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Scientific article
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English

COVID-19 mortality in women and men in sub-Saharan Africa: a cross-sectional study

Published inBMJ global health, vol. 6, no. 11, e007225
Publication date2021-11
Abstract

Introduction: Since sex-based biological and gender factors influence COVID-19 mortality, we wanted to investigate the difference in mortality rates between women and men in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Method: We included 69 580 cases of COVID-19, stratified by sex (men: n=43 071; women: n=26 509) and age (0-39 years: n=41 682; 40-59 years: n=20 757; 60+ years: n=7141), from 20 member nations of the WHO African region until 1 September 2020. We computed the SSA-specific and country-specific case fatality rates (CFRs) and sex-specific CFR differences across various age groups, using a Bayesian approach.

Results: A total of 1656 deaths (2.4% of total cases reported) were reported, with men accounting for 70.5% of total deaths. In SSA, women had a lower CFR than men (mean [Formula: see text] = -0.9%; 95% credible intervals (CIs) -1.1% to -0.6%). The mean CFR estimates increased with age, with the sex-specific CFR differences being significant among those aged 40 years or more (40-59 age group: mean [Formula: see text] = -0.7%; 95% CI -1.1% to -0.2%; 60+ years age group: mean [Formula: see text] = -3.9%; 95% CI -5.3% to -2.4%). At the country level, 7 of the 20 SSA countries reported significantly lower CFRs among women than men overall. Moreover, corresponding to the age-specific datasets, significantly lower CFRs in women than men were observed in the 60+ years age group in seven countries and 40-59 years age group in one country.

Conclusions: Sex and age are important predictors of COVID-19 mortality globally. Countries should prioritise the collection and use of sex-disaggregated data so as to design public health interventions and ensure that policies promote a gender-sensitive public health response.

eng
Keywords
  • COVID-19
  • Epidemiology
Citation (ISO format)
DALAL, Jyoti et al. COVID-19 mortality in women and men in sub-Saharan Africa: a cross-sectional study. In: BMJ global health, 2021, vol. 6, n° 11, p. e007225. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007225
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ISSN of the journal2059-7908
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Technical informations

Creation11/26/2021 1:27:00 PM
First validation11/26/2021 1:27:00 PM
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