Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Sanchez, Mauro
Data de Publicação: 2021
Outros Autores: Moura, Erly, Moreira, Juliano, Lima, Rodrigo, Barreto, Ivana, Pereira, Claudia, Santos, Leonor
Tipo de documento: preprint
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: SciELO Preprints
Texto Completo: https://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/2012
Resumo: Objective: to analyze the evolution of mortality due to COVID-19 in the period from January 2020 to February 2021 in Brazil. Methods. Data on all deaths were obtained from the transparency portal, continuously fed by the country's civil registry offices. It was considered death by COVID-19 when there were citations of COVID-19, coronavirus or new coronavirus in the cause of death. Mortality rates for COVID-19 were standardized by sex and age group, according to a population estimate for 2020. Proportional COVID-19 mortality was calculated by age group and region, according to sex. General proportional mortality was calculated by place of death and region, according to the cause of death. Results. Of the 1,596,130 deaths recorded, 16% had COVID-19 as a basic cause, the mortality rate in Brazil was 119.9 per 100 thousand inhabitants, reaching 410.5 in Roraima for men. High rates were found mainly in the North and lowest in the Northeast. The highest proportion was between 70 and 79 years of age. Death by COVID-19 at home reached 3.8% of deaths in the North and 3.4% in the Northeast. Conclusions. The use of civil registry data is of great importance for a timely monitoring of COVID-19 mortality, thus showing the country faces, in 2021, an increase in deaths, worsening the pandemic.
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spelling Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 FebruaryMortalidade por COVID-19 no Brasil: uma análise do Registro Civil de óbitos de janeiro de 2020 a fevereiro de 2021MortalidadeCOVID-19coronavírusepidemiologiapandemiaBrasilMortalityCOVID-19coronavirusepidemiologypandemicBrazilObjective: to analyze the evolution of mortality due to COVID-19 in the period from January 2020 to February 2021 in Brazil. Methods. Data on all deaths were obtained from the transparency portal, continuously fed by the country's civil registry offices. It was considered death by COVID-19 when there were citations of COVID-19, coronavirus or new coronavirus in the cause of death. Mortality rates for COVID-19 were standardized by sex and age group, according to a population estimate for 2020. Proportional COVID-19 mortality was calculated by age group and region, according to sex. General proportional mortality was calculated by place of death and region, according to the cause of death. Results. Of the 1,596,130 deaths recorded, 16% had COVID-19 as a basic cause, the mortality rate in Brazil was 119.9 per 100 thousand inhabitants, reaching 410.5 in Roraima for men. High rates were found mainly in the North and lowest in the Northeast. The highest proportion was between 70 and 79 years of age. Death by COVID-19 at home reached 3.8% of deaths in the North and 3.4% in the Northeast. Conclusions. The use of civil registry data is of great importance for a timely monitoring of COVID-19 mortality, thus showing the country faces, in 2021, an increase in deaths, worsening the pandemic.Objetivo: analisar a evolução da mortalidade por COVID-19 no período de janeiro de 2020 a fevereiro de 2021 no Brasil. Métodos. Dados sobre todos os óbitos foram obtidos do Portal da Transparência, alimentado continuamente pelos cartórios civis do país. Foi considerado óbito por COVID-19 quando havia citação de COVID-19, coronavírus ou novo coronavírus como causa de óbito. As taxas de mortalidade por COVID-19 foram padronizadas por sexo e faixa etária, conforme estimativa populacional para 2020. Mortalidade por COVID-19 proporcional foi calculada por faixa etária e região, conforme o sexo. Mortalidade geral proporcional foi calculada por local de falecimento e região, conforme causa do óbito.  Resultados. Dos 1.596.130 óbitos registrados, 16% tiveram COVID-19 como causa básica, a taxa de mortalidade no Brasil foi de 119,9 por 100 mil habitantes, chegando a 410,5 em Roraima para o sexo masculino. Altas taxas foram encontradas principalmente na região Norte e as menores na região Nordeste. A maior proporção foi entre 70 e 79 anos de idade. A morte por COVID-19 em domicílio atingiu 3,8% dos óbitos na região Norte e 3,4% no Nordeste. Conclusões. O uso de dados do registro civil é de grande importância para o monitoramento atualizado da mortalidade por COVID-19, demonstrando que o país enfrenta, em 2021, aumento de óbitos e agravamento da pandemia.SciELO PreprintsSciELO PreprintsSciELO Preprints2021-03-22info:eu-repo/semantics/preprintinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersionapplication/pdfhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/preprint/view/201210.1590/SciELOPreprints.2012porhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/article/view/2012/3289Copyright (c) 2021 Mauro Sanchez, Erly Moura, Juliano Moreira, Rodrigo Lima, Ivana Barreto, Claudia Pereira, Leonor Santoshttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessSanchez, MauroMoura, ErlyMoreira, JulianoLima, RodrigoBarreto, Ivana Pereira, ClaudiaSantos, Leonorreponame:SciELO Preprintsinstname:SciELOinstacron:SCI2021-03-20T14:14:48Zoai:ops.preprints.scielo.org:preprint/2012Servidor de preprintshttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scieloONGhttps://preprints.scielo.org/index.php/scielo/oaiscielo.submission@scielo.orgopendoar:2021-03-20T14:14:48SciELO Preprints - SciELOfalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
Mortalidade por COVID-19 no Brasil: uma análise do Registro Civil de óbitos de janeiro de 2020 a fevereiro de 2021
title Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
spellingShingle Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
Sanchez, Mauro
Mortalidade
COVID-19
coronavírus
epidemiologia
pandemia
Brasil
Mortality
COVID-19
coronavirus
epidemiology
pandemic
Brazil
title_short Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
title_full Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
title_fullStr Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
title_full_unstemmed Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
title_sort Mortality from COVID-19 in Brazil: analysis of death’s civil registry from 2020 January to 2021 February
author Sanchez, Mauro
author_facet Sanchez, Mauro
Moura, Erly
Moreira, Juliano
Lima, Rodrigo
Barreto, Ivana
Pereira, Claudia
Santos, Leonor
author_role author
author2 Moura, Erly
Moreira, Juliano
Lima, Rodrigo
Barreto, Ivana
Pereira, Claudia
Santos, Leonor
author2_role author
author
author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Sanchez, Mauro
Moura, Erly
Moreira, Juliano
Lima, Rodrigo
Barreto, Ivana
Pereira, Claudia
Santos, Leonor
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Mortalidade
COVID-19
coronavírus
epidemiologia
pandemia
Brasil
Mortality
COVID-19
coronavirus
epidemiology
pandemic
Brazil
topic Mortalidade
COVID-19
coronavírus
epidemiologia
pandemia
Brasil
Mortality
COVID-19
coronavirus
epidemiology
pandemic
Brazil
description Objective: to analyze the evolution of mortality due to COVID-19 in the period from January 2020 to February 2021 in Brazil. Methods. Data on all deaths were obtained from the transparency portal, continuously fed by the country's civil registry offices. It was considered death by COVID-19 when there were citations of COVID-19, coronavirus or new coronavirus in the cause of death. Mortality rates for COVID-19 were standardized by sex and age group, according to a population estimate for 2020. Proportional COVID-19 mortality was calculated by age group and region, according to sex. General proportional mortality was calculated by place of death and region, according to the cause of death. Results. Of the 1,596,130 deaths recorded, 16% had COVID-19 as a basic cause, the mortality rate in Brazil was 119.9 per 100 thousand inhabitants, reaching 410.5 in Roraima for men. High rates were found mainly in the North and lowest in the Northeast. The highest proportion was between 70 and 79 years of age. Death by COVID-19 at home reached 3.8% of deaths in the North and 3.4% in the Northeast. Conclusions. The use of civil registry data is of great importance for a timely monitoring of COVID-19 mortality, thus showing the country faces, in 2021, an increase in deaths, worsening the pandemic.
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