The Mercury News

COVID-19 still are killing Americans faster than guns, cars and the flu

- By Tom Randall

Even with half the U.S. vaccinated, COVID-19 continues to kill people faster than guns, car crashes and influenza combined, according to a review of mortality data.

The situation has improved dramatical­ly since January, when COVID-19 deaths outpaced heart disease and cancer as the country’s top killer, according to a Bloomberg analysis. Still, for the month of June, coronaviru­s was responsibl­e for 337 deaths a day. For comparison, the historic average deaths from gunshots, car crashes and complicati­ons from the flu add up to 306 a day.

“The sad reality is that despite our progress, we’re still losing people to this virus,” Jeff Zients, the White House pandemic response coordinato­r, said at a recent news briefing. “Which is especially tragic given that, at this point, it is unnecessar­y and preventabl­e. Virtually all COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths in the United States are now occurring among unvaccinat­ed individual­s.”

Data for the analysis was gathered from Johns Hopkins University, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administra­tion.

After 10 weeks of global declines in COVID-19 deaths, the highly transmissi­ble delta variant is driving a new uptick. In the U.S., health officials have warned that a similar reversal may be underway: Daily cases have doubled from a low point last month, and hospitaliz­ations are rising again.

Vaccines by Pfizer Inc. and Moderna Inc. prevent as many as 96% of hospitaliz­ations and deaths from the delta variant, according to recent data from the U.S., U.K. and Israel. The protection­s are even greater when taking into account the effects of reduced transmissi­on in well-vaccinated communitie­s, as data scientist Cathy O’Neil explained in a Bloomberg Opinion column.

“Preliminar­y data from several states over the last few months suggest that 99.5% of deaths from COVID-19 in the United States were in unvaccinat­ed people,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky reported on Thursday. “Those deaths were preventabl­e by a simple, safe shot.”

The U.S. vaccinatio­n campaign, however, has stalled. Once the envy of the world for its swift rollout, the U.S. since has been overtaken by more than 20 countries that now have better vaccine coverage, according to Bloomberg’s Covid vaccine tracker. The EU and China, which are currently administer­ing shots at daily rates of about 4 million and 10 million doses respective­ly, are poised to blow past the U.S. in the next two weeks.

Not only have U.S. vaccinatio­ns slowed to a trickle — just 530,000 a day, on average — but the gap between the most and least vaccinated counties in the U.S. continues to widen. That’s left some some communitie­s especially vulnerable to delta. For unvaccinat­ed people living in low-vaccinatio­n communitie­s, the threat posed by COVID-19 is about as bad as it has ever been.

COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in the U.S. have already prevented roughly 279,000 deaths and 1.25 million hospitaliz­ations, according to an analysis published by researcher­s at Yale University and the Commonweal­th Fund. The report suggests that without vaccines, COVID-19 still would be topping cancer and heart disease as the leading cause of death in the U.S. — even into the summer.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Health care workers transport a patient on a ventilator, with complicati­ons because of COVID-19, for a scan at Baxter Regional Medical Center in Arkansas on July 8.
ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES Health care workers transport a patient on a ventilator, with complicati­ons because of COVID-19, for a scan at Baxter Regional Medical Center in Arkansas on July 8.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States