Lodi News-Sentinel

Report: Hurricane Maria claimed 1,139 lives in Puerto Rico over three months

- By Karen Kaplan

It’s been almost a year since Hurricane Maria slammed into Puerto Rico, battering the U.S. territory with heavy rain, flash floods and winds that blew up to 155 mph. Officially, the death toll stands at 64. But a new report estimates that 1,139 people lost their lives as a result of the Category 4 storm.

The figure, published Thursday in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n, is based on mortality data from Puerto Rico’s vital statistics system that was not previously available.

It’s among the higher estimates of hurricane-related deaths to emerge since the storm hit on Sept. 20, and it’s within the range reported in May by a team from the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health. Their conclusion, based on face-to-face interviews of nearly 3,300 Puerto Rican residents, was that between 793 and 8,498 people died as a result of the storm, with 4,645 being the most likely number.

Some deaths were a direct consequenc­e of Hurricane Maria, including residents who drowned in flooded streets or who were crushed in collapsing buildings. Other fatalities occurred days or weeks later as patients were forced to go without necessary medication­s, lost access to equipment such as dialysis machines or were unable to call for an ambulance following an otherwise treatable emergency as Puerto Rico struggled to recover from the storm.

For the new study in JAMA, demographe­r Alexis Santos-Lozada of Pennsylvan­ia State University and researcher Jeffrey Howard of the University of Texas at San Antonio examined official death counts for Puerto Rico between January 2010 and December 2017.

First, the pair focused on the seven years before the hurricane hit to determine the baseline number of deaths for each month of the year. They averaged the figures from 2010 to 2016 and came up with a range that had a 95 percent chance of including the true mortality number.

Then, for each month, they compared that range to the number of deaths in 2017.

For all of the months between January and August, the 2017 death count was in line with the averages from the previous seven years. In four months (January, April, May and June) the 2017 figure was slightly above average, and in four months (February, March, July and August) it was slightly below. But in all those cases, the 2017 count was within the historical range.

That changed in September, when Hurricane Maria made landfall.

Between 2010 and 2016, the number of September deaths in Puerto Rico was between 2,297 and 2,469. In 2017, it was 2,928, according to the vital statistics system.

To be conservati­ve, Santos-Lozada and Howard compared the 2017 figure to the highest number in the range from previous years. That gave them an estimate of 459 “excess deaths” in the month the hurricane hit.

Using the same method, they estimated there were 564 additional deaths in October and 116 in November. But by December, the 2017 death count (2,820) was back in the historical range (2,543 to 2,824).

 ?? CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Hundreds of San Juan residents take shelter at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Sept. 19, 2017, until Hurricane Maria passed.
CAROLYN COLE/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Hundreds of San Juan residents take shelter at the Roberto Clemente Coliseum in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Sept. 19, 2017, until Hurricane Maria passed.

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