From the BBC:
“Covid US
death toll: Imagining what 500,000 lost lives look like”
The US will
soon top 500,000 deaths in the Covid-19 pandemic. It will be the latest grim
milestone for a country that has by far the highest death toll in the world
from the virus. The US has seen more than twice as many deaths as the next
hardest-hit country, Brazil. But it is also one of the most populous countries.
In terms of deaths per 100,000 population, it ranks ninth, behind countries
like the UK, Czech Republic, Italy and Portugal, according to Johns Hopkins
University. The first known US death from the virus came on 6 February 2020.
That means half
a million lives have been lost in just over one year, more than the US death
tolls from World War I, World War II and the Vietnam War combined.
If every death
came from the city of Atlanta, nearly its entire population would be wiped out.
If you counted
one second for every person who has died from Covid in the US, you would count
for almost six days.
The death toll
equals the total crowd from four days of the Coachella Music Festival, one of
the biggest annual music gatherings in the US.
And it is
nearly five times the attendance at the most highly attended Super Bowl ever -
at the Rose Bowl in California, in 1977 (103,985)
Death came
in three waves The first wave in the spring began as most of the country
went into lockdown and was followed by a second albeit less severe wave in the
period from late summer to early autumn. A devastating third surge over
the past three months had communities reeling over the holidays. It is
among the leading causes of death in the US. Last year, it was the third
leading cause of death overall, with only heart disease and cancer claiming
more US lives. At times, most notably during the third wave of cases, it
spiked higher than both heart disease and cancer. The death toll in the
US is more than 10 times higher than the number of Americans who died from
influenza and pneumonia the year before the pandemic.
Life expectancy
in the US fell by a full year in the first half of 2020, a change experts say
was fuelled by the pandemic. The life expectancy for the entire population
dropped to 77.8 years, according to a report by the Centers for Disease
Control. Covid-19 spared no part of the
country. At the start of the pandemic, it was largely concentrated in a few
large cities with diverse communities of colour, like New York and Detroit. But
towards the end of last year, some of the least populated US states - including
North and South Dakota - saw some of the worst outbreaks, not just in America,
but in the world. Racial minorities - except for Asian Americans - were more
likely to die of the virus than white Americans. Black people in particular
have been the hardest hit, dying at 1.4 times the rate of white people. Indigenous
communities in particular were the hardest hit per capita. Data suggests these
racial disparities are often informed by community-level social factors, such
as a higher likelihood that people of colour may work in essential occupations,
rely on public transport and live in crowded housing.
^ 1 American
dying from Covi is sad. 500,000 Americans from Covid is heartbreaking. Sadly,
the number is only going to increase. ^
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