duke Clinical Research Institute Duke University Medical Center Durham North Carolina USA
5. Division of Cardiology Johns Hopkins School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland USA
6. Division of Cardiology Loma Linda University Medical Center Loma Linda California USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThe COVID‐19 pandemic, which started in 2020, resulted in greater all‐cause mortality in 2020 and in subsequent years. Whether all‐cause mortality remains elevated in 2023 compared to pre‐pandemic numbers is unknown.Methods and resultsThe United States (US) Center for Disease Control Wide‐Ranging, Online Data for Epidemiologic Research database was used to compare mortality rates between 2019 and provisional data for 2022 and 2023. Age‐adjusted mortality rates (AAMRs) for all‐cause as well as top causes of mortality were collected. Mortality based on subgroups by sex, age, and ethnicity was also collected. All‐cause AAMRs between 2018 and 2023 per 100,000 individuals were 723.6, 715.2, 835.4, 879.7, (provisionally) 798.8, and (provisionally) 738.3, respectively, with AAMRs in 2023 remaining above 2019 pre‐pandemic levels. Similar trends were noted in subgroups based on sex, ethnicity, and most age groups. Mortality attributed directly to COVID‐19 peaked in 2021 as the 3rd leading cause of death and dropped to the 10th leading cause in 2023. Provisional mortality rate trends for 2023 suggest that rates for diseases of the heart increased during the pandemic but appear to have returned to or dipped below pre‐pandemic levels.ConclusionProvisional 2023 all‐cause mortality rates in the US have decreased from the 2021 peak associated with the COVID‐19 pandemic but remain above the pre‐pandemic baseline. Mortality from some conditions, including diseases of the heart, appears to have recovered from the impact of the COVID‐19 pandemic.
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