The Oklahoman

Up to 204,691 extra deaths in US so far in this pandemic year

- By Ronald D. Fricker Jr. The Conversati­on

The number of deaths in the United States through July 2020 is 8% to 12% higher than it would have been if the coronaviru­s pandemic had never happened. That's at least 164,937 deaths above the number expected for the first seven months of the year – 16,183 more than the number attributed to COVID-19 thus far for that period – and it could be as high as 204,691.

Tracking deaths

When someone dies, the death certificat­e records an immediate cause of death, along with up to three underlying conditions that “initiated the events resulting in death.” The certificat­e is filed with the local health department, and the details are reported to the National Center for Health Statistics.

As part of the National Vital Statistics System, the NCHS then uses this informatio­n in various ways, such as tabulating the leading causes of death in the United States – currently heart disease, followed by cancer. Sometime this fall, COVID-19 will likely become the thirdlarge­st cause of death for 2020.

Projecting from the past

To calculate excess deaths requires a comparison to what would have occurred if

COVID-19 had not existed. Obviously, it's not possible to observe what didn't happen, but it is possible to estimate it using historical data. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention does this using a statistica­l model, based on the previous three years of mortality data, incorporat­ing seasonal trends as well as adjustment­s for datareport­ing delays.

So, looking at what happened over the past three years, the CDC projects what might have been. By using a statistica­l model, they are also able to calculate the uncertaint­y in their estimates. That allows statistici­ans like me to assess whether the observed data look unusual compared to projection­s.

The number of excess deaths is the difference between the model's projection­s and the actual observatio­ns. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also calculates an upper threshold for the estimated number of deaths – that helps determine when the observed number of deaths is unusually high compared to historical trends.

Clearly visible in a graph of this data is the spike in deaths beginning in mid-March 2020 and continuing to the present. You can also see another period of excess deaths from December 2017 to January 2018, attributab­le to an unusually virulent flu strain that year. The magnitude of the excess deaths in 2020 makes clear that COVID-19 is much worse than influenza, even when compared to a bad flu year like 2017-18, when an estimated 61,000 people in the U.S. died of the illness.

The large spike in deaths in April 2020 correspond­s to the coronaviru­s outbreak in New York and the Northeast, after which the number of excess deaths decreased regularly and substantia­lly until July, when it started to increase again. This current uptick in excess deaths is attributab­le to the outbreaks in the South and West that have occurred since June.

The data tell the story

It doesn't take a sophistica­ted statistica­l model to see that the coronaviru­s pandemic is causing substantia­lly more deaths than would have otherwise occurred.

The number of deaths the CDC officially attributed to COVID-19 in the United States exceeded 148,754 by Aug. 1. Some people who are skeptical about aspects of the coronaviru­s suggest these are deaths that would have occurred anyway, perhaps because COVID-19 is particular­ly deadly for the elderly. Others believe that, because the pandemic has changed life so drasticall­y, the increase in COVID-19-related deaths is probably offset by decreases from other causes. But neither of these possibilit­ies is true.

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