Houston Chronicle

Model: Daily toll to nearly double

Officials predicting deaths to hit 3,000 by June 1

- By Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Eileen Sullivan

WASHINGTON — As President Donald Trump presses states to reopen their economies, his administra­tion is privately projecting a steady rise in coronaviru­s infections and deaths over the next several weeks, reaching about 3,000 daily deaths on June 1 — nearly double the current level.

The projection­s, based on data collected by various agencies, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and laid out in an internal document obtained Monday by the New York Times, forecast about 200,000 new cases each day by the end of May, up from about 30,000 cases now. There are currently about 1,750 deaths per day, the data shows.

They are not the only ones forecastin­g more carnage. Another model, closely watched by the

White House, raised its fatality projection­s on Monday to more than 134,000 American deaths from COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, by early August. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington more than doubled its previous projection of about 60,000 total deaths, an increase that it said partly reflects “changes in mobility and social distancing policies.”

The numbers underscore a sobering reality: While the United States has been hunkered down for the past seven weeks, the prognosis has not markedly improved. As states reopen — many without meeting White House guidelines that call for a steady decline in coronaviru­s cases or in the number of people testing positive over a 14day period — the cost of the shift is likely to be tallied in funerals.

“There remains a large number of counties whose burden continues to grow,” the CDC warned, alongside a map that offered a detailed view of the growth of the pandemic.

The projection­s amplify the primary

fear of public health experts: that a reopening of the economy will put the nation right back where it was in mid-March, when cases were rising so rapidly in some parts of the country that patients were dying on gurneys in hospital hallways amid overloaded health systems.

Under the White House’s reopening plan, called “Opening Up America Again,” states considerin­g relaxing stay-at-home policies are supposed to show a “downward trajectory” either in the number of new infections or positive tests as a percent of total tests over 14 days, and a “robust testing program” for at-risk health care workers.

Model ‘overly optimistic’

In New York, where the number of overall cases is declining, a cautious-sounding Gov. AndrewCuom­o said Monday that the state would monitor four “core factors” to determine if a region is ready to reopen: the number of new infections; the capacity of the health care system; the testing capacity; and the capacity for “contract tracing” to identify people exposed to those who test positive.

“While we continue to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus,

we can begin to focus on reopening, but we have to be careful and use the informatio­n we’ve learned so we don’t erase the strides we’ve already made,” Cuomo said.

Nationally, 27 states had loosened social distancing restrictio­ns in some way as of Monday, and others had announced changes that will take effect in the coming weeks, according to an analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation. But only 19 of those states meet the caseload or testing criteria set out by the Trump administra­tion.

The remaining seven — Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Mississipp­i, Nebraska and Wyoming — are still showing a rise in daily infections and positive tests, yet have moved toward reopening anyway.

“It is true that there are parts of the country that are doing better and can begin to look at ways to ease the requiremen­ts, but there are large swaths of the country that are not, and the growth that is projected is based mostly on' these other parts of the country,” Jennifer Kates, the foundation’s director of global health and HIV policy and an author of the analysis, said in an interview.

If anything, the administra­tion’s projection­s are too optimistic, forecastin­g experts said Monday.

In the projection­s, the number of actual deaths for one of the last days in April turned out to be slightly lower than what the model showed. But for much of April and parts of May, actual deaths were some 10 times higher than the model predicted.

“The model is overly optimistic and not particular­ly useful in guiding decisions about the disease’s trajectory,” said Dr. Donald Burke, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.

Dr. George Rutherford, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the University of California, San Francisco, noted that the government’s model has already come in below reported deaths from COVID-19, and that death toll is not counting deaths not officially recorded. “Remember,” he said, “these are reported deaths; the true number is likely higher.”

‘A horrible thing’

In the absence of a national policy to slow the virus, state officials have been left to answer a wrenching question: How many deaths are acceptable?

The White House distanced itself from the projection­s, saying the document, dated Saturday, was not produced by or presented to the president’s coronaviru­s task force, which does its own modeling. “The data is not reflective of any of the modeling done by the task force or data that the task force has analyzed,” Judd Deere, Trump’s deputy press secretary, told reporters on Monday.

On Sunday, the president offered his own projection­s, saying that deaths in the United States could reach 100,000, twice as many as he had forecast only two weeks ago. But that figure falls short of what his own administra­tion is now predicting to be the total death toll by the end of May — much less in the months that follow. It follows a pattern for Trump, who has frequently understate­d the effect of the disease.

“We’re going to lose anywhere from 75, 80 to 100,000 people,” he said in a virtual town hall on Fox News. “That’s a horrible thing. We shouldn’t lose one person over this.”

Public health experts and epidemiolo­gists say they were not surprised by the administra­tion’s numbers. Many do not expect the virus to slow down until 60 percent to 70 percent of the population is infected, creating what experts call “herd immunity.”

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