Adjusting for changing population structure |
Detailed adjustment of all excess death calculations for narrow age bins in the countries where these are available, so as to account for fine change in population structure over time. |
Adjusting for changes in other high-risk indicators |
Capture and adjustment for other variables that affect mortality risk, in particular residence in long-term facilities (rates may have changed over time in various countries, with different patterns for elderly and for young residents). |
Completeness corrections |
Allowance for uncertainty in completeness corrections; consideration that completeness may have changed during pandemic years. |
Sensitivity to modeling choice |
Consideration of different options regarding choice of pre-pandemic reference period and regarding imposed models; showing full range of results rather than single spuriously accurate average or weighted average. |
Post-hoc corrections in specific countries |
Avoidance of post-hoc corrections that are not based on pre-specified rules; pre-specification of objective, unambiguous criteria for any required post-modeling corrections. |
All-cause mortality modeling |
Ensuring full transparency of model and model performance, including variance explained; exploration of transportability; acknowledgement of measurement errors and biases in included variables, consideration of alternative variables and models. |
Underestimation of uncertainty |
Incorporation of uncertainty from each step in the modeling and from each of the variables considered; cautious interpretation since uncertainty may still be underestimated. |
Excess death estimates per risk strata |
Routine provision of excess death estimates per age group and according to other major risk strata (e.g., separately for community versus long-term care resident population and per ethnic/racial strata). |
Causal (mis)interpretation |
Avoidance of causal statements of excess deaths attributed directly to SARS-CoV-2; consideration of direct and indirect effects of the pandemic and of the measures taken; in-depth assessment of causes and attribution will require other types of studies. |