May 2022
The monitoring of excess mortality provides us with a more comprehensive understanding of the impact of COVID-19 beyond the number of COVID-19 deaths reported by countries. The World Health Organization (WHO) is tracking global excess mortality as the pandemic evolves over time to reveal a picture of its full impact and burden on countries, health systems and individuals.
Excess mortality associated with COVID-19 is used to quantify the direct and indirect impacts of the pandemic. 'Excess mortality' is defined as the difference between the total number of deaths that have occurred and the number of deaths that would have been expected in the absence of the pandemic i.e. a no-COVID-19 scenario.
Understanding the excess mortality:
Baseline
Reported COVID-19 deaths
Estimated excess mortality
Negative values
The global excess mortality associated with COVID-19 was 14.91 million in the 24 months between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2021, representing 9.49 million more deaths than those globally reported as directly attributable to COVID-19.
The impact of the pandemic has been over several waves with each characterized by unique regional distributions, mortality levels and drivers. Twenty countries, representing approximately 50% of the global population, account for over 80% of the estimated global excess mortality for the January 2020 to December 2021 period. These countries are Brazil, Colombia, Egypt, Germany, India, Indonesia, the Islamic Republic of Iran, Italy, Mexico, Nigeria, Pakistan, Peru, the Philippines, Poland, the Russian Federation, South Africa, the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, Turkey, Ukraine, and the United States of America (USA). We are able to observe the evolution of the pandemic over these 24 months as different regions and countries were impacted by and responded to the threat of COVID-19.
When we chart reported COVID-19 deaths and estimated excess mortality by WHO region, we're able to observe additional trends that help us to understand the impact of COVID-19 upon each region of the world.
The following charts intentionally use different scales for each Region. While this does not allow for direct comparison of the charts between regions, the difference between estimated excess mortality in regions requires different scales to allow us to perceive the difference between reported deaths and excess mortality within each region independently.
Numbers in red indicate the total excess mortality from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2021 for each region.
When we chart reported COVID-19 deaths and estimated excess mortality by World Bank income group, we're able to observe trends that help us understand how the income level of countries may have affected COVID-19 impact and response.
The following charts intentionally use different scales for each group. While this does not allow for direct comparison of these charts between income groups, the difference between estimated excess mortality in income groupings requires separate scales to allow us to perceive the difference between reported deaths and excess mortality within each group independently. The excess deaths are close to reported COVID-19 deaths in high-income countries but much higher in the other country groups.
Numbers in red indicate the total excess mortality from 1 January 2020 to 31 December 2021 for each income group.
Excess mortality cannot be derived for all countries when using standard methods because of gaps in the underlying data. Therefore, statistical methods are required to derive the expected and total deaths based on the levels of data available for countries; this is why these figures are called 'estimates'.
The methodology for generating the estimates adopts a statistical method called a Poisson regression model and has been developed in collaboration with the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) and an appointed Technical Advisory Group for COVID-19 Mortality Assessment.
Our estimates have a range of uncertainty per country and that level of uncertainty is directly related to a country's reporting capacity and variable data quality. As we chart the range between the upper and lower bounds of uncertainty for WHO regions, we are able to observe the relative availability of data for each region and how data gaps disproportionately impact some parts of the world more than others. If the uncertainty bounds are larger, this indicates that there is less available data and therefore, a corresponding greater degree of uncertainty. These ranges in uncertainty serve to highlight the ongoing need and work of WHO, as we partner with countries to strengthen national Health Information Systems, Civil Registration and Vital Statistics Systems and reporting of causes of death, and integrated surveillance systems to help improve data availability and close 'data gaps'.
Excess mortality estimates and model uncertainty by WHO Region
More about the COVID-19 excess mortality estimates
Excess mortality estimates, published May 2022, for global, regional and national levels can be downloaded from the data set page, including age and sex dimensions for the years 2020 and 2021.
In the following months, WHO will continue the official country consultation process with Member States, compiling further data sources and working with UN DESA and the WHO-UN DESA Technical Advisory Group.