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HOME > Epidemiol Health > Volume 47; 2025 > Article
Original Article Can resident registration expiration statistics due to death be used for near-real-time mortality tracking? A validation study using 2023 data from Korea
Jin-Hwan Kimorcid
Epidemiol Health 2025;47e2025042-0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4178/epih.e2025042
Published online: August 3, 2025
Institute for Health and Environment, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
Corresponding author:  Jin-Hwan Kim,
Email: jinhwan.kim@snu.ac.kr
Received: 21 March 2025   • Accepted: 25 July 2025
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OBJECTIVES
Real-time mortality tracking is essential for public health surveillance, especially during emergencies such as the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. In Korea, delayed availability of vital statistics (VS) data has hindered timely mortality monitoring. This study evaluates whether National Administrative Data (NAD) on resident registration expiration due to death, provided by the Ministry of Interior and Safety, could serve as a reliable alternative for near real-time mortality surveillance.
METHODS
We compared mortality counts between VS and NAD for 2023 at multiple geographic levels (county, province, and nation) and across demographic strata (sex and age groups). The analysis was conducted in 3 stages: comparing overall mortality counts, analyzing county-level distributions, and assessing equivalence through correlation analyses, scatter plots, and density plots.
RESULTS
NAD showed strong agreement with VS at the national level, reporting only 0.4% more deaths overall (0.2% for male, 0.6% for female). Notable differences were observed in early childhood mortality, with NAD showing 16.8% fewer deaths for neonates (age 0) and 14.8% more for ages 1-4, as well as in monthly variations (5-9%). Correlation analyses indicated extremely high consistency between the 2 data sources across all geographic levels (correlation coefficients ≥0.999), especially at the national and provincial levels.
CONCLUSIONS
NAD provides a reliable alternative to VS for real-time mortality surveillance in Korea, providing comparable accuracy with much-improved timeliness. Although some variations are present in specific age groups and monthly trends, these can be addressed through appropriate analytical strategies. The recent availability of sex-specific and age-specific data in NAD since 2023 establishes it as a valuable infrastructure for mortality surveillance.


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