Santa Fe New Mexican

Virus may kill up to 240K in U.S.

Officials say toll could be higher if people don’t follow distancing guidelines

- By Michael D. Shear and James Glanz

WASHINGTON — The top government scientists battling the coronaviru­s estimated Tuesday that the deadly pathogen could kill 100,000 to 240,000 Americans as it ravages the country despite social-distancing measures that have closed schools, banned large gatherings, limited travel and forced people to stay in their homes.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, and Dr. Deborah Birx, who is coordinati­ng the coronaviru­s response, displayed that grim projection at a White House briefing, calling it “our real number” but pledging to do everything possible to reduce it.

As dire as those prediction­s are, Fauci and Birx said the number of deaths could be much higher if Americans did not follow the strict guidelines vital to

keeping the virus from spreading. The White House models they displayed showed that more than 2.2 million people could have died in the United States if nothing were done.

Those conclusion­s were based on a continuing analysis of cases in the United States and generally matched those from similar models created by public health researcher­s around the globe. The two public health officials urged people to take the restrictio­ns seriously, and a subdued President Donald Trump, appearing with them, echoed that message, saying that now is not the time to relax.

“I want every American to be prepared for the hard days that lie ahead,” said Trump, who answered questions for more than two hours and predicted that there would be “light at the end of the tunnel,” but warned that “we’re going to go through a very tough two weeks.”

Fauci and Birx showed charts indicating coronaviru­s cases in New York and New Jersey have risen far higher than in other parts of the country, a fact they said gives them hope that the overall number of deaths might be lower if people in the rest of the states follow the guidelines for at least the next month.

But outbreaks in New Orleans, Detroit and other cities are growing quickly, and experts say it is unclear whether social distancing measures can stop them from rising even more in the next few weeks. Recent estimates in Florida suggest it may be entering a phase of exponentia­l growth.

Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, stressed that even with those efforts, it is possible that nearly a quarter-million people in the United States could lose their lives.

“As sobering a number as that is, we should be prepared for it,” he said.

The president, who on Sunday extended for 30 days the government’s recommenda­tions for slowing the spread of the virus, made it clear that the data compiled by Fauci and Birx convinced him that the death toll would be even higher if the restrictio­ns on work, school, travel and social life were not taken seriously by all Americans. Trump said the virus was a “great national trial unlike any we have ever faced before,” and said it would require the “full absolute measure of our collective strength, love and devotion” to minimize the number of people infected.

“It’s a matter of life and death, frankly,” he said, offering a sober assessment of the pandemic’s effect on the United States. “It’s a matter of life and death.”

As of Tuesday, more than 183,500 cases of the virus have been reported in the United States, with more than 3,700 deaths — more than 1,500 of which are in New York, the center of the nation’s outbreak.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, D-N.Y., told residents of the state that things would continue to get worse — the peak was not expected there for another one to three weeks.

On Wall Street, the S&P 500 declined 1.6 percent Tuesday, the end of a month in which the index fell 12.5 percent.

The projection released at the White House was the first time Trump’s administra­tion has officially estimated the breadth of the threat to human life from the disease caused by the coronaviru­s, COVID-19. In the past several weeks, Birx and Fauci have resisted predicting how many people might die in the pandemic, saying that there was not enough reliable data.

That is no longer the case, they said.

Public health scientists spent the past week constructi­ng a model that could predict how widely the virus would spread in the coming months and how many people who get infected would succumb to the disease. Birx said the result was clear: The only way to minimize deaths is to continue the difficult restrictio­ns on American life.

“There’s no magic bullet. There’s no magic vaccine or therapy. It’s just behaviors,” Birx said. “Each of our behaviors, translatin­g into something that changes the course of this viral pandemic over the next 30 days.”

The new government estimates came to the same conclusion other researcher­s have: that even with the isolation efforts already underway to limit the spread of the virus, infections are almost certain to soar, straining the ability of hospitals to care for infected patients and leading to a growing number of deaths.

One of those models, created by scientists at the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, predicts deaths from the virus in the United States will rise rapidly during April, reaching a total of about 84,000 by the beginning of August.

The model uses the severe lockdown in Wuhan, China, to calibrate how the outbreak might play out in the United States.

That approach has some critics because control measures imposed in the United States have generally been less stringent than those in Wuhan.

“If we fail at those measures, we face outcomes far worse than any included in the range of possibilit­ies predicted by their model,” said Carl Bergstrom, a professor of biology at the University of Washington.

A second study, released March 17 by the epidemic modeling group at Imperial College London and written by 30 scientists on its coronaviru­s response team, predicted that if the United States had done nothing to prevent the spread of the virus, 2.2 million people could have died. If, however, the government tried to isolate people suspected of having the virus and people they were in contact with, the number of deaths could be cut in half, the researcher­s said.

They concluded that only a nationwide suppressio­n effort — an expanded version of efforts now underway across parts of the country — might significan­tly reduce the death toll. But they warned that such efforts might have to be maintained for long periods to ensure that the threat is over.

Trump, who spent weeks playing down the threat of the virus — and who has retreated from saying that social distancing could be scaled back in midApril — congratula­ted himself at the briefing for projection­s showing that public health measures may significan­tly limit the national death toll.

“What would have happened if we did nothing? Because there was a group that said, ‘Let’s just ride it out,’ ” Trump said, without saying what “group” he was referring to. The president noted the estimate that as many as 2.2 million people “would have died if we did nothing, if we just carried on with our life.”

“You would have seen people dying on airplanes; you would have seen people dying in hotel lobbies. You would have seen death all over,” Trump said. By comparison, he said, a potential death toll of 100,000 “is, according to modeling, a very low number.”

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