COVID-19第一年美国大流行和经济衰退对死亡率的影响

Christopher J Ruhm
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引用次数: 2

摘要

从2020年3月1日到2021年2月28日,美国新增近70万人死亡,这是由两种相互抵消的机制造成的:由这一时期失业率变化预测的,这里称为“衰退效应”,以及由“大流行效应”预测的,这反映了SARS-CoV-2感染和COVID-19的直接后果,随之而来的对健康和医疗保健的影响,以及其他不是由更大的失业引起的死亡率变化。这项研究使用疾病控制和预防中心的数据,将这一时期的总死亡率分解为流行病和经济衰退的影响,并根据性别、种族和民族、年龄和14个原因进行了额外的估计。虽然大流行病的影响增加了许多类型的死亡率,但经济衰退的影响降低了大多数类型的死亡率。如果没有经济衰退的影响,死亡人数将比实际发生的人数多近4万人。然而,有不同的影响,特别是外部原因。由于大流行的强烈影响,交通事故和与酒精有关的死亡人数和凶杀案有所上升。相比之下,经济衰退对吸毒死亡率上升的影响更大。抵消了流行病和经济衰退的影响,自杀人数有所减少。了解这些不同的影响,可为减轻当前和未来卫生大流行的政策努力提供有益的经验教训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Pandemic And Recession Effects On Mortality In The US During The First Year Of COVID-19.

There were almost 700,000 excess deaths in the US from March 1, 2020, through February 28, 2021, resulting from two often counterbalancing mechanisms: those predicted by changes in unemployment rates occurring during this period, referred to here as the "recession effect," and those predicted by the "pandemic effect," which reflects direct consequences of SARS-CoV-2 infections and COVID-19, accompanying impacts on health and medical care, and other changes in mortality not caused by greater joblessness. Using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, this study decomposed total mortality in this period into pandemic and recession effects, with additional estimates by sex, race and ethnicity, age, and fourteen causes. Although the pandemic effect increased many types of mortality, the recession effect reduced most types of mortality. Without the recession effect, there would have been nearly 40,000 more deaths than actually occurred. However, there were disparate impacts, particularly for external causes. Vehicular and alcohol-related fatalities and homicides rose because of strong pandemic effects. In contrast, the recession effect accounted for a greater share of the rise in drug mortality. Offsetting pandemic and recession effects resulted in a decrease in the number of suicides. Understanding these diverse impacts provides useful lessons for policy efforts to mitigate the current and future health pandemics.

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