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COVID-19 has had least impact on life expectancy in Nordic countries

by Jana Vobecká

COVID-19 pandemic has led to life expectancy losses in Europe and overseas in the past two years but not in Denmark and its Nordic neighbours.
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COVID Test Center

Source: JC Gellidon

COVID-19 took a toll on human lives the last two years, but with different intensity across countries. Denmark is one of the few counties where mortality levels were very little affected and life expectancy did not bounce radically to better or worse over the past two years.

On average, Danes were gaining a little more than two months of life expectancy yearly before the pandemic. In the first pandemic year 2020 the gain stayed positive although at somewhat lower level, 1,1 month, to turn slightly negative in 2021 to a 1,5-month loss in a year-to-year comparison, says José Manuel Aburto.

For a full overview see the figure below.

The calm Danish waters are rare. A new study co-led by scientists at University of Southern Denmark found that countries spanning most of Europe, the US and Chile recorded reductions in life expectancy in 2020 at a scale that wiped out years of progress. Pandemics and other mortality shocks such as natural disasters negatively affect life expectancy. The nature, duration, and capacity to deal with the shock affects how fast will it take to rebound.

 

Central and Eastern Europe most affected

The COVID-19 death storm has had indeed different intensity and pace, the mortality trends in the second pandemic year 2021 saw more diverse impacts across countries.

While in 12 countries the tide started to return and the life expectancy saw bounce-backs from previous losses (among them most significantly Switzerland, Sweden, Spain, and Belgium), in another 14 countries the life expectancy storm continued and even intensified.

Central and Eastern European countries were the most affected and the impact of COVID-19 on mortality was much stronger than in 2020. USA with the worst life expectancy decline in the first year of pandemic did not rebound in 2021, says José Manuel Aburto.

 

What made the difference?

Overall, the death toll of the two pandemic years reflects on how successfully countries managed the pandemic. In particular, how efficiently and diligently they managed lockdowns and vaccination. The lockdown timing and enforcement mattered a great deal.

In the first pandemic year 2020, the countries with measured, timely and well-enforced lockdowns had the lowest excess death. In 2021, vaccine was available and countries that applied the vaccine fast and wide saw lower losses.

The structure of mortality changed over time, too. In 2021, more intense mortality of people below age 60 contributed largely to the life expectancy losses across countries, while older population saw mortality improvements compared to the first pandemic year 2020.

This is also associated to vaccination effectiveness. For example, while USA mortality for ages 80+ returned to pre-pandemic levels in 2021, overall life expectancy losses grew due to worsening mortality in ages below 60.

Despite large differences, all countries under study experienced life expectancy deficits. Even the least affected countries, like Denmark, Finland, and Norway, experienced stagnation or slower improvement in life expectancy.

Sweden and Switzerland managed to bounce back to pre-pandemic level of life-expectancy in the second year of the pandemic. Thus, together with the above-mentioned Nordic countries they also came out as the least affected overall, says José Manuel Aburto.

The research was published in Nature Human Behaviour and is a result of collaboration between the researchers of the Interdiscipliary Centre on Population Dynamics (CPop) at the University of Southern Denmark, the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science (LCDS) at the University of Oxford, and the Estonian Institute for Population Studies at Tallin University.The study is supported by the ROCKWOOL Foundation.

 

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 Life expectancy changes (Δ e0) 2019-20 and 2020-21 across countries. The countries are ordered by increasing cumulative life expectancy losses since 2019. Grey dots indicate the average annual life expectancy changes over the years 2016 through 2019.

 

This Policy Insight was originally published as a Press release here.

 

Read the scientific paper "Life expectancy changes since COVID-19".

 

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