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Mortality trends and causes of death in a South African hospital complex pre- and during COVID-19
BACKGROUND : Before coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), global health was improving, with
declining mortality trends. The pandemic disrupted this progress, increasing mortality in
South Africa between April 2020 and March 2022. Pre-pandemic data establishes a baseline for
assessing COVID-19’s impact on all-cause mortality.
OBJECTIVES : This study examines changes in hospital-based mortality trends in a Gauteng
hospital complex from April 2018 to March 2022, addressing the scarcity of such studies during
the COVID-19 era.
METHOD : A retrospective review of 7815 deaths from April 2018 to March 2022 was conducted.
Chi-squared tests were used to analyse deaths by age group and gender, with correlations
reported.
RESULTS : Mortality rates rose from 3.2% in 2018–2019, peaked at 5.1% in 2020–2021, and
declined to 4.2% in 2021–2022. Patients aged 15 years–64 years had the highest death rates,
with an increase among those over 65. Male deaths exceeded female deaths, with the smallest
difference observed in 2020–2021. Leading causes of death included diseases of the circulatory
and respiratory systems, neoplasms, digestive system diseases, and infectious and parasitic
diseases.
CONCLUSION : The study highlights COVID-19’s impact on mortality, showing variations by
year, age, gender, and disease.
Contribution: Excess non-COVID-19 deaths likely stemmed from disrupted healthcare
services. These findings underscore the need for ongoing monitoring of hospital mortality to
identify pandemic-related service disruptions and guide interventions to strengthen
healthcare services, improve access to care, and enhance referral systems during unexpected
disasters.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY : While efforts have been made to anonymise the data, the
nature of the variables collected (e.g. gender, date of birth,
date of death and cause of death) can indirectly be identified.
As such, the data can be made available to other researchers
from the corresponding author, K.M.T., on request.