TY - JOUR
T1 - Author Correction
T2 - Global, regional, and national burden of chronic respiratory diseases and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, 1990–2023: a Global Burden of Disease study (Nature Medicine, (2026), 32, 1, (197-223), 10.1038/s41591-025-04077-9)
AU - GBD 2023 Global Chronic Respiratory Disease and Covid Collaborators
AU - Oh, Jiyeon
AU - Kim, Soeun
AU - Yim, Yesol
AU - Kim, Min Seo
AU - Zyoud, Samer H.
AU - Zyoud, Sa’ed H.
AU - Zoghi, Ghazal
AU - Zitoun, Osama A.
AU - Zielińska, Magdalena
AU - Zia, Hafsa
AU - Zhumagaliuly, Abzal
AU - Zhu, Bin
AU - Zhou, Jiayan
AU - Zhong, Claire Chenwen
AU - Zhong, Anthony
AU - Zheng, Jinxin
AU - Zhang, Zhi Jiang
AU - Zhang, Yunquan
AU - Zhang, Jingya
AU - Zawiah, Mohammed
AU - Zastrozhin, Michael
AU - Zaki, Nazar
AU - Zakham, Fathiah
AU - Yu, Chuanhua
AU - Youssef, Mohammed
AU - Yonemoto, Naohiro
AU - Yezli, Saber
AU - Ye, Pengpeng
AU - Yaya, Sanni
AU - Yasufuku, Yuichi
AU - Yano, Yuichiro
AU - Yadav, Mukesh Kumar
AU - Yadav, Lalit
AU - Xue, Mingyang
AU - Xu, Xiaoyue
AU - Xiao, Lishun
AU - Xia, Zhijia
AU - Hanson, Sarah Wulf
AU - Wubie, Yihun Miskir
AU - Wojewodzic, Marcin W.
AU - Willeit, Peter
AU - Wickramasinghe, Dakshitha Praneeth
AU - Wicaksana, Anggi Lukman
AU - Westerman, Ronny
AU - Waqas, Muhammad
AU - Waqar, Ahmed Bilal
AU - Wang, Yanzhong
AU - Wang, Xing
AU - Menezes, Ritesh G.
AU - El-Ashker, Said
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature America, Inc. 2026.
PY - 2026/3
Y1 - 2026/3
N2 - Correction to: Nature Medicinehttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-04077-9, published online 6 January. In the version of the article initially published, there was an error in the last sentence of the abstract, where in the text now reading “During the pandemic, the incidence of chronic respiratory diseases increased modestly, but the decline in mortality rates became less pronounced,” “became less pronounced” appeared as “became more pronounced.” In the Results “Disease burden before and during the COVID-19 pandemic” section, a similar error appeared, and some average annual percentage change values were mistakenly interchanged. In the updated text that follows, the original incorrect text or values are shown in brackets. “In contrast, the AAPC of age-standardized death rates of chronic respiratory diseases showed a less [more] pronounced decreasing trend during the pandemic (AAPC, –1.23 [−3.04]) compared with before the pandemic (AAPC, –3.04 [−1.23]; Extended Data Fig. 9). This pattern in mortality trends was also observed for COPD, for which the AAPC in deaths changed from –3.27 to –1.34 [−1.34 to −3.27]. Similarly, asthma showed a shift in death rates from –1.92 to –1.26 [–1.26 to –1.92], whereas asthma … the pandemic). Pneumoconiosis showed a reversing trend in mortality from a decline before the pandemic (AAPC, 0.21 [−1.26]) to a minimal increase (AAPC, –1.26 [0.21]) during the pandemic…. For ILD and pulmonary sarcoidosis, mortality trends reversed from a modest increase (AAPC, –1.99 [1.05]) to a slight decline (AAPC, 1.05 [−1.99]; Fig. 4).” The text is now amended in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.
AB - Correction to: Nature Medicinehttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-025-04077-9, published online 6 January. In the version of the article initially published, there was an error in the last sentence of the abstract, where in the text now reading “During the pandemic, the incidence of chronic respiratory diseases increased modestly, but the decline in mortality rates became less pronounced,” “became less pronounced” appeared as “became more pronounced.” In the Results “Disease burden before and during the COVID-19 pandemic” section, a similar error appeared, and some average annual percentage change values were mistakenly interchanged. In the updated text that follows, the original incorrect text or values are shown in brackets. “In contrast, the AAPC of age-standardized death rates of chronic respiratory diseases showed a less [more] pronounced decreasing trend during the pandemic (AAPC, –1.23 [−3.04]) compared with before the pandemic (AAPC, –3.04 [−1.23]; Extended Data Fig. 9). This pattern in mortality trends was also observed for COPD, for which the AAPC in deaths changed from –3.27 to –1.34 [−1.34 to −3.27]. Similarly, asthma showed a shift in death rates from –1.92 to –1.26 [–1.26 to –1.92], whereas asthma … the pandemic). Pneumoconiosis showed a reversing trend in mortality from a decline before the pandemic (AAPC, 0.21 [−1.26]) to a minimal increase (AAPC, –1.26 [0.21]) during the pandemic…. For ILD and pulmonary sarcoidosis, mortality trends reversed from a modest increase (AAPC, –1.99 [1.05]) to a slight decline (AAPC, 1.05 [−1.99]; Fig. 4).” The text is now amended in the HTML and PDF versions of the article.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105033952094
U2 - 10.1038/s41591-026-04288-8
DO - 10.1038/s41591-026-04288-8
M3 - Comment/debate
C2 - 41814008
AN - SCOPUS:105033952094
SN - 1078-8956
VL - 32
SP - 1160
JO - Nature Medicine
JF - Nature Medicine
IS - 3
ER -