Yuma Sun

Hurricane’s death toll in Puerto Rico estimated at nearly 3,000

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SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — Puerto Rico’s governor raised the U.S. territory’s official death toll from Hurricane Maria from 64 to 2,975 on Tuesday after an independen­t study found that the number of people who succumbed in the desperate, sweltering aftermath had been severely undercount­ed.

The new estimate of nearly 3,000 dead in the six months after Maria devastated the island in September 2017 and knocked out the entire electrical grid was made by researcher­s with the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University.

“We never anticipate­d a scenario of zero communicat­ion, zero energy, zero highway access,” Gov. Ricardo Rossello told reporters. “I think the lesson is to anticipate the worst. ... Yes, I made mistakes. Yes, in hindsight, things could’ve been handled differentl­y.”

He said he is creating a commission to study the hurricane response, and a registry of people vulnerable to the next hurricane, such as the elderly, the bedridden and kidney dialysis patients.

Rossello acknowledg­ed Puerto Rico remains vulnerable to another major storm. He said the government has improved its communicat­ion systems and establishe­d a network to distribute food and medicine, but he noted that there are still 60,000 homes without a proper roof and that the power grid is still unstable.

“A lesson from this is that efforts for assistance and recovery need to focus as much as possible on lower-income areas, on people who are older, who are more vulnerable,” said Lynn Goldman, dean of the Milken institute.

Tuesday’s finding is almost twice the government’s previous estimate, included in a recent report to Congress, that there were 1,427 more deaths than normal in the three months after the storm.

The George Washington researcher­s said the official count from the Sept. 20 hurricane was low in part because doctors were not trained in how to classify deaths after a disaster.

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