Excess Deaths
- Categories:
- Other ill-defined and unspecified causes of mortality (1,025)
- Unspecified fall (397)
- Exposure to unspecified factor (168)
- Other specified general symptoms and signs (41)
- Cachexia (12)
- Malaise and fatigue (10)
- Shock, unspecified (4)
- Bradycardia, unspecified (3)
- Coma, unspecified (1)
- Disorientation, unspecified (1)
- Fever, unspecified (1)
- Instantaneous death (1)
- Other shock (1)
- Pulseless electrical activity, not elsewhere classified (1)
- Syncope and collapse (1)
- Deaths: Government of Canada
- Population: Government of Canada
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- There were a total of 334,081 deaths in Canada in 2022
- 45,616 of all deaths were among those aged 80-84
- 20,867 of all deaths were from Unknown Causes
- 1,667 deaths from Unknown Causes were among those aged 80-84
1,667 deaths from Unknown Causes were among elderly men and women aged 80-84
2022 vs New Normal™ for elderly men and women aged 80-84 in Canada
- 1,667 of 45,616 total deaths were from Unknown Causes
- 3.65% of all deaths were from Unknown Causes
- This is up 91% compared to Old Normal rates.
- 864 of 51,502 total deaths would have been expected under Old Normal conditions.
- 803 excess deaths from Unknown Causes in 2022.
- 5,886 fewer than expected All Cause deaths in 2022.
- 1,472 excess deaths from Unknown Causes (2015-2022)
- 49,276 fewer than expected All Cause deaths over the first 8 years of Canada’s New Normal™.
- To show this year’s deaths from Unknown Causes are up 91% compared to Old Normal rates, we need to calculate the rates for both 2022 and for the Old Normal.
Remember, death rates are calculated to answer these questions:
- “How many elderly men and women aged 80-84 were there?” and
- “How many of them died from Unknown Causes?”
The following 2 charts provide this information:
Deaths – Unknown Causes – Both Sexes – Aged 80-84 | Canada, Canada
Population – Both Sexes – Aged 80-84 – [2000-2022] | Canada, Canada
From the charts, we can see that in 2022, 1,667 of 878,761 elderly men and women aged 80-84 living in Canada died from Unknown Causes.
1,667 ÷ 878,761 = 0.00190 (2022 CDR)
Deaths/100,000 Both Sexes 80-84 from Unknown Causes
The table shows there were a total of 9,413 deaths from Unknown Causes among 9,577,387 elderly men and women aged 80-84 living in Canada in the 15 years immediately prior to the New Normal™.
9,413 ÷ 9,577,387 = 0.00098 (Old Normal CDR)
We can use the Old Normal rate to predict this year’s deaths:
2022 pop X Old Normal CDR = expected deaths
878,761 X 0.00098 = 864 expected deaths
The difference between actual and expected deaths shows lives saved or lost:
1,667 – 864 = 803
Dividing the actual deaths by the expected deaths gives us the comparative rates:
1,667 ÷ 864 = 1.9107
This reveals 803 lives lost and is 191.07% of what we expected (an increase of 91%) in deaths from Unknown Causes among elderly men and women aged 80-84 living in Canada in 2022, as compared to the Old Normal.
This is the same method used by Public Health to calculate the 5-yr CDR (Cumulative Death Rate):
6,015 ÷ 5,439,781 = 0.00111 (5-yr CDR)
878,761(2022 pop) X 0.00111 = 972 expected deaths
The difference between actual and expected deaths:
1,667 – 972 = 695 or 695 lives lost
Divide actual deaths by expected deaths:
1,667 ÷ 972 = 1.7002 or an increase of 70%
for deaths from Unknown Causes among elderly men and women aged 80-84 living in Canada in 2022, as compared to the previous 5 years.
Compare our Old Normal to the 5yr CDR. Does it tell the same story your TV does?
Finally, the same method can also be used to compare our Old Normal rate to the New Normal™ rate:
New Normal™ population X Old Normal rate = expected deaths
6,318,542 X 0.00098 = 6,210 expected deaths
The difference between actual and expected deaths:
7682 – 6,210 = 1,472 or 1,472 lives lost
Dividing the actual deaths by the expected deaths:
7,682 ÷ 6,210 = 1.2246 or an increase of 22%
in deaths from Unknown Causes among elderly men and women aged 80-84 living in Canada in the New Normal™, as compared to the Old Normal.
The world has been led to believe that a deadly pandemic swept the globe beginning in 2020, causing an increase in death rates, especially among the elderly
The data show that death rates began to increase in 2015, immediately upon implementation of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, that young adults have experienced ever-increasing death rates since, and that death rates among the elderly have remained relatively stable.
Return to the top of the page to select another age category.
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