Democratic quality and excess mortality during the COVID‑19 pandemic
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Martín Martín, José Jesús; Correa Gómez, Manuel; Rojo Gallego-Burín, Araceli María; Sánchez Martínez, María Teresa; Delgado Márquez, Luisa; Ortega Almón, María ÁngelesEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
COVID-19 Coronavirus Excess mortality
Date
2024-04-04Referencia bibliográfica
Martín-Martín, JJ., Correa, M., Rojo-Gallego-Burín, AM. et al. Democratic quality and excess mortality during the COVID-19 pandemic. Sci Rep 14, 7948 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55523-6
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Unit of Excellence in Inequality, Human Rights, and Sustainability of the University of Granada (DEHUSO)Abstract
The aim of this study is to analyse the relationship between democratic quality and excess mortality
produced in the year 2020 before COVID-19 vaccinations were generalised. Using cross-sectional data
from 80 countries on five continents, multiple linear regression models between excess mortality, the
general democracy index and its disaggregation into five categories: electoral process and pluralism,
government functioning, political participation, political culture and civil liberties were estimated.
The analysis also considered, public health spending per capita, overweight inhabitants, the average
temperature of the country, population over 65 years of age, The KOF Globalisation Index, and the
Gross National Income per capita as control variables. It was possible to establish a strong inverse
association between excess mortality per million inhabitants and the general democracy index and
four of its five categories. There was a particularly strong relationship between excess mortality and
the political culture dimension (−326.50, p < 0.001). The results suggest that the higher the democratic
quality of the political institutions of a State and particularly of their political culture the more
improved the response and management of the pandemic was in preventing deaths and protecting
their citizens more effectively. Conversely, countries with lower democracy index values have higher
excess mortality. Quality democratic political institutions provide more effective public health policies
in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.