Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

U.S. deaths hit 1 million; ‘we are letting it happen’

- By Carla K. Johnson

The U.S. death toll from COVID-19 hit 1 million on Monday.

• The confirmed number of dead is equivalent to a 9/11 attack every day for 336 days.

• It is roughly equal to how many Americans died in the Civil War and World War II combined.

• It is as if Boston and Pittsburgh were wiped out.

“It is hard to imagine a million people plucked from this earth,” said Jennifer Nuzzo, who leads a new pandemic center at the Brown University School of Public Health in Providence, R.I. “It’s still happening and we are letting it happen.”

Some of those left behind say they cannot return to normal:

• They replay their loved ones’ voicemail messages.

• They watch old videos to see them dance.

• When other people say they are done with the virus, they bristle with anger or ache in silence.

“‘Normal.’ I hate that word,” said Julie Wallace, 55, of Elyria, Ohio, who lost her husband to COVID-19 in 2020. “All of us never get to go back to normal.” Some notable facts:

• Three out of every four deaths were people 65 and older.

• More men died than women.

• White people made up most of the deaths overall.

• Black, Hispanic and Native American people have been roughly twice as likely to die from COVID-19 as their white counterpar­ts.

• Most deaths happened in urban areas, but rural places, where opposition to masks and vaccinatio­ns tends to run high, paid a heavy price at times.

Real number higher?

The death toll less than 2½ years into the outbreak is based on death-certificat­e data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. But the real number of lives lost to COVID-19, either directly or indirectly, as a result the disruption of the health care system in the world’s richest country, is believed to be far higher.

The U.S. has the highest reported COVID-19 death toll of any country, though health experts have long suspected that the real number of deaths in places including India, Brazil and Russia is higher than the official figures.

The milestone came more than three months after the U.S. reached 900,000 dead. The pace has slowed since a harrowing winter surge fueled by the omicron variant.

The U.S. is averaging about 300 COVID-19 deaths per day, compared with a peak of about 3,400 a day in January 2021. New cases are on the rise again, climbing more than 60% in the past two weeks to an average of about 86,000 a day, still well below the all-time high of over 800,000, reached when the omicron variant was raging during winter.

The largest bell at Washington National Cathedral in the nation’s capital tolled 1,000 times a week ago, once for every 1,000 deaths. President Joe Biden on Thursday ordered flags lowered to halfstaff and called each life “an irreplacea­ble loss.”

 ?? BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE ?? Angelina Proia of New York lost her father, Richard Proia, to COVID-19in April 2020. She runs a support group for grieving families on Facebook and has seen it divided over vaccinatio­ns.
BEBETO MATTHEWS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, FILE Angelina Proia of New York lost her father, Richard Proia, to COVID-19in April 2020. She runs a support group for grieving families on Facebook and has seen it divided over vaccinatio­ns.

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