Alarming 2021 pandemic death counts in New Brunswick retracted - Action News
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New Brunswick

Alarming 2021 pandemic death counts in New Brunswick retracted

Stunning estimates released by Statistics Canada earlier this year showing that hundreds of people more than normal died in New Brunswick during the summer and fall of 2021 have been discarded by the agency.

Statistics Canada makes drastic revisions to province's excess mortality estimates

A close-up of a woman with shoulder-length, grey hair and glasses, wearing a fuchsia and white striped shirt.
Infectious disease expert Tara Moriarty of the University of Toronto said she's baffled by how death estimates in New Brunswick in 2021 suddenly went from among the highest among provinces to among the lowest. (CBC)

Stunning estimatesreleased by Statistics Canada earlier this year showing that hundreds of people more than normal died in New Brunswick during the summer and fall of 2021 have been discardedby theagency.

It is now reporting theopposite that in New Brunswick in 2021 hundreds fewer people than normal died.

It's a major swing in a critical pandemic measurement that has surprised health and data professionals and generated calls for a detailed explanation from all government agencies involved.

Tara Moriarty, an associate professor and infectious disease researcher at the University of Toronto, has been tracking the issue of "excess mortality" across Canada during the COVID-19 pandemic. She is baffled by what's happened with New Brunswick's numbers.

In July, Statistics Canada produced a chart showing nine years of deaths in New Brunswick with fatalities in 2021 (in grey) rising far above any other year. This week, a revised chart showed deaths in 2021 to be similar to other years. (Statistics Canada)

"I've never seen this before. I've never seen it," Moriarty said of a suddendrop in New Brunswick death counts.

"The province and Statistics Canada need to explain."

In July Statistics Canada released estimates showing 8,138 people had passed away in New Brunswick during the first 50 weeks of 2021.

The number shatteredprevious records and was calculatedtobe 567 more deaths than would be expected in a normal, non-pandemic year.

That appeared to show the COVID-19 pandemic was taking a much larger human toll on New Brunswick residents than official government counts of COVID deaths were recording, and it triggeredsharp questioning in the legislature and expressions of concern from publichealth officials.

However, on Thursday, Statistics Canada released new estimates lowering the death total in New Brunswick for those 50 weeks to 7,272.

That's 866 fewer deaths than it reported in July and now puts fatalities in New Brunswick in 2021 lower than normal, not higher.

There have been no similar revisions in other provinces.

Explanations from Statistics Canada have been limited but appear to focus on ongoing problems it has been having with the quality of mortality information being provided to it by New Brunswick.

Statistics Canada has been keeping track of deaths in provinces weekly during the pandemic. (Canadian Press/Sean Kilpatrick)

"Recently, New Brunswick has been submitting preliminary information on deaths to Statistics Canada," read a statement issued by StatisticsCanada on Thursday about the significant change in its New Brunswick death counts.

"While this information does provide more timely results, this incomplete data has increased the uncertainty associated with provisional estimates for recent reference periods.

"As a result this information is no longer being included in the provisional estimates for New Brunswick."

Statistics Canada has been trackingdeathsin each province monthly during the COVID-19 pandemic and comparing them to what would have been expected in a normal year in an effort to detect "excessmortality" caused by the virus both directly and indirectly

"To understand the direct and indirect consequences of the pandemic, it is important to measureexcessmortality, which occurs when there are moredeathsthan expected in a given period," Statistics Canadanotes in an explanation of the project.

The agency had been showing New Brunswick with one of the highest death rates among provinces during the second half of 2021, but that has flipped to one of the lowest.

And although the numbers were always presented by StatisticsCanada as being "estimates" and "provisional" no other province has experienced a change as large.

Fredericton data analyst Ray Harris says the public needs an explanation about why death counts in 2021 swung from high to low if the new estimates are to be believed. (Rachel Cave/CBC)

Some of the changes are so large, noteveryone is prepared to accept the new estimates as being any more accurate than previous ones.

For example during the first two weeks of December 2021, Statistics Canada had been estimating 439 deaths in New Brunswick as recently as two months ago but now puts the number at 326, a 26 per cent reduction.

And it went from estimating 61 deaths above normal in New Brunswick in the last two weeks of October 2021 (359) to 20 deaths below normal (278) in its current estimate.

Moriarty said the involvement of multiple provincial and federal bodies in the construction of death estimates in New Brunswick makes identifying where the problem in the numbers lies difficult, but she doubted Statistics Canada alone is to blame.

"Professionally, they are exceedingly careful about being very conservative and cautious about their estimates and about trying to be as right as they can be," said Moriarty.

"It's incredibly important for trust in the institution, so they can't be too happy at the moment."

Ray Harris, a Fredericton-based data professional,has worked with New Brunswick COVID numbers throughout the pandemic, including the excess mortality numbers.

Former New Brunswick health minister Dorothy Shephard was peppered with questions in the legislature this spring about high the 2021 death rates reported by Statistics Canada. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

He noted the province has not always presented other COVID data in a straightforward way and said such large revisions in how many people died in New Brunswick in 2021 will need to be fully explained to be believed.

"This is a hot topic. People are looking at these numbers," Harris said. "I'm of the belief that you should always try to build credibility, especially with data."

In a statement, the Department of Health said it is working co-operatively with the federal government on the mortality issue but no one was made available for an interview.

"The department continues to collaborate with Statistics Canada to ensure the data and methodology are appropriately understood by both parties," read the statement.

"The Department of Health will also complete an analysis of death certificates of its own to better understand mortality trends observed during the pandemic, as well as the contribution of COVID-19 to excess deaths."