Sex Differences in Excess Mortality During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Publication date: Jul 15, 2025

Background The COVID-19 pandemic was a significant global mortality shock. In addition to baseline differences in mortality risk, males often face a survival disadvantage in crisis situations such as famines and epidemics. Although many countries have reported higher numbers of male COVID-19 deaths, the evolution of sex differences in mortality over the course of the pandemic, and how these differences compare using both relative (accounting for higher male baseline mortality) and absolute measures remains underexplored. Methods We examined sex differences in excess mortality from March 2020 to July 2023 using data from 33 countries in the Short-Term Mortality Fluctuations dataset. We estimate both absolute (male excess mortality – female excess mortality) and relative (male P-score – female P-score) sex differences in COVID-related mortality. We analysed the sex gap monthly and across three pandemic phases: pre-vaccine, post-vaccine, and endemic. Results In most countries, absolute male excess mortality exceeded that of females during the pre-vaccine phase of the pandemic. While the overall male disadvantage in total excess deaths gradually declined throughout the pandemic, it remained more pronounced in countries with delayed mortality peaks. The evidence for relative male disadvantage was weaker overall, and this gap further narrowed during the endemic phase. In some contexts, such as Nordic countries, women even experienced higher relative excess mortality later in the pandemic. Sex differences in absolute excess mortality tended to grow with age, but there was no clear pattern in the relative sex differences across age groups Conclusions While previous research has highlighted a male disadvantage in COVID-19 mortality based on absolute death counts, our study shows that this pattern was concentrated in the pre-vaccine phase and declined over time. Relative increases in mortality were often similar between sexes and, in some cases, greater among women. These findings suggest that sex differences in COVID-19 mortality were more varied than commonly assumed and underscore the importance of using both absolute and relative measures to assess the impact of health crises on population subgroups.

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Concepts Keywords
Czechia Absolute
July Countries
Mortality33 Covid
Wealthy Deaths
Differences
Disadvantage
Excess
Expected
Medrxiv
Mortality
Pandemic
Pre
Preprint
Relative
Sex

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 Pandemic
disease MESH shock
disease MESH death
drug DRUGBANK Tricyclazole
disease IDO susceptibility
disease MESH infection
disease IDO country
disease MESH uncertainty

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