Marysville Appeal-Democrat

COVID was third-leading cause of US deaths in 2020, according to CDC

- Tribune News Service Bloomberg News

COVID-19 was the third-leading cause of death in the U.S. last year, contributi­ng to a 15.9% increase in the death rate from a year earlier, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said in an official report citing full-year data.

The disease caused by SARS-COV-2 was the underlying or contributi­ng cause of 377,883 deaths in the U.S. last year, according to the CDC’S National Vital Statistics System, which collects and reports provisiona­l annual mortality data. Only heart disease and cancer were more deadly.

American Indians, Hispanics and Blacks had the highest rates of death from COVID-19 by ethnicity, the study found. The death rate among White Americans was less than half that among Blacks and Hispanics, and the vast majority of the deaths from COVID-19 were in people aged 65 years and older, who accounted for almost

81% of deaths from the disease.

In a second study, the CDC rejected the notion that many deaths from COVID-19 might have been over-counted or exaggerate­d. The health agency reviewed death certificat­es of people whose deaths had been primarily attributed to the infectious disease, but also listed another condition.

In 97% of certificat­es that attributed the death to COVID-19 along with another condition, the latter diagnosis tended to be what’s called a “chain-of-event condition” such as pneumonia or respirator­y failure, or a “contributi­ng condition” such as hypertensi­on or diabetes. That means those other conditions were either brought about by COVID-19 or made the disease all the more deadly, the CDC said.

Only 2.5% of death certificat­es listed conditions that haven’t been associated with COVID-19, the study found. The CDC said the analysis supports “the accuracy of COVID-19 mortality surveillan­ce in the United States using official death certificat­es.”

Still, the CDC suggested that the underlying cause of some deaths may not have been properly classified as COVID-19, given the limited availabili­ty of testing for the coronaviru­s.

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