China Daily Global Weekly

United States’ virus death toll passes 200,000

Fears for increased COVID-19 mortality as the country enters fall and winter

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

The death toll in the United States from COVID-19 passed 200,000, accounting for one-fifth of the global casualties from the pandemic, as experts warned of further increases in infections and mortality as cooler fall weather moves people indoors.

As of the morning of Sept 24, 201,880 people in the US had died from COVID-19, with more than 6.93 million infected with the novel coronaviru­s, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University, which registered a global death toll of 975,100.

That means the US toll has doubled in four months — in late May the country reported 100,000 deaths from the disease.

“These are not numbers; these are human beings. These are friends and family,” Ali H. Mokdad, chief strategy officer of the Population Health Initiative at the University of Washington, told China Daily.

“I’m concerned that we’re coming into fall and winter where we’ll have more infection and we’ll have much more mortality, unfortunat­ely,” he said in a video interview.

On Sept 21, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention withdrew guidance that had said airborne transmissi­on was thought to be the main way the coronaviru­s spreads. It said the draft recommenda­tion was “posted in error” on Sept 18.

Commenting on the sudden reversal, Mokdad said it was confusing and that people may lose trust if the messaging is not consistent and changes

are made without explanatio­ns.

“Potentiall­y (there will be) another 200,000 deaths between now and January, (so) we have to be very careful, since we are moving indoors, because cold weather is coming,” he said. “It’s better to make sure that we

are on the conservati­ve side with our recommenda­tions in that regard.”

In its update to global COVID-19 mortality projection­s last week, the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation predicted that cumulative deaths by

Jan 1 would hit 378,320.

The institute cited “steeper than expected declines” in several states as the factors for lowering an estimate of 415,000 deaths by year’s end that it had predicted on Sept 10. But it cautioned that deaths could surge to more than 3,000 per day by the end of December.

“So far we have been underestim­ating by a little bit the mortality for several reasons. We assumed that when a state reaches eight deaths per day per million, they will go to a lockdown,” Mokdad said. “Unfortunat­ely, we underestim­ate because we assume that states will do something, and states sometimes don’t (do that).”

The institute said that increasing mask use to 95 percent could save nearly 115,000 lives, reducing the expected number of deaths by 62.7 percent.

Mokdad, a University of Washington professor of health metrics, said that in the US every state decided to do something different.

“CDC China had a very consistent message and told people exactly what they need to do. Sometimes when people didn’t wear a mask, there was enforcemen­t,” he said. “We know in the United States when you recommend something and you don’t enforce it, sometimes it doesn’t work.”

He said that the US could have done better by locking down earlier and “making sure we stay locked down until we control the virus, then open up”.

US President Donald Trump, who admitted to a journalist that he had played down the risk of the virus early on because he did not want to “create a panic”, continued to say the US would soon see a light at the end of the tunnel.

“We are rounding the corner on the pandemic, with or without a vaccine,” Trump said on Sept 21.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN / AP ?? Maria Flores kisses her son Pedro Garcia, 4, while a teacher takes his hand as he arrives for the first day of school at the Mosaic Pre-K Center in the New York City borough of Queens on Sept 21. The city’s public schools had delayed reopening for two weeks.
MARK LENNIHAN / AP Maria Flores kisses her son Pedro Garcia, 4, while a teacher takes his hand as he arrives for the first day of school at the Mosaic Pre-K Center in the New York City borough of Queens on Sept 21. The city’s public schools had delayed reopening for two weeks.

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