For 2021, Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) estimates the mid-year population at 60.14 million people: an increase of about 604,281 (1.01%) since mid-year 2020. Here’s how Covid-19 impacted life expectancy.
Unfortunately, the latest report shows how the Covid-19 pandemic impacted mortality and life expectancy in South Africa. As expected, the country experienced a peak in deaths during the first and second waves.
According to Stats SA, “this resulted in a significant increase in the crude death rate [CDR] from 8.7 deaths per 1,000 people in 2020 to 11.6 deaths per 1,000 people in 2021. The significant rise in deaths in 2021 [approximately 34%], meant a drop in the 2021 life expectancy [LE] at birth for South Africa”.
To break it down, the life expectancy for men dropped by 3.1 years for men (from 62.4 in 2020 to 59.3 in 2021), and by 3.8 years for women (from 68.4 to 64.6).
This after the first two waves of Covid-19 infections swept across South Africa between 1 July 2020 and 30 June 2021.
The second and third waves (driven by the Beta and Delta variants respectively) resulted in “significantly higher proportions of deaths in the country than would normally have occurred; as a result of this rise in deaths, life expectancy at birth declined significantly”.
However, Stats SA said: “Whilst the life expectancy at birth indicator is an important health indicator, in this Covid-19 period it should not be interpreted as a projection of an individual’s lifespan, but should rather be used to shed light on the cumulative burden of a crisis compared to recent trends.”
That said, the full impact of the pandemic will only be known as new data becomes available over time, to provide researchers with a better sense of the full impact on South Africa and the world.
Here are the key findings of the mid-year population report:
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