Peer-Reviewed Articles in Scientific JournalsThe demography of COVID-19 deaths database, a gateway to well-documented international data
Caporali, Arianna; Garcia, Jenny; Couppié, Étienne; Poniakina, Svitlana; Barbieri, Magali; Bonnet, Florian; Camarda, Carlo Giovanni; Cambois, Emmanuelle; Hourani, Iris; Korotkova, Daria; Meslé, France; Penina, Olga; Robine, Jean-Marie; Sauerberg, Markus; Torres, Catalina (2022)
Nature – Scientific Data 9(93): 1–9
DOI: 10.1038/s41597-022-01191-y
National authorities publish COVID-19 death counts, which are extensively re-circulated and compared; but data are generally poorly sourced and documented. Academics and stakeholders need tools to assess data quality and to track data-related discrepancies for comparability over time or across countries. “The Demography of COVID-19 Deaths” database aims at bridging this gap. It provides COVID-19 death counts along with associated documentation, which includes the exact data sources and points out issues of quality and coverage of the data. The database – launched in April 2020 and continuously updated – contains daily cumulative death counts attributable to COVID-19 broken down by sex and age, place and date of occurrence of the death. Data and metadata undergo quality control checks prior to online release. As of mid-December 2021, it covers 21 countries in Europe and beyond. It is open access at a bilingual (English and French) website with content intended for expert users and non-specialists (https://dc-covid.site.ined.fr/en/; figshare: https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5807027). Data and metadata are available for each country separately and pooled over all countries.