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Using Benford’s law to assess the quality of COVID-19 register data in Brazil

Lucas Silva, Dalson Britto Figueiredo Filho

2020Journal of Public Health51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We employ Newcomb-Benford law (NBL) to evaluate the reliability of COVID-19 figures in Brazil. Using official data from February 25 to September 15, we apply a first digit test for a national aggregate dataset of total cases and cumulative deaths. We find strong evidence that Brazilian reports do not conform to the NBL theoretical expectations. These results are robust to different goodness of fit (chi-square, mean absolute deviation and distortion factor) and data sources (John Hopkins University and Our World in Data). Despite the growing appreciation for evidence-based-policymaking, which requires valid and reliable data, we show that the Brazilian epidemiological surveillance system fails to provide trustful data under the NBL assumption on the COVID-19 epidemic.

Topics & Concepts

Benford's lawCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)StatisticsGoodness of fitReliability (semiconductor)EconometricsStandard deviation2019-20 coronavirus outbreakSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)Data qualityRegister (sociolinguistics)Actuarial scienceMathematicsMedicineEconomicsVirologyPhysicsMetric (unit)Operations managementInfectious disease (medical specialty)PathologyPower (physics)OutbreakQuantum mechanicsPhilosophyDiseaseLinguisticsBenford’s Law and Fraud Detection
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