A population-based cohort study of socio-demographic risk factors for COVID-19 deaths in Sweden
Autor
Drefahl, Sven
Wallace, Matthew
Mussino, Eleonora
Aradhya, Siddartha
Kolk, Martin
Brandén, Maria
Malmberg, Bo
Andersson, Gunnar
Institución
Resumen
As global deaths from COVID-19 continue to rise, the world’s governments, institutions, and
agencies are still working toward an understanding of who is most at risk of death. In this
study, data on all recorded COVID-19 deaths in Sweden up to May 7, 2020 are linked to highquality and accurate individual-level background data from administrative registers of the
total population. By means of individual-level survival analysis we demonstrate that being
male, having less individual income, lower education, not being married all independently
predict a higher risk of death from COVID-19 and from all other causes of death. Being an
immigrant from a low- or middle-income country predicts higher risk of death from COVID19 but not for all other causes of death. The main message of this work is that the interaction
of the virus causing COVID-19 and its social environment exerts an unequal burden on the
most disadvantaged members of society