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Excess mortality in Cyprus during the COVID-19 pandemic and its lack of association with vaccination rates

Authors :
Theodore Lytras
Maria Athanasiadou
Anna Demetriou
Despina Stylianou
Alexandros Heraclides
Olga Kalakouta
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundIt has been claimed that COVID-19 vaccination is associated with excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic, a claim that contributes to vaccine hesitancy. We examined whether all-cause mortality has actually increased in Cyprus during the first two pandemic years, and whether any increases are associated with vaccination rates.MethodsWe calculated weekly excess mortality for Cyprus between January 2020 and June 2022, overall and by age group, using both a Distributed Lag Nonlinear Model (DLNM) adjusted for mean daily temperature, and the EuroMOMO algorithm. Excess deaths were regressed on the weekly number of confirmed COVID-19 deaths and on weekly first-dose vaccinations, also using a DLNM to explore the lag-response dimension.Results552 excess deaths were observed in Cyprus during the study period (95%CI: 508–597) as opposed to 1306 confirmed COVID-19 deaths. No association between excess deaths and vaccination rates was found overall and for any age group except 18-49 years, among whom 1.09 excess deaths (95%CI: 0.27–1.91) per 10,000 vaccinations were estimated during the first 8 weeks post-vaccination. However, detailed cause-of-death examination identified just two such deaths potentially linked to vaccination, therefore this association is spurious and attributable to random error.ConclusionsExcess mortality was moderately increased in Cyprus during the COVID-19 pandemic, primarily as a result of laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 deaths. No relationship was found between vaccination rates and all-cause mortality, demonstrating the excellent safety profile of COVID-19 vaccines.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........fd1b0715ada1d2ece9d34868892ad7c9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.08.05.22278487