Title
Measuring the excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic in the Northern Territory, Australia.
Link to article in PubMed
Abstract
This study aims to assess whether there was any excess mortality among the Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations in the Northern Territory (NT), Australia, during the COVID-19 pandemic. A time-series analysis using death data (1997-2023) was applied separately to the monthly and yearly death counts to develop an excess mortality surveillance model (using Auto-Regressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA)) for the NT population. Excess mortality was calculated by comparing expected deaths with actual deaths. In 2022, there was a statistically significant excess mortality of 193 ( < 0.01), compared with 82 recorded COVID-19 deaths. Excess mortality was significant for both the Aboriginal ( = 91) and non-Aboriginal ( = 102) populations in 2022. Even though some months had significant excess mortality among both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations, the recorded COVID-19 deaths were not high in these months. This was associated with the peak of COVID-19 fatalities. The ARIMA model demonstrates deviations from expected deaths and helps understand the pandemic's impact on the NT. Excess deaths occurred in 2022; however, no large spikes in most of the months suggest public health success in the NT.
Publication information
Epidemiol Infect . 2026 Feb 6:154:e26. doi: 10.1017/S0950268826101046.
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Measuring the excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic.pdf
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Re-used under a Creative Commons Attribution License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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673.4 KB
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Adobe PDF
Checksum
(MD5):f64766c0bbadbabe1e1871f103bad722
Date Issued
2026-02-06
Type
Journal Article
Journal Title
Epidemiology and infection
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