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The Economist's tracker for covid-19 excess deaths
This repository contains the data behind The Economist’stracker for covid-19 excess deaths (which is free to read), and the code that we have used to clean, analyse and present the numbers.
Scripts and output data
Our tracker uses two different R scripts to calculate excess deaths in each country:
cleaning_script.R: this imports raw data from various sources, and exports a weekly or monthly historical time series of total_deaths and covid_deaths going back to 2015 (or the earliest available year). If the source for total deaths has also specified a value for expected_deaths, that is included too. We remove any weeks or months in which the data might be incomplete. The files are exported to /output-data/historical-deaths/.
There's also an additional script that summarises the data for some graphics in the article:
interactive_script.R: this imports the files for excess deaths for a list of countries and creates the data for the small multiple chart and the table featured in the article. The files are exported to /output-data/interactive/.
Source data
Our tracker uses data from a number of statistical bureaus, health ministries and government departments. For each country, you can find the relevant source documents in the /source-data/ folder, including some old versions in each country's /archive/ folder. Some of the data are automatically downloaded from official websites in cleaning_script.R, an R file that formats the data consistently across countries.
We have also collated a full list of sources and links in a file called list_of_sources.csv. In general we have tried to use the most expansive official estimate of covid-19 deaths available in each country. Belgium, Britain and Sweden all publish restrospectively adjusted estimates of when deaths occurred or were registered, rather than when they were reported. For most other countries, we have used the figures maintained by the ECDC and Our World In Data. We have subtracted one day from the ECDC's time series (since it uses 10am CET as its cut-off point).
Below is a summary of our sources for each country.
Austria
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Statistik Austria
Last analysed to April 5th
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
Statistik Austria
Weekly average, based on 2016-19
Belgium
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Sciensano
Last analysed to May 24th
covid_deaths
Sciensano
Retrospectively adjusted, to use day that death occurred
expected_deaths
Sciensano
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Brazil
We have used the Registro Civil, with data scraping by Brasil.IO, to import monthly data on deaths from all causes and covid-19 during 2019-20 for five Brazilian cities: São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Fortaleza, Manaus and Recife. We have also imported historical data for 2016-18 from Brazil's DataSUS.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Registro Civil / DataSUS / Brasil.IO
Last analysed to April 30th
covid_deaths
Registro Civil / DataSUS / Brasil.IO
expected_deaths
The Economist
Monthly average, based on 2016-19
Britain
We have combined English and Welsh data from the Office for National Statistics with data from the National Records of Scotland and the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency. Scotland reports data two days after everywhere else. We have used the ONS and NISRA dates as our weekly ending point.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
ONS / NRS / NISRA
Last analysed to June 5th
covid_deaths
ONS / NRS / NISRA
Retrospectively adjusted, to use day that death was registered
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Chile
To follow the latest census in 2017, from which we are importing population estimates, we have grouped the regions of Ñuble and Biobio together. We have imported regional covid-19 death tolls from a GitHub repository maintained by Data Science Research Peru. Note: Chile's deaths have been higher than the 2015-19 average for most of 2020, possibly because of population growth. We are looking into ways to adjust for this.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Registro Civil
Last analysed to June 2nd
covid_deaths
Ministerio de Salud / DSRP
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Denmark
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Danmarks Statistik
Last analysed to June 2nd
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Ecuador
We are importing Ecuador's national covid-19 death toll from the ECDC. Ecuador's Ministerio de Salud Pública is producing daily PDF bulletins of official covid-19 deaths in each province, but we have not yet found this data in a machine-readable format, and so have left province-level covid-19 observations blank.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Registro Civil
Last analysed to May 31st
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
The Economist
Monthly average, based on 2018-19
France
France's national covid-19 toll, which we are importing from the ECDC, includes deaths in nursing homes. But the regional covid-19 tolls, which we are importing from Santé Publique France, only include deaths in hospitals. Santé Publique France's hospital data begin on March 18th. Before then, we have trained a statistical model to predict each region's share of national hospital deaths.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Insee
Last analysed to May 26th
covid_deaths
Santé Publique France / ECDC
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Germany
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Destatis
Last analysed to May 12th
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2016-19
Indonesia
The only available data about deaths from all causes is a monthly tally of burials in Jakarta, which comes from the city's Department of Parks and Cemeteries.
Russia's Federal State Statistics Service has only published regional data about deaths from all causes up to March 31st. Instead, we have imported data from the Moscow's Government Open Data Portal, which has released monthly figures up to April 30th.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Moscow Government Open Data Portal
Last analysed to May 31st
covid_deaths
Ministry of Health of Russia
expected_deaths
The Economist
Monthly average, based on 2015-19
South Africa
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
South African Medical Research Council
Last analysed to June 2nd
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
South African Medical Research Council
Baseline modelled by SAMRC
Spain
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Last analysed to June 2nd
covid_deaths
Ministerio de Sanidad / Datadista
expected_deaths
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Baseline modelled by MoMo
Sweden
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Statistiska Centralbyran
Last analysed to June 2nd
covid_deaths
Folkhalsomyndigheten
Retrospectively adjusted, to use day that death occurred
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Switzerland
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
Federal Statistical Office
Last analysed to May 31st
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2015-19
Turkey
The only available data about deaths from all causes is a daily tally of burials in Istanbul, which comes from the city's Metropolitan Municipality (İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi). We are grateful to Oğuz Işık for collecting this data by hand and sending it to us.
The Turkish government has not released a regional breakdown of covid-19 data since April 1st, at which point the city had roughly 40% of the nation’s official deaths and 55% of confirmed cases. For our tracker, we have assumed that Istanbul has had 50% of Turkey's official covid-19 death toll, which we are importing from the ECDC.
Variable
Source
Notes
total_deaths
İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi
Last analysed to May 12th
covid_deaths
ECDC / Our World In Data
expected_deaths
The Economist
Weekly average, based on 2017-19
United States
The CDC is publishing weekly data about deaths from all causes in each state and New York City. We are importing data on covid-19 deaths from USA Facts, which collates it from the CDC. For New York City, we are using covid-19 death data from the city's Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, which includes confirmed and probable fatalities. For the time being, we are not reporting a nationwide death toll from all causes, because the quality of data varies from state to state.
The data and files that we have generated from official sources are freely available for public use, as long as The Economist is cited as a source.
Authors
This data has been collected, cleaned and analysed by James Tozer and Martín González. We are grateful to Oğuz Işık for providing data from Turkey; to Laurianne Despeghel and Mario Romero Zavalato for providing data from Mexico; and to Thais Carrança, Helio Gurovitz and Diogo Melo for providing data from Brazil.
If you use the data, or have any suggestions, please email [email protected].