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COVID-19 pandemic death rates by country

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Part ofa series on the
COVID-19 pandemic
Scientifically accurate atomic model of the external structure of SARS-CoV-2. Each "ball" is an atom.
Scientifically accurate atomic model of the external structure of SARS-CoV-2. Each "ball" is an atom.
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This article contains the number of confirmedCOVID-19 deaths per population as of 12 February 2026, by country. It also has cumulative death totals by country. For these numbers over time see the tables, graphs, and maps atCOVID-19 pandemic deaths andCOVID-19 pandemic by country and territory.

This data reflects entire populations and does not adjust for age-specific risk. According to U.S. CDC data, COVID-19 has had markedly different impacts across demographics, with factors such as pre-existing conditions, socioeconomic status, and urban versus rural residency influencing outcomes. For example, the CDC reported that as 27 April 2021, the reported case fatality ratios were 0.015%, 0.15%, 2.3%, and 17% for the age groups 0–17, 18–49, 50–74, and 75 or over, respectively.[1] Similar patterns were observed in other countries, with older populations consistently experiencing higher mortality, emphasizing the critical role of age distribution in pandemic modeling.

Data reliability

[edit]

Variation between testing programmes worldwide results in differentascertainment rates per country: not everySARS-CoV-2 infection, nor every COVID-19-related death, will be identified. Additionally, testing availability, public compliance with testing, and differences in healthcare infrastructure further complicate accurate reporting. Some deaths may be wrongly attributed to COVID-19 (for example if all suspected COVID-19 deaths are counted as COVID-19 deaths, for example, Belgium counted suspected deaths as confirmed cases in September 2020, and Public Health England initially counted all deaths after a positive test "to be sure not to underestimate the number of COVID-19 related deaths", while Scotland reported all deaths within 28 days of such a positive test).[2][3] Therefore, according to WHO analyses, the true numbers of infections and deaths are expected to excceed the confirmed numbers everywhere, though the extent will vary by country.[4] These statistics are therefore less suitable for between-country comparisons. As deaths are easier to identify than infections (which are regularly asymptomatic), the truecase fatality rate (CFR) is likely lower than the observed CFR. Underreporting is especially severe in countries with limited healthcare access or conflict zones, where both testing and vital registration systems are incomplete.

Reports from Socialstyrelsen in Sweden indicate 20,797 cases of Covid-19 deaths as of 2024-10-15[5] which differs from the table below.

Causes of variation in true CFRs between countries, include variations in age and overall health of the population, medical care, and classification of deaths.[6] For instance, countries with higher prevalence of comorbidities such as diabetes, obesity, or cardiovascular disease often experienced elevated mortality rates even among younger age groups.

Excess mortality provides a broader estimate of these numbers. According to WHO, it includes both "direct COVID-19 and indirect, non-COVID-19 deaths".[7] They compare overall mortality with that of previous years, and as such also include the potentially vast number of deaths among people with unconfirmed COVID-19. These statistics have been crucial for understanding the broader societal impact of the pandemic, including deaths due to delayed healthcare, mental health crises, and economic stressors.

Examples from specific countries

[edit]

Russia

[edit]
COVID cases in Russia

According to excess-mortality analyses, Russia's total COVID-19 deaths in 2020 were estimated to exceed 186,000[8] while confirmed COVID-19 deaths were at 56,271.[9] This discrepancy reflects not only under-testing but also policy-driven reporting choices and limited transparency in regional reporting systems.

The Netherlands

[edit]
COVID in the Netherlands

In the Netherlands, excess-mortality estimates indicate arounds 20,000 deaths from COVID-19 in 2020,[10] while only the death of 11,525 identified COVID-19 cases was registered.[9] The official count ofCOVID-19 deaths as of December 2021 is slightly more than 5.4 million, according toWorld Health Organization's report in May 2022. WHO also said that the real numbers are far higher than the official tally because of unregistered deaths in countries without adequate reporting.[11] WHO emphasized that undercounting remains a global issue, particularly in low and middle-income countries where civil registration and death certification are incomplete.

COVID cases in China

China

[edit]

The number of reported deaths and cases in China is likely severely undercounted. Multiple independent studies estimate China's true COVID-19 death toll may be between one to two million, rather than the official count of 122,398.[12][13] This is partly due to how deaths caused by COVID-19 are counted. Only deaths occurring in hospitals are included.[14] Furthermore, regional disparities in reporting and sudden changes in testing strategy contributed to challenges in determining the actual mortality burden.

Age and gender adjusted mortality

[edit]

COVID‑19 mortality varies substantially by age, with older populations experiencing disproportionately higher fatality rates. According to provisional CDC mortality data, COVID‑19 death rates per 100,000 population rise steeply with age, from under 1 in young children to over 1,395 per 100,000 in those aged 85+ in 2021.[15] CDC data also indicates that men experienced higher mortality rates, with 208,718 men passing in 2020 and 175,818 females passing. This number spiked to 258,507 and 202,006 in 2021. Biological, behavioral, and occupational factors may contribute to these differences, including a higher prevalence of comorbidities among men and differntial exposure risk.

According to one comparative study of European countries, “once differences in population age distributions are taken into account, variations in mortality rates between countries are considerably smaller”, and highlighted the importance of age-standardized mortality for international comparisons.[16] Age-standardized mortality is critical for assessing international comparisons accurately.These metrics allow policymakers and researchers to distinguish the impact of the disease itself from demographic factors that influence observed death rates.

Timeline of reporting changes and policy shifts

[edit]

Throughout the pandemic, many countries revised their case and death reporting systems.Public Health England changed its definition, counting deaths within 28 days of a positive test, noting: “death in a person with a laboratory-confirmed positive COVID-19 test and died within (equal to or less than) 28 days of the first positive specimen date.”[17]A technical review later noted that “the UK daily COVID death counts … were changed to report deaths within 28 days of a first [positive test].”[18]At the global level, the World Health Organization noted changes in international reporting frequency beginning in 2023. As the organization stated, “a number of countries have stopped reporting or changed their frequency … As of 25 August 2023, WHO declared that it is no longer necessary … to report daily counts."[19] WHO further cautioned that “case detection, definitions, testing strategies, reporting practice, and lag times … differ between countries. This variability makes longitudinal analyses challenging and requires careful interpretation of trends over time. Countries also introduced retroactive adjustments, further complicating historical data comparisons.

Table of total cases, deaths, and death rates by country

[edit]

Note: Table is automatically updated daily.[note 1] Data source isOur World in Data.[note 2][note 3]

Updated February 6, 2026.
COVID-19 pandemic cases and mortality by country[20]
CountryDeaths / millionDeathsCases
World[a]8937,108,819778,999,210
Peru6,603221,0674,533,436
Bulgaria5,68038,7761,340,943
North Macedonia5,4299,991352,093
Bosnia and Herzegovina5,11916,407404,289
Hungary5,07249,1242,240,408
Croatia4,81218,8041,371,038
Slovenia4,6869,9141,366,652
Georgia4,51917,1511,864,337
Montenegro4,3172,654251,280
Czech Republic4,11443,9154,884,130
Latvia4,0887,691977,793
Moldova4,04212,290656,455
Slovakia3,89421,3151,889,409
Greece3,86040,2005,851,323
San Marino3,69312625,292
United States3,6121,233,841103,436,829
Romania3,60469,0903,603,605
Lithuania3,5209,9171,446,857
United Kingdom3,404232,11225,107,983
Brazil3,345703,68537,949,801
Italy3,329198,52326,969,719
Chile3,29864,4975,410,407
Martinique3,1591,104230,354
Poland3,151120,9906,836,330
Armenia3,0498,785454,891
Gibraltar3,00211320,550
Belgium2,94934,3394,905,271
Paraguay2,94019,880735,759
Trinidad and Tobago2,9344,390191,496
Argentina2,881130,83010,118,700
Portugal2,84429,6335,671,586
European Union[b]2,8301,269,971186,951,258
Sweden2,78829,2412,784,104
Russia2,777404,29024,901,467
Colombia2,760142,8056,402,603
Aruba2,70829244,224
Ukraine2,678109,9375,554,962
Serbia2,65818,0572,568,003
Guadeloupe2,6541,021203,235
France2,616168,19439,057,095
Mexico2,605335,0907,629,738
Spain2,548121,88013,980,340
Bermuda2,54716518,860
Guam2,53641952,287
Austria2,48522,5346,083,720
Tunisia2,42729,4231,153,361
Estonia2,3733,204616,631
French Polynesia2,31865079,451
Saint Lucia2,29341030,254
Uruguay2,2697,6961,043,217
Liechtenstein2,2628921,649
Suriname2,2561,40682,516
Sint Maarten2,1829211,051
Bahamas2,13584939,127
Malta2,1161,118125,272
Barbados2,100593109,141
Germany2,080174,97938,437,943
Finland2,05811,4661,516,470
Grenada2,03523819,693
Ecuador2,02336,0641,081,942
Panama2,0068,8301,045,652
Andorra1,99415948,015
Republic of Ireland1,9109,7621,765,585
Lebanon1,90510,9471,239,904
Kosovo1,8693,212274,279
Bolivia1,85322,3891,212,180
Costa Rica1,8489,3941,241,702
Puerto Rico1,8325,9381,252,713
Hong Kong1,79813,4662,876,106
Montserrat1,78781,403
Monaco1,7206717,181
Belize1,70868871,493
Denmark1,69610,0123,452,820
British Virgin Islands1,669647,661
Curaçao1,64530545,883
South Africa1,644102,5954,073,151
Iran1,640146,8377,627,863
Switzerland1,61114,1704,490,543
Guyana1,5961,31275,520
Collectivity of Saint Martin1,5914612,324
Antigua and Barbuda1,5721469,106
Jersey1,55516166,391
Luxembourg1,5301,000401,149
United States Virgin Islands1,52513225,389
Cyprus1,4501,364718,345
Caribbean Netherlands1,4304111,922
Canada1,42455,2824,819,055
Namibia1,4224,110172,557
Israel1,39512,7074,841,688
French Guiana1,38441398,041
Isle of Man1,37811638,008
Seychelles1,37017251,899
Netherlands1,28322,9868,656,720
Jamaica1,2793,634157,664
Albania1,2753,608337,234
Jordan1,25414,1221,746,997
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines1,2141249,674
Eswatini1,1701,42775,356
Turkey1,164101,41917,004,725
Botswana1,1482,801330,699
Guatemala1,13220,2051,255,212
Dominica1,1077416,047
New Caledonia1,09331480,203
Malaysia1,07637,3515,329,836
Palestine1,0755,708703,228
Honduras1,06211,114473,040
Réunion1,056921494,595
Guernsey1,0506735,326
Norway1,0505,7321,549,525
Azerbaijan1,00510,353836,510
Bahrain1,0011,536696,614
Saint Kitts and Nevis984466,607
Oman9784,628399,449
Australia96325,23611,861,161
Fiji96288569,047
Kazakhstan95119,0721,504,370
Turks and Caicos Islands893416,932
Libya8916,437507,269
Northern Mariana Islands8894114,985
New Zealand8844,5382,668,236
Anguilla844123,904
Mauritius8411,074332,105
Cabo Verde80241764,550
Wallis and Futuna78293,760
Belarus7757,118994,077
Cuba7718,5301,113,832
Sri Lanka74016,907672,812
Taiwan73917,6729,970,937
American Samoa702348,359
South Korea69335,93434,571,873
El Salvador6734,230202,066
Mongolia6302,1361,011,489
Mayotte61218742,027
Maldives602316186,694
Japan59774,69433,803,572
Philippines58666,8644,173,631
Indonesia581162,0596,830,274
Federated States of Micronesia5796531,765
Iraq57525,3752,465,545
Palau562106,372
Kuwait5592,570667,290
Faroe Islands5182834,658
Cayman Islands5163731,472
Iceland489186211,188
Thailand48734,9935,419,906
Saint Barthélemy45655,507
Morocco43616,3051,279,115
Vietnam43343,20611,624,000
Marshall Islands4241716,297
Nepal40412,0341,003,946
Brunei399182350,550
Dominican Republic3904,384661,103
Greenland3742111,971
India374533,84745,056,126
Myanmar36219,494643,401
Singapore3582,0243,006,155
Zimbabwe3575,740266,436
Sao Tome and Principe353806,771
Saint Pierre and Miquelon34723,426
Lesotho31070936,140
Saudi Arabia2999,646841,469
Solomon Islands25419925,954
Qatar238690514,524
United Arab Emirates2292,3491,067,030
Egypt22024,830516,023
Venezuela2075,856552,743
Mauritania20499763,891
Zambia2024,078349,892
Afghanistan1977,998235,214
Comoros1931619,109
Kiribati183245,085
Cambodia1773,056139,326
Bangladesh17429,5312,052,275
Macau1741213,514
Djibouti16618915,690
Algeria1516,881272,435
Kyrgyzstan1471,02488,953
Samoa1443117,057
Gambia14137212,627
Syria1403,16357,423
Cook Islands13527,375
Malawi1302,68689,168
Gabon12630749,069
Pakistan12530,6561,580,631
Tonga1231316,992
Senegal1111,97289,437
Rwanda1071,468133,274
Kenya1045,689344,140
Sudan1025,04663,993
Equatorial Guinea10118317,130
Timor-Leste10013823,460
Tuvalu9912,943
Laos88671219,060
China[c]85122,39899,381,761
Nauru8415,393
Guinea-Bissau841779,614
Uganda763,632172,222
Somalia761,36127,334
Haiti7486034,901
Cameroon711,974125,320
Mozambique682,252233,927
Papua New Guinea6567046,864
Republic of the Congo6438925,234
Ethiopia607,574501,324
Yemen562,15911,945
Liberia542948,090
Angola541,937107,487
Madagascar461,42868,733
Vanuatu441412,019
Ghana441,463172,779
Nicaragua3624516,803
Guinea3346838,593
Mali3274333,199
Togo3129039,553
Eritrea3010310,189
Uzbekistan291,016175,158
Ivory Coast2783588,434
Bhutan262163,193
Central African Republic2211315,492
Burkina Faso1740022,217
Sierra Leone151267,985
Democratic Republic of the Congo141,474101,010
Nigeria143,155267,229
South Sudan1314718,873
Tanzania1384643,606
Niger123159,573
Tajikistan1212517,786
Benin1116328,036
Chad101947,702
Burundi11554,569
Vatican City0026
Niue001,092
Falkland Islands001,923
Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha002,166
Pitcairn Islands004
Tokelau0080
North Korea000
Turkmenistan000
  1. ^Countries which do not report data for a column are not included in that column's world total.
  2. ^Data onmember states of the European Union are individually listed, but are also summed here for convenience. They are not double-counted in world totals.
  3. ^Does not includespecial administrative regions (Hong Kong andMacau) orTaiwan.


Map of death rates

[edit]

Total confirmed COVID-19 deaths per million people by country:[21][note 3][note 4]

See date at top of map.
Total confirmed COVID cases by country at the start.

Regional overviews

[edit]

Significant regional disparities in COVID-19 mortality reflect demography, vaccination, surveillance capacity, and timing. According to WHO, as of March 2023, 43% of global reported COVID-19 deaths were in the Americas, followed by 32% in Europe and 12% in South-East Asia.The remaining WHO regions—Western Pacific, Eastern Mediterranean, and Africa—accounted for 14% of global deaths.[22] These variations are influenced by population density, public health infrastructure, vaccine rollout, and pre-existing healthcare inequalities. Additionally, cultural factors, mobility patterns, and government interventions significantly affected the timing and magnitude of mortality waves.

COVID-19 death rates according to vaccination status in the US.

Comparison with other global health threats

[edit]

The WHO estimates that “COVID-19 was directly responsible for 8.7 million deaths in 2021,” making it one of the world’s leading causes of death that year.[23] However, it did not exceed major chronic diseases: “The world’s biggest killer is ischaemic heart disease, responsible for 13% of the world’s total deaths.” Lower respiratory infections (non-COVID) remained “the fifth leading cause of death in 2021.”[23]COVID-19’s mortality risk strongly increases with age. Analysis by Think Global Health notes that while children and adolescents face minimal direct mortality, indirect effects such as missed education, malnutrition, and mental health deterioration add significant long-term health burdens.[24] After adjusting for under-reporting, analyses found COVID-19 ranked among the top three causes of death in several regions, including the second leading cause in the Americas and third in Europe.[24]

The pandemic also produced substantial indirect health impacts. Cardiovascular mortality rose markedly during periods of healthcare disruption, according to a science journal: “in the early months of the pandemic, studies showed a significant increase in deaths from CVD compared to … 2019,” and these elevated levels “persisted until early 2022.”[25] Other indirect effects shown included excess mortality due to untreated chronic conditions, reduced vaccination coverage for other infectious diseases, and increased mental health crises. Health systems worldwide experienced strain that exposed vulnerabilities in both high and low-resource settings.

Summary

[edit]

COVID-19 has demonstrated a highly age-dependent mortality profile, with older populations experiencing disproportionately higher fatality rates. Mortality rates have varied over time due to changes in reporting practices, public health interventions, virus variants, and vaccine rollout. Regional differences reflect disparities in healthcare access, population age structures, and policy responses. Comparison with other global health threats emphasizes COVID-19's significant impact relative to chronic diseases. Age and gender-adjusted mortality analyses provide a clearer understanding of the pandemic's burden across populations, highlighting the importance of protective measures for vulnerable groups. The pandemic underscores the critical role of timely, accurate data reporting and international cooperation in mitigating the effects of emerging diseases. Furthermore, COVID-19 highlighted systemic inequalities and the long-term societal implications of global health crises.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The table this note applies to is updated daily by a bot. For more info seeTemplate:COVID-19 data/Cite.
  2. ^Our World in Data (OWID). SeeCoronavirus Source Data for OWID sourcing info. Excerpt: "Deaths and cases: our data source. Our World in Data relies on data from Johns Hopkins University. ... JHU updates its data multiple times each day. This data is sourced from governments, national and subnational agencies across the world — a full list of data sources for each country is publishedon Johns Hopkins GitHub site. It also makes its data publicly available there."
  3. ^ab"CSSEGISandData/COVID-19".GitHub. 5 August 2022. COVID-19 Data Repository by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) atJohns Hopkins University. TheCSV files are downloaded via the "Raw" links. The "Raw" link doesn't show up until you click the csv file link. This opens into a GitHub page with the data and the "Raw" link. SeeHow to Use our Data for more info and links. See:Pandemic Data Initiative. Seemore sourcing history and info.
  4. ^Our World in Data (OWID) maps and graphs on cases and deaths. Click on the download tab to download the image. The table tab has a table of the exact data by country. The source tab says the data is from theCOVID-19 Data Repository by the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) atJohns Hopkins University. The image at the source is interactive and provides more detail. For example, for maps run your cursor over the color bar legend to see the countries that apply to that point in the legend. For graphs run your cursor over the graph for more info. SeeCoronavirus Source Data for more OWID sourcing info.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Demographic Trends of COVID-19 cases and deaths in the US reported to CDC". 2021-04-27.
  2. ^John Newton (12 August 2020)."Behind the headlines: Counting COVID-19 deaths".UK Health Security Agency. Retrieved26 January 2020.
  3. ^Beaney, Thomas; Clarke, Jonathan M; Jain, Vageesh; Golestaneh, Amelia Kataria; Lyons, Gemma; Salman, David; Majeed, Azeem (2020)."Excess mortality: the gold standard in measuring the impact of COVID-19 worldwide?".Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.113 (9):329–334.doi:10.1177/0141076820956802.ISSN 0141-0768.PMC 7488823.PMID 32910871.Russia's case definition for a COVID-19 death, for example, relies solely on results from autopsy, unlike most European countries.6 Death must have been due directly to COVID-19, so it is not counted if a patient was found to have COVID-19 but it did not cause their death.6,7 This will lead to significant underreporting, especially as Russia has one of the highest numbers of COVID-19 cases worldwide and yet has a case fatality rate of only 1.7% as of 31 July 2020.3 Spain's definition requires a positive polymerase chain reaction or antibody test for COVID-19, with only hospital deaths included in the death count despite a significant number of deaths from COVID-19 in the community and care homes.8,9 Belgium, by contrast, has one of the broadest definitions for a COVID-19 death, including all suspected cases. Care home deaths in Belgium account for around half of all excess deaths, but only 26% of care home deaths were confirmed (rather than suspected) COVID-19,10 leading to possible overcounting relative to other countries.11
  4. ^Verity, Robert (March 30, 2020)."Estimates of the severity of coronavirus disease 2019: a model-based analysis".The Lancet. Infectious Diseases.20 (6):669–677.Bibcode:2020LanID..20..669V.doi:10.1016/S1473-3099(20)30243-7.PMC 7158570.PMID 32240634.
  5. ^"Statistik om covid-19, influense och RS".Socialstyrelsen. October 15, 2024.
  6. ^Aravindan, John Geddie (18 September 2020)."Why is Singapore's COVID-19 death rate the world's lowest".Reuters.
  7. ^Beaney, Thomas; Clarke, Jonathan M; Jain, Vageesh; Golestaneh, Amelia Kataria; Lyons, Gemma; Salman, David; Majeed, Azeem (2020)."Excess mortality: the gold standard in measuring the impact of COVID-19 worldwide?".Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.113 (9):329–334.doi:10.1177/0141076820956802.ISSN 0141-0768.PMC 7488823.PMID 32910871.Under the assumption that the incidence of other diseases remains steady over time, then excess deaths can be viewed as those caused both directly and indirectly by COVID-19 and gives a summary measure of the 'whole system' impact. ... Despite this, when seeking to understand the full impact of deaths due to COVID-19 and explain why excess deaths vary, there is a need to distinguish the component parts – of direct COVID-19 and indirect, non-COVID-19 deaths.
  8. ^Agence France-Presse (December 28, 2020)."Russia admits to world's third-worst Covid-19 death toll".The Guardian.
  9. ^ab"COVID-19 Data Explorer".Our World in Data.
  10. ^"CBS: afgelopen jaar ruim 20.000 coronadoden".nos.nl (in Dutch). 7 April 2021.
  11. ^Rigby, Jennifer (2022-05-05)."Almost three times as many died as a result of COVID than officially reported - WHO".Reuters. Retrieved2022-05-05.
  12. ^Du, Zhanwei; Wang, Yuchen; Bai, Yuan; Wang, Lin; Cowling, Benjamin John; Meyers, Lauren Ancel (2023-10-29)."Estimate of COVID-19 Deaths, China, December 2022–February 2023".Emerging Infectious Diseases.29 (10):2121–2124.doi:10.3201/eid2910.230585.ISSN 1080-6040.PMC 10521589.PMID 37640373.
  13. ^Bai, Yao; Peng, Zhihang; Wei, Fengying; Jin, Zhen; Wang, Jinjie; Xu, Ximing; Zhang, Xinyan; Xu, Jun; Ren, Zixiong; Lu, Bulai; Wang, Zhaojun; Xu, Jianguo; Huang, Senzhong (2023-03-22)."Study on the COVID-19 epidemic in mainland China between November 2022 and January 2023, with prediction of its tendency".Journal of Biosafety and Biosecurity.5 (1):39–44.doi:10.1016/j.jobb.2023.03.001.PMC 10030260.PMID 36992708.
  14. ^Glanz, James; Hvistendahl, Mara; Chang, Agnes (2023-02-15)."How Deadly Was China's Covid Wave?".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2025-08-31.
  15. ^Ahmad, Farida (29 April 2022)."Provisional Mortality Data — United States, 2021".Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.71 (17):597–600.doi:10.15585/mmwr.mm7117e1.PMC 9098238.PMID 35482572. Retrieved17 November 2025.
  16. ^Sepulveda, Edgardo (December 2021)."Income inequality and COVID-19 mortality: Age-stratified analysis of 22 OECD countries".SSM - Population Health.16 100904.doi:10.1016/j.ssmph.2021.100904.PMC 8456048.PMID 34584934.
  17. ^Loke, Yoon (16 July 2020)."Why no-one can ever recover from COVID-19 in England – a statistical anomaly".The Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine.
  18. ^"Changes to the way we report on COVID-19 deaths".UK Health Security Agency.blog.gov. UK Health Security Agency. 27 January 2023.
  19. ^"Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) Epidemiological Updates and Monthly Operational Updates".World Health Organization.
  20. ^Mathieu, Edouard;Ritchie, Hannah; Rodés-Guirao, Lucas; Appel, Cameron; Giattino, Charlie; Hasell, Joe; Macdonald, Bobbie; Dattani, Saloni; Beltekian, Diana; Ortiz-Ospina, Esteban;Roser, Max (2020–2024)."Coronavirus Pandemic (COVID-19)".Our World in Data. Retrieved2026-02-06.
  21. ^World map of cumulative confirmed COVID-19 deaths per million people. FromOur World in Data.
  22. ^"COVID-19 cases | WHO COVID-19 dashboard".WHO Data. World Health Organization.
  23. ^ab"The top 10 causes of death".The top 10 causes of death. World Health Organization.
  24. ^abTroeger, Christopher."Just How Do Deaths Due to COVID-19 Stack Up?".Think Global Health.
  25. ^Henry, Timothy (17 November 2021)."The direct and indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on cardiovascular disease throughout the world".European Heart Journal.43 (11):1154–1156.doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehab782.PMC 8690059.PMID 34791131.

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COVID-19 pandemic death rates by country at Wikipedia'ssister projects:
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=COVID-19_pandemic_death_rates_by_country&oldid=1336082951"
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