The Impact of COVID-19 on Mortality in Italy: Retrospective Analysis of Epidemiological Trends

被引:9
|
作者
Rovetta, Alessandro [1 ]
Bhagavathula, Akshaya Srikanth [2 ]
机构
[1] R&C Res, Via Brede T2, I-25073 Brescia, Italy
[2] United Arab Emirates Univ, Coll Med & Hlth Sci, Inst Publ Hlth, Abu Dhabi, U Arab Emirates
来源
JMIR PUBLIC HEALTH AND SURVEILLANCE | 2022年 / 8卷 / 04期
关键词
COVID-19; deniers; excess deaths; epidemiology; infodemic; infodemiology; Italy; longitudinal analysis; mortality; time series; pandemic; public health; MULTIPLE; TESTS;
D O I
10.2196/36022
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: Despite the available evidence on its severity, COVID-19 has often been compared with seasonal flu by some conspirators and even scientists. Various public discussions arose about the noncausal correlation between COVID-19 and the observed deaths during the pandemic period in Italy. Objective: This paper aimed to search for endogenous reasons for the mortality increase recorded in Italy during 2020 to test this controversial hypothesis. Furthermore, we provide a framework for epidemiological analyses of time series. Methods: We analyzed deaths by age, sex, region, and cause of death in Italy from 2011 to 2019. Ordinary least squares (OLS) linear regression analyses and autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) were used to predict the best value for 2020. A Grubbs 1-sided test was used to assess the significance of the difference between predicted and observed 2020 deaths/mortality. Finally, a 1-sample t test was used to compare the population of regional excess deaths to a null mean. The relationship between mortality and predictive variables was assessed using OLS multiple regression models. Since there is no uniform opinion on multicomparison adjustment and false negatives imply great epidemiological risk, the less-conservative Siegel approach and more-conservative Holm-Bonferroni approach were employed. By doing so, we provided the reader with the means to carry out an independent analysis. Results: Both ARIMA and OLS linear regression models predicted the number of deaths in Italy during 2020 to be between 640,000 and 660,000 (range of 95% CIs: 620,000-695,000) against the observed value of above 750,000. We found strong evidence supporting that the death increase in all regions (average excess=12.2%) was not due to chance (t(21) =7.2; adjusted P<.001). Male and female national mortality excesses were 18.4% (P<.001; adjusted P=.006) and 14.1% (P=.005; adjusted P=.12), respectively. However, we found limited significance when comparing male and female mortality residuals' using the Mann-Whitney U test (P=.27; adjusted P=.99). Finally, mortality was strongly and positively correlated with latitude (R=0.82; adjusted P<.001). In this regard, the significance of the mortality increases during 2020 varied greatly from region to region. Lombardy recorded the highest mortality increase (38% for men, adjusted P<.001; 31% for women, P<.001; adjusted P=.006). Conclusions: Our findings support the absence of historical endogenous reasons capable of justifying the mortality increase observed in Italy during 2020. Together with the current knowledge on SARS-CoV-2, these results provide decisive evidence on the devastating impact of COVID-19. We suggest that this research be leveraged by government, health, and information authorities to furnish proof against conspiracy hypotheses that minimize COVID-19-related risks. Finally, given the marked concordance between ARIMA and OLS regression, we suggest that these models be exploited for public health surveillance. Specifically, meaningful information can be deduced by comparing predicted and observed epidemiological trends.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] COVID-19 in Italy: An Analysis of Death Registry Data
    Ciminelli, Gabriele
    Garcia-Mandico, Silvia
    JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2020, 42 (04) : 723 - 730
  • [42] Clinical and Epidemiological Features of Pediatric COVID-19: A Retrospective Study
    Mirkarimi, Mohammadreza
    Heidari, Solmaz
    Shamsizadeh, Ahmad
    Tahouri, Kia
    Alisamir, Mohsen
    Fathi, Mohammadreza
    Mohammadi, Shooka
    HEALTH SCIENCE REPORTS, 2024, 7 (11)
  • [43] The Impact of COVID-19 on Conspiracy Hypotheses and Risk Perception in Italy: Infodemiological Survey Study Using Google Trends
    Rovetta, Alessandro
    JMIR INFODEMIOLOGY, 2021, 1 (01):
  • [44] Clinical and epidemiological characteristics of COVID-19 mortality in Saudi Arabia: A retrospective multi-center study
    Mahmoud, Mahmoud A.
    Altaluoni, Alaa Anwar
    Alshargi, Abdulrahman Abdullah
    Al-Zalabani, Abdulmohsen H.
    JOURNAL OF FAMILY MEDICINE AND PRIMARY CARE, 2024, 13 (10) : 4270 - 4275
  • [45] Temporal Analysis of COVID-19 Epidemiological Indicators in a Low-Income Brazilian Context: A Retrospective Analysis in Paraiba State
    da Silva, Fabiola Ferreira
    de Abreu, Luiz Carlos
    Daboin, Blanca Elena Guerrero
    Morais, Tassiane Cristina
    Cavalcanti, Matheus Paiva Emidio
    Bezerra, Italla Maria Pinheiro
    da Silva, Celia Guarnieri
    Figueira, Fernando Augusto Marinho dos Santos
    Guedes, Viviane Valeria de Caldas
    Riera, Andres Ricardo Perez
    VIRUSES-BASEL, 2023, 15 (10):
  • [46] A single-centred retrospective observational analysis on mortality trends during the COVID-19 pandemic
    Hirachund, Omishka
    Pennefather, Camilla
    Naidoo, Mergan
    SOUTH AFRICAN FAMILY PRACTICE, 2023, 65 (01)
  • [47] Epidemiological analysis of 18 patients with COVID-19
    Chen, G.
    Wu, M-Z
    Qin, C-J
    Wu, B-B
    Luo, W-R
    Liu, L.
    Liu, J-Y
    EUROPEAN REVIEW FOR MEDICAL AND PHARMACOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2020, 24 (23) : 12522 - 12526
  • [48] Increased COVID-19 mortality in patients with schizophrenia: A retrospective study in Brazil
    Costa, Diogo Fernando Bornancin
    Rossignoli, Paula
    Pontarolli, Deise Regina Sprada
    Collodel Junior, Paulo
    Assolari, Camilla Luz
    Nasr, Acacia Maria Lourenco Francisco
    de Carvalho, Dnise Siqueira
    Gadelha, Ary
    Massuda, Raffael
    SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2024, 271 : 200 - 205
  • [49] Transmissibility and mortality trends of COVID-19 epidemic in Egypt
    Masoud, Mohamed
    Gewaifel, Gihan
    Gamaleldin, Nahla
    ALEXANDRIA JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2020, 56 (01) : 189 - 195
  • [50] Epidemiological impact and cost-effectiveness analysis of COVID-19 vaccination in Kenya
    Orangi, Stacey
    Ojal, John
    Brand, Samuel P. C.
    Orlendo, Cameline
    Kairu, Angela
    Aziza, Rabia
    Ogero, Morris
    Agweyu, Ambrose
    Warimwe, George M.
    Uyoga, Sophie
    Otieno, Edward
    Ochola-Oyier, Lynette, I
    Agoti, Charles N.
    Kasera, Kadondi
    Amoth, Patrick
    Mwangangi, Mercy
    Aman, Rashid
    Ng'ang'a, Wangari
    Adetifa, Ifedayo M. O.
    Scott, J. Anthony G.
    Bejon, Philip
    Keeling, Matt J.
    Flasche, Stefan
    Nokes, D. James
    Barasa, Edwine
    BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, 2022, 7 (08):