COVID-19 Mortality in Australia: Deaths registered until 30 June 2022

COVID-19 deaths that occurred by 30 June 2022 that have been registered and received by the ABS

Released
29/07/2022

Key Statistics

  • 8,219 deaths where people died with or from COVID-19 that occurred by 30 June 2022 have been registered and received by the ABS. The ABS expects to receive further registrations for this period from the jurisdictional Registries of Births, Deaths and Marriages.
  • The underlying cause of death for 7,057 (85.9%) of these people was COVID-19. 
  • There were a further 1,162 people who died of other causes (e.g. cancer) but COVID-19 contributed to their death.  
  • Chronic cardiac conditions were the most common pre-existing chronic condition for those who had COVID-19 certified as the underlying cause of death.

The number of deaths published in this report are provisional and will increase as additional registrations are received by the ABS. 

Deaths due to COVID-19 are coded to ICD-10 codes U07.1 and U07.2 using rules in accordance with the most current advice from the World Health Organization. 

Deaths in this article on COVID-19 occur up to 30 June 2022. 

Deaths in this article include both doctor and coroner certified and therefore do not match the number of COVID-19 deaths presented in the Provisional Mortality Statistics publication. 

Deaths in this article are sourced from the civil registration system. The data is not directly comparable with data sourced from health surveillance systems. 

Deaths due to COVID-19 in Australia

The Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a respiratory infection caused by a new coronavirus. On 11 March 2020 the World Health Organization (WHO) declared COVID-19 to be a pandemic.

There are 8,219 death registrations that have been received by the ABS where an individual is certified as having died from or with COVID-19 between the start of the pandemic and 30 June 2022. Of the 390,620 death registrations received by the ABS (both doctor and coroner certified) in Australia during the pandemic period, 2.1% are of people who have died with or from COVID-19. This number of deaths is a preliminary figure and represents only those deaths for which registration has been completed through the jurisdictional Registries of Births, Deaths and Marriages (the civil registration system). The number of deaths of people who have died from or with COVID-19 during this time period will increase as additional registrations are received by the ABS. Deaths which occurred in the most recent published months (i.e. June) will have the largest increases as more registrations are received. 

Data published by the ABS is collected through the civil registration system. Civil registration based data is not directly comparable with that released from disease surveillance systems which are designed to release information rapidly on both infections and mortality. 

Information about mortality sourced from the registration-based system takes longer to receive than information reported through the surveillance system, but it is more comprehensive and can provide important additional insights into deaths from COVID-19. Cause of death information is sourced from the Medical Certificate of Cause of Death (MCCD), which enables identification of the underlying cause of death and other associated causes. These data sources also provide demographic information about the decedent (e.g. age, sex and country of birth).

Certification of COVID-19 on the MCCD in Australia

There were 8,354 deaths which occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022 and had COVID-19 written as a term on the death certificate. The composition of these 8,354 deaths is as follows: 

Deaths due to COVID-19: 

  • 6,977 with an underlying cause of death assigned to acute COVID-19 infection with the virus being laboratory confirmed. 
  • 60 deaths that were due to long term effects of COVID-19 (e.g. long COVID-19). 
  • 20 deaths that were certified as being due to suspected COVID-19 with the virus not confirmed in a laboratory at the time of certification.

These 7,057 deaths are considered to be "due to" COVID-19 and are included in underlying cause mortality tabulations in this report.

COVID-19 related deaths: 

  • 1,162 deaths which were COVID-19 related. This is where the person either died with COVID-19 (confirmed or suspected) or had complications from a previous COVID-19 infection but the virus was not the underlying cause of death. While COVID-19 did not directly cause the death in these people, it was still considered to contribute to death. These deaths are included in COVID-19 related death tabulations of this report (i.e. people dying with COVID-19) and are included in overall totals. 

Other deaths include: 

  • 56 deaths which had a negative COVID-19 result recorded on the death certificate. When a negative COVID-19 test result is recorded on a death certificate an ICD-10 code of ‘Z03.8 Examination and observation for other specified reasons’ is assigned to capture the information communicated by the doctor. These deaths are not included in COVID-19 mortality reporting. 
  • 78 deaths which occurred in people who had COVID-19 but recovered and had no lasting complications, or COVID-19 was listed on the death certificate but did not contribute to death. These mentions of COVID-19 on the death certificate are captured with an ICD-10 code of “U08.9 Personal history of COVID-19”. These deaths are not included in COVID-19 mortality reporting. 
  • 4 deaths of neonates (infants aged under 28 days) where a personal history of COVID-19 was mentioned as a condition in the mother. The infant was not COVID-19 positive. All diseases in the infant and the mother certified on a Medical Certificate of Cause of Perinatal Death are assigned an ICD-10 code. These mentions of COVID-19 on the death certificate are captured with an ICD-10 code of “U08.9 Personal history of COVID-19”.  These deaths are not included in COVID-19 mortality reporting. 

 

Coding of COVID-19 from the MCCD

Australian cause of death data is coded to the International Classification of Diseases, 10th revision which is governed by the WHO. Case definitions, certification guidelines and coding rules have been implemented for international use.

A death directly due to COVID-19 is defined by the WHO as a death resulting from a clinically compatible illness, in a probable or confirmed COVID-19 case, unless there is a clear alternative cause of death that cannot be related to COVID disease (e.g. trauma). There should be no period of complete recovery from COVID-19 between illness and death.

In response to the emergence of COVID-19 the WHO issued new emergency codes to be used when coding causes of death for statistical purposes.

  • U07.1 COVID-19 virus identified

This code is used when COVID-19 is confirmed by laboratory testing.
 

  • U07.2 COVID-19 virus not identified

This code is used for suspected or clinical diagnoses of COVID-19 where testing is not completed or inconclusive.
 

  • U08 Personal history of COVID-19

This code is used when:

- A person has recovered from COVID-19 and no long term effects have been certified as contributing to an individual’s death.

- COVID-19 is listed on the death certificate but it did not contribute to the death. 

These deaths are not included in COVID-19 mortality tabulations.

  • U09 Post COVID-19 condition

This code is used to link long term conditions including chronic lung conditions that are the result of the virus. These deaths are included in COVID-19 mortality tabulations.
 

  • U10 Multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with COVID-19

This code is used to identify people who have died from COVID-19 where the virus has led to a multi-inflammatory response syndrome. There have been no deaths due to this disorder in Australia.
 

A further code ‘Z03.8 Examination for observation and other specified reasons’ can be used to record a negative test result in order to capture this information on the death certificate. These deaths are not tabulated as being due to COVID-19.

The international rules and guidance for selecting the underlying cause of death for statistical tabulation apply when COVID-19 is reported on a death certificate. COVID-19 is not considered as due to, or as an obvious consequence of, other diseases and conditions. These rules are also applied to cause of death coding for Influenza and selected other infectious diseases. There is no provision in the classification to link COVID-19 to other causes or modify its coding in any way.

Almost all deaths due to COVID-19 in Australia have laboratory confirmation of the virus. Of the 7,057 registered COVID-19 deaths occurring by 30 June 2022, 7.037 (99.7%) were coded to U07.1, (laboratory confirmed) COVID-19, virus identified. There were 20 (0.3%) deaths where the doctor certified that it was a suspected case of COVID-19 with no laboratory confirmation recorded at the time the MCCD was completed.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Year and month of occurrence

The table below shows the number of registered deaths due to COVID-19 over the course of the pandemic by month of occurrence.  

  • The number of deaths occurring in May and June 2022 is not reflective of the true total and will increase as additional death registrations are received by the ABS. Other time periods may also change if the death registration process has been delayed. 
  • Deaths due to COVID-19 increased during April and May 2022 after a decline in March. 
  • Cumulatively, the highest number of deaths have occurred during the Omicron wave. 
Deaths due to COVID-19 by year and month of occurrence (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
Year of death occurrenceJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecTotal
20200023781231454731461681905
202121120013973094382572121,332
20221,590997391657830355nananananana4,820
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified as the underlying cause of death.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this table.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Age and sex

  • Males had a higher number of registered deaths (4,047) due to COVID-19 than females (3,010 deaths).

  • The highest number of COVID-19 deaths occurred among those aged 80-89 years (2,623). This was true for both males and females.

  • Males aged under 80 years had a higher number of deaths than females (1,591 compared with 831).

  • The median age for those who died from COVID-19 was 84.7 years (82.9 years for males, 86.7 years for females).

  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. Deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have an underlying cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

Deaths due to COVID-19: State of registration

As of 30 June 2022, the majority of registered deaths due to COVID-19 had occurred in Victoria (2,965). Nearly 80% of deaths due to COVID-19 have occurred in Victoria and New South Wales. Additional deaths due to COVID-19 for this time period are expected to be received in coming months for most jurisdictions as death registrations are finalised. 

Number and proportion of COVID-19 deaths by state of registration (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
COVID-19 deaths (no.)Proportion of total COVID-19 deaths (%)
NSW2,56036.3
Vic2,96542.0
Qld83511.8
SA3104.4
WA2022.9
Tas771.1
NT200.3
ACT881.2
Aus7,057100
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified as the underlying cause of death.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Associated causes of death

COVID-19 was the underlying cause of death for 7,057 registered deaths that have been received by the ABS occurring up to 30 June 2022. The WHO defines the underlying cause of death as the disease or condition that initiated the train of morbid events leading to death. Diseases and conditions reported on the MCCD that are not the underlying cause of death are referred to as associated causes. Associated causes can be either:

  • Conditions listed in the causal sequence (the chain of events leading to death). These are conditions that were caused by COVID-19 and its complications; or
  • Pre-existing chronic conditions, often listed in Part II of the MCCD as ‘other conditions relevant to the death’. These are conditions that a person had before they contracted COVID-19.

Examining conditions in the causal sequence can provide insights into how a disease progresses and leads to death. Examining pre-existing chronic conditions provides an understanding of risk factors that might contribute to death from a particular disease. Both can inform health prevention and intervention policies.

Most deaths due to COVID-19 have other conditions listed on the death certificate (94.4%). The table below shows that over half of all certificates had both a causal sequence and pre-existing conditions listed on the certificate.

On average, deaths due to COVID-19 had 3.0 other diseases and conditions certified alongside the virus. 

Number of deaths due to COVID-19 that had associated conditions (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
Reported with:No. of deathsPercent (%)
Reported alone on certificate3955.6
Reported with causal sequence of events only1,27518.1
Reported with pre-existing chronic conditions only1,58622.5
Reported with causal sequence of events and pre-existing chronic conditions3,80153.9
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. Deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have an underlying cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Associated causes, conditions in the causal sequence

COVID-19 is a respiratory illness that weakens the immune system causing inflammation. This commonly leads to poor respiratory outcomes such as viral pneumonia and secondary infection. Other manifestations such as acute kidney injury and cardiac complications have also been reported but these are less common.

Disease progressions were described in a causal sequence by the certifier in 5,076 (71.9%) of the 7,057 deaths due to COVID-19 outlined in this report. Among these 5,076 deaths:

  • Acute respiratory diseases were the most commonly certified diseases listed as a consequence of COVID-19.
  • Pneumonia was present as a consequence of COVID-19 in nearly two-thirds of deaths where a causal sequence was certified by a doctor.
  • Other acute outcomes including infections (e.g. sepsis) and renal complications were certified in 10.3% and 9.4% of deaths respectively.
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. Deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have an underlying cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Associated causes, pre-existing chronic conditions

People with pre-existing chronic conditions have greater risk of developing severe illness from COVID-19. While pre-existing chronic conditions do not cause COVID-19, they increase the risk of COVID-19 complications and therefore increase the risk of death.

Pre-existing chronic conditions were reported on death certificates for 5,387 (76.3%) of the 7,057 deaths due to COVID-19 deaths outlined in this report. Of these 5,387 deaths:

  • Chronic cardiac conditions including coronary atherosclerosis, cardiomyopathies and atrial fibrillation were the most commonly certified co-morbidities, present in 38.1% of the 5,387 deaths.
  • Dementia including Alzheimer's disease was certified as a pre-existing condition in over 30% of deaths due to COVID-19.
  • Diabetes, a condition that weakens the immune system, was certified as a pre-existing condition in 17.9% of deaths with a chronic condition mentioned.
  • Cancer was a pre-existing condition in 16.5% of the 5,387 deaths. Blood and lymph cancers (e.g. leukaemia) were the most commonly certified cancer type among those deaths. 
  • The type of comorbidities most commonly present in Australian deaths due to COVID-19 are consistent with those reported internationally.
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. All deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have been coded to ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified as the underlying cause of death.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

Deaths due to COVID-19: Country of birth

  • Those who died of COVID-19 with a country of birth of overseas, had an age-standardised death rate two times higher than that of people who were born in Australia (15.6 deaths per 100,000 people versus 7.6 deaths).
  • Those with a country of birth in the Middle East had the highest age-standardised death rate at 46.9 deaths per 100,000 people.
  • Those with a country of birth in the United Kingdom and Ireland had the lowest age-standardised death rate at 7.4 per 100,000 people.
  • Those born in the Eastern European region had the highest median age at death at 91.3 years. Those born in the Oceania and Antarctic region (excluding Australia) had the lowest median age at death at 72.1 years. 

Country of birth of those who have died from COVID-19 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)

Country of birth  No. of deathsAge-standardised death rateMedian age at death (years)
Australia3,1117.685.2
Overseas born3,91615.684.3
 Oceania and Antarctica30417.272.1
 North-West Europe7507.686.0
  United Kingdom and Ireland5647.485.9
  Other North-West Europe1868.386.2
 Southern and Eastern Europe1,67124.486.4
  Southern Europe59419.487.4
  South Eastern Europe88630.285.2
  Eastern Europe19119.991.3
 North Africa and the Middle East50141.280.4
  North Africa8327.082.8
  Middle East41846.980.2
 South-East Asia25013.080.1
 North-East Asia15911.186.8
 Southern and Central Asia12810.780.8
 Americas8811.677.8
 Sub-Saharan Africa657.976.5
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. Deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have an underlying cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.
  6. Country of birth uses the Standard Australian Classification of Countries (SACC).
  7. Deaths without a recorded country of birth are excluded from this table.

Deaths due to COVID-19: socio-economic status (SEIFA)

Socio-economic indexes rank areas in Australia according to relative socio-economic advantage and disadvantage.

  • The number of people who died due to COVID-19 was around 3 times higher in those in quintile 1 (most disadvantaged) than those in quintile 5 (least disadvantaged). This was true for both males and females.
  • Proportions of COVID-19 mortality were similar for both males and females across each quintile.
  • People living in the least disadvantaged areas (quintile 5) had the lowest numbers of deaths due to COVID-19.
SEIFA (IRSD) quintile of those who died from COVID-19 (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)(f)(g)
SEIFA QuintileMalesPercent (%) of male deaths due to COVID-19FemalesPercent (%) of female deaths due to COVID-19
1 (lowest)1,34933.31,00933.5
286021.366822.2
371817.758719.5
462215.443614.5
5 (highest)45811.32889.6
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. Deaths due to COVID-19 in this report have an underlying cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.
  6. Data for SEIFA (Index of relative social disadvantage) quintiles have been calculated using a meshblock to SEIFA (IRSD) correspondence. 
  7. Deaths without a SEIFA score are excluded from this table.

COVID-19 related-deaths (dying with COVID-19)

For death registrations received by the ABS up to 30 June 2022, there were 1,162 people who died with COVID-19 rather than directly from the virus itself. In this article, these deaths are referred to as COVID-19 related deaths.

A COVID-19 related death is one where there is a disease or injury pathway to death that is not directly caused by the virus. For example, a person may have late stage cancer that has metastasised extensively causing organ damage leading to death. This person may also have contracted COVID-19. While the virus or it's complications may have negatively impacted health in an immuno-compromised person, the virus itself did not cause the terminal event leading to death (e.g. organ failure caused by metastases). In this example, the underlying cause of death would be recorded as cancer and COVID-19 would be considered an associated cause of death.

COVID-19 related deaths: Year and month of occurrence

Most recorded COVID-19 related deaths (1,096 deaths, 99.2%) occurred during the Delta and Omicron waves. Of these COVID-19 related deaths occurring during the Delta and Omicron waves, there were 214 that occurred in January 2022 and 267 that occurred in May 2022. There were 9 COVID-19 related deaths (0.8%) recorded during wave 1 and 2 of the pandemic in Australia. The number of COVID-19 related deaths is expected to increase as additional registrations are received by the ABS. 

COVID-19 related deaths by year and month of occurrence (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
Year of death occurrenceJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDecTotal
20200001010520009
202100000011214192057
2022214198109193267115nananananana1,096
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. COVID-19 related deaths have an associated cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.

COVID-19 related deaths: Most common underlying cause of death

Of the 1,162 people who died with COVID-19, cancers were the most common underlying cause of death. Blood and lymph cancers (e.g. leukaemia) were the most commonly certified cancer type among those deaths. Circulatory system diseases were the second most common underlying cause of death in COVID-19 related deaths. Ischaemic heart diseases were the most common cause of circulatory system disease for those who died with COVID-19. 

Most common underlying cause in COVID-19 related deaths (a)(b)(c)(d)(e)
Underlying cause of deathNo. of deathsProportion (%)
Cancer30826.5
Circulatory system diseases29125
Dementia including Alzheimers23420.1
Kidney and urinary diseases453.9
Falls443.8
Diabetes433.7
Respiratory diseases423.6
Other conditions15513.3
Total deaths1,162100
  1. Includes COVID-19 death registrations only. Numbers will differ to disease surveillance systems.
  2. Includes all COVID-19 deaths (both doctor and coroner certified) that occurred and were registered by 30 June 2022.
  3. COVID-19 related deaths have an associated cause of either ICD-10 code U07.1 COVID-19, virus identified or U07.2 COVID-19, virus not identified.
  4. Data is provisional and subject to change.
  5. Refer to the methodology for more information regarding the data in this graph.
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