There was no significant increase in mortality rates in Israel in the first seven months of 2020 compared to previous years, according to figures published by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) on Thursday.

This is despite the outbreak of the coronavirus, which has killed 976 Israelis to date.

The mortality rate was especially low from January through March. However, the mortality rate rose to levels similar to previous years after the pandemic struck Israel, with death rates fluctuating wildly from week to week.

A statistical calculation of excess mortality by weeks found that the excess mortality between March-July is about 300 deaths out of 19,000 deaths during that period.

From the beginning of 2020 until the end of July, 27,500 Israeli residents died. In 2019, 27,550 residents died in those months.

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In these months, the gross mortality rate, which takes into account the size of the population, was slightly lower in 2020 than in 2019 - 3.0 per 1,000 compared to 3.1, respectively. Comparing the months of March-July 2020 to March-July 2019, the mortality rate was almost the same.

The CBS noted that mortality from the coronavirus in Israel is relatively low compared to many other countries. Out of about 19,000 deaths in Israel from March-July, about 570 people (about 3%) died directly from the coronavirus (according to Health Ministry data.

However, in other countries, such as England, the United States, Spain, Italy and France, significant "excess mortality" has been reported in the months since the plague broke out. In Israel, the increase in the percentage of deaths from the corona virus from the total number of deaths is noticeable, mainly in weeks 15 and 16 (April 19-6) and starting from week 28 (July 12-6) and all of July. In the last week of July, the percentage of deaths from the coronavirus out of the total deaths reached almost 10%. But is the total mortality higher than in previous years?

To answer the question of whether there is an excess mortality rate in Israel in 2020 and especially after the outbreak of the epidemic, the CBS calculated the weekly mortality rates in Israel for 2020 compared to the average of the previous five years (2019-2015), using confidence intervals of the mortality rates in those years. Read more at Arutz-7