|
America Counts: Stories Behind the Numbers
?Excess Mortality? During COVID-19 Varied by Race, Ethnicity, Geography
An additional 573,000 people died in the United States during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic but ?excess mortality? at the national level masks substantial variations by state, age, sex, and race and ethnicity, according to new U.S. Census Bureau research recently published in Demography.
?Excess mortality? refers to deaths from any cause above what is expected from recent mortality trends.
This research shows the pandemic widened the mortality gap between the nation?s Black and White populations and completely erased the mortality advantage of the Hispanic population in relation to the non-Hispanic White population.
Overall, males ages 65 and older, non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaskan Native, Hispanic and non-Hispanic Black individuals experienced higher rates of excess mortality than other groups, according to the research.
Continue reading to learn more about:
- How we track excess mortality
- Excess mortality by age, sex, and race/ethnicity
- Time and space variations
- Pandemic and mortality disparities
|
|
Help us spread the word about Census Bureau data!
Share this on social media or forward it to a friend.
|
|
You May Be Interested In
Continued Decrease in Mortality Brings Natural Increase Closer to Pre-Pandemic Levels
Population estimates released in December 2023 showed that 19 states had more deaths than births in 2023, down from 25 in 2022.
|
|
|
America Counts features stories on various topics including:?
For the Media:?Contact our?Public Information Office?for inquiries or interviews.?
Don't miss an America Counts story!?Use the button below to sign up and update your preferences.
|
|
|
|