Assessing COVID-19 Mortality in Serbia’s Capital: Model-Based Analysis of Excess Deaths
Dane Cvijanovic, Nikola Grubor, Nina Rajovic, Mira Vucevic, Svetlana Miltenovic, Marija Laban, Tatjana Mostic, Radica Tasic, Bojana Matejic, Natasa Milic

TL;DR
This study analyzed excess deaths in Belgrade, Serbia, during 2020-2021 to assess the true impact of COVID-19 and found that most increased mortality was due to the pandemic.
Contribution
The study validates the final mortality dataset in Belgrade and provides evidence that excess deaths are primarily due to SARS-CoV-2.
Findings
Excess deaths in 2020 and 2021 were 3175 and 8321, respectively, with most attributed to COVID-19.
Mortality increases were highest in older age groups, while younger groups saw decreases or small increases.
The study confirms no significant misattribution of causes of death in the final dataset.
Abstract
Concerns have been raised about discrepancies in COVID-19 mortality data, particularly between preliminary and final datasets of vital statistics in Serbia. In the original preliminary dataset, released daily during the ongoing pandemic, there was an underestimation of deaths in contrast to those reported in the subsequently released yearly dataset of vital statistics. This study aimed to assess the accuracy of the final mortality dataset and justify its use in further analyses. In addition, we quantified the relative impact of COVID-19 on the death rate in the Serbian capital’s population. In the process, we aimed to explore whether any evidence of cause-of-death misattribution existed in the final published datasets. Data were sourced from the electronic databases of the Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. The dataset included yearly recorded deaths and the causes of death…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and healthcare impacts · COVID-19 epidemiological studies · COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
