This website uses own and third-party cookies to improve media features and optimize navigation. If you continue navigating, we consider you accept its use. More information

Changes

Jump to: navigation, search

Talk:Estimated excess mortality

1 byte added, 07:47, 11 April 2022
no edit summary
</ul></div>
The National Statistics Institute provides an estimate of the number of deaths that have occurred every week during the different outbreaks of COVID-19 in Spain in the years 2020 and 2021. The This information is organised by regions and by provinces as well as by age group and sex. It includes data for the specific week and those accumulated so far every year.
The graph on the weekly evolution shows the estimated excess mortality for each of the weeks between from January and to June 2020. The National Statistics Institute thus calculates the absolute difference for each week between the accumulated deaths so far in the year 2020 with respect to the accumulated data for the previous year, 2019. The values Figures were negative during the first eleven weeks of the year, which denotes a more favourable death rate. However, there was a sharp increase in mid-March, peaking in the second half of March and throughout April, and then gradually declining until the end of June. Cumulative excess deaths reached 42,623 at the end of the six-month period.
The map on the ''[[:File:Change in the number of deaths|Change in the number of deaths ]]'' shows the final balance of the first twenty-six weeks of 2020 in each of the Spanish provinces, both in absolute figures and in percentages.
The impact of excess mortality on the major age groups is shown in on the second graph, in which the older age group stands out. The maps for each of the three age groups show the sharp contrast between the behaviour of the group aged 80 and over and the group under 60 years of age.
<br>
<br>
1,098
edits

Navigation menu