sa国际传媒

Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

sa国际传媒 sees 40K+ excess deaths since start of COVID-19 pandemic

During the Omicron wave in January 2022, excess deaths spiked, especially in places like sa国际传媒 and Quebec, where the number of unexpected deaths climbed 20% above what was expected if the pandemic never happened.
Anyone who has a medical emergency is putting their lives on the line if they delay calling BCEHS op
An ambulance rushes from a hospital emergency room in sa国际传媒 - BC Ambulance Service

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, an estimated 40,349 more people died in sa国际传媒 than expected, says the country’s vital statistics agency. 

The unexpected deaths represent a 7.4 per cent increase in the number of people who died across the country if the pandemic were never to have happened, according to updated data released Thursday by Statistics sa国际传媒.

Excess mortality measures how many deaths actually occurred compared to what was expected under normal circumstances. It’s one way researchers have been able to figure out the true number of lives lost due to COVID-19. Last month, the World Health Organization reported the number of during the pandemic had climbed to nearly 15 million.

Over that same period, only 32,490 deaths were directly attributed to COVID-19, a gap Statistics sa国际传媒 researchers say could be the result of “indirect consequences” from the pandemic, such as delayed medical procedures, increased substance use or declines in deaths from endemic diseases like influenza. 

Omicron’s deadly legacy

When the highly infectious Omicron variant swept through sa国际传媒’s population in late 2021 and early 2022, many Canadians experienced relatively mild COVID-19 symptoms.

But as public health authorities and experts noted at the time, its highly infectious nature meant more people were infected, leading to a greater cumulative risk of death. 

The latest Statistics sa国际传媒 numbers confirm excess deaths increased across sa国际传媒 in January 2022 in “a new period of significant excess mortality.”

The number of unexpected deaths across sa国际传媒 in January surged to 4,085, a 13.2 per cent spike over what was expected without a pandemic. 

Some groups of Canadians faced higher than expected death rates than others.

With 904 excess deaths, British Columbia experienced one of the highest rates of excess mortality at 22.2 per cent. That was only behind Quebec, which saw a 22.4 per cent increase in the number of unexpected deaths.

In sa国际传媒, death rates among younger males surged

Younger Canadians and males also died at higher rates in January 2022, especially in the country's Western provinces. 

Deaths of those under 45 years old were roughly 50 per cent higher than expected in Alberta and sa国际传媒, whereas older groups in these provinces saw excess mortality drop to less than half that, hovering around 20 per cent. 

Nationally, there were 11.7 per cent more deaths among men in January, compared to 6.8 per cent for women. But that gap was not consistent across the country. 

At 1.6 times higher than the national average, sa国际传媒 reported the highest excess mortality rate among males in the country. The number of males who died in sa国际传媒 in January 2022 was 26.5 per cent higher than expected, compared to a 16.5 per cent spike for females, according to Statistics sa国际传媒.

The statistics agency said data is not yet available on why and how people died in January 2022. 

It’s important to keep in mind, warned the Statistics sa国际传媒 researchers, deaths from both direct and indirect impacts of COVID-19. 

As they put it, “many excess deaths among younger Canadians may be attributable to other causes, such as overdoses.”