| Literature DB >> 34732841 |
Janet E Rosenbaum1, Marco Stillo2, Nathaniel Graves2, Roberto Rivera3.
Abstract
All-cause mortality counts allow public health authorities to identify populations experiencing excess deaths from pandemics, natural disasters, and other emergencies. Delays in the completeness of mortality counts may contribute to misinformation because death counts take weeks to become accurate. We estimate the timeliness of all-cause mortality releases during the COVID-19 pandemic for the dates 3 April to 5 September 2020 by estimating the number of weekly data releases of the NCHS Fluview Mortality Surveillance System until mortality comes within 99% of the counts in the 19 March 19 2021 provisional mortality data release. States' mortality counts take 5 weeks at median (interquartile range 4-7 weeks) to completion. The fastest states were Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, New York, Utah, Idaho, and Hawaii. States that had not adopted the electronic death registration system (EDRS) were 4.8 weeks slower to achieve complete mortality counts, and each weekly death per 10^8 was associated with a 0.8 week delay. Emergency planning should improve the timeliness of mortality data by improving state vital statistics digital infrastructure.Entities:
Keywords: All-cause mortality; Covid-19; Death certificates; Excess mortality; Reporting delay; Vital statistics
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34732841 PMCID: PMC8564267 DOI: 10.1057/s41271-021-00309-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Public Health Policy ISSN: 0197-5897 Impact factor: 2.222
Fig. 1Delay in mortality reporting by date and adoption of electronic death registration system, compared with average (dotted line)
Fig. 2Weeks until all-cause mortality counts are complete for April 3-September 5, 2020. The red line shows the mean delay
Poisson regression to predict delay in mortality reporting with varying intercept by state (n = 1196 observations of 52 jurisdictions)
| IRR | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 3.96 | (3.42, 4.56) | < 0.001 |
| Weekly deaths per 10^8 | 1.14 | (1.09, 1.20) | < 0.001 |
| Electronic death registration system | |||
| Full adoption | Ref. | ||
| Partial adoption | 0.84 | (0.66, 1.06) | 0.1 |
| No adoption | 1.85 | (1.31, 2.61) | < 0.001 |
IRR incidence rate ratio, exponentiated coefficients of Poisson regression
95% CI = 95 percent confidence interval
Fig. 3Association between death reporting system and weeks of delay (n = 52: 50 states, NYC, and DC). Centralized ME: Centralized state medical examiner office (median (M) 6 weeks, interquartile range (IQR) 3–9 weeks, n = 17 states). County mixture: County-based mixture of medical examiner and coroner offices (M 5 weeks, IQR 4–6 weeks, n = 14 states). County coroner: County/district-based coroner offices (M 5 weeks, IQR 4–6 weeks, n = 14 states). County ME: County/district-based medical examiner offices (M 4 weeks, IQR 4–5 weeks, n = 7 states/jurisdictions)