WEATHER53
Diamond Member
- Apr 13, 2017
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All doctors to house quarantine250,000 --- medical errors almost 5 times the killer than Covid19
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All doctors to house quarantine250,000 --- medical errors almost 5 times the killer than Covid19
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
the common cold isn't likely to kill you.
flu - not so much so those are the "apples to apples" #'s i'd be looking at.
the rest are just bulletpoints that makes people go WOW THAT'S A LOT but are meaningless to the point.
look, i want this shit over too. i would much rather go out and face life than shit at home crying BOOGIE MAN STAY AWAY; but the comparisons that don't help the cause, i'm going to say.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
the common cold isn't likely to kill you.
flu - not so much so those are the "apples to apples" #'s i'd be looking at.
the rest are just bulletpoints that makes people go WOW THAT'S A LOT but are meaningless to the point.
look, i want this shit over too. i would much rather go out and face life than shit at home crying BOOGIE MAN STAY AWAY; but the comparisons that don't help the cause, i'm going to say.
I will start with and complete you first sentence/
The common cold is not likely to kill you (neither is this)
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
Many communicable situations do not have a vaccine
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
After the initial wave of COVID is waning and knowing that most people have mild cases anyway, opening up businesses seems like the right move, but still wearing masks and using social distancing. That should keep the rate of spread to a low and manageable level as we build herd immunity. That also gets our economy back up and running, which we desperately need.
Again, given the extremely small size of a covid 19 virus cell, masks do nothing but give a false sense of security and provide a little eyewash. They are in effect as useless as tits on a boar hog.
100% unvarnished bullshit.3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
You mean only the n95 or better mask that even some hospital workers can not get.After the initial wave of COVID is waning and knowing that most people have mild cases anyway, opening up businesses seems like the right move, but still wearing masks and using social distancing. That should keep the rate of spread to a low and manageable level as we build herd immunity. That also gets our economy back up and running, which we desperately need.
Again, given the extremely small size of a covid 19 virus cell, masks do nothing but give a false sense of security and provide a little eyewash. They are in effect as useless as tits on a boar hog.
The masks would prevent you from giving COVID -19 to me.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
Because there was no run wild agenda to oust Trump and mess with the election
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
the common cold isn't likely to kill you.
flu - not so much so those are the "apples to apples" #'s i'd be looking at.
the rest are just bulletpoints that makes people go WOW THAT'S A LOT but are meaningless to the point.
look, i want this shit over too. i would much rather go out and face life than shit at home crying BOOGIE MAN STAY AWAY; but the comparisons that don't help the cause, i'm going to say.
I will start with and complete you first sentence/
The common cold is not likely to kill you (neither is this)
The common cold is not likely to kill you unless you are otherwise ill or are already an old fart on life support in a nursing home
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
while i do agree with the #'s the counter point you must consider is -
none of those other ones are contagious.
while i go along with "life is a risk" because it is, to compare a highly contagious disease to cancer? well billions has been poured into cancer research and will continue to be. accidents? how does this really compare with something you're simply trying to contain?
The common cold is contagious too so is the flu so using your method we stay locked down forever to better mankind.
Either you agree with this or admit that you are wrong
the common cold isn't likely to kill you.
flu - not so much so those are the "apples to apples" #'s i'd be looking at.
the rest are just bulletpoints that makes people go WOW THAT'S A LOT but are meaningless to the point.
look, i want this shit over too. i would much rather go out and face life than shit at home crying BOOGIE MAN STAY AWAY; but the comparisons that don't help the cause, i'm going to say.
I will start with and complete you first sentence/
The common cold is not likely to kill you (neither is this)
The common cold is not likely to kill you unless you are otherwise ill or are already an old fart on life support in a nursing home
And in that case an unexpected bowel movement can do you in.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
The death rate is much lower for the flu and those 80,000 deaths happened in the course of a year - not 3 months. Moreover, hospitalizations for the COVID is significantly longer and more life threatening which is a strain on resources.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
The death rate is much lower for the flu and those 80,000 deaths happened in the course of a year - not 3 months. Moreover, hospitalizations for the COVID is significantly longer and more life threatening which is a strain on resources.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
The death rate is much lower for the flu and those 80,000 deaths happened in the course of a year - not 3 months. Moreover, hospitalizations for the COVID is significantly longer and more life threatening which is a strain on resources.
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
The death rate is much lower for the flu and those 80,000 deaths happened in the course of a year - not 3 months. Moreover, hospitalizations for the COVID is significantly longer and more life threatening which is a strain on resources.
Flu does not occur over a 12 month period
Very contagious is Covid bu also
very unlethal. Almost all of us have likely already experienced it as unknown to us or very mild. We’ve actually already passed the point that quarantine is necessary or effective
Here is a COVID-19 statistic that we never hear about: COVID-19 deaths as a percentage of all deaths (deaths from all causes) by age group. This is an important statistic because recently some news outlets have claimed that COVID-19 is now a leading cause of death in the U.S. So it would be instructive and revealing to see what percentage of each age group’s total deaths are being caused by COVID-19. These percentages are based on the numbers in this morning’s CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S.
If you find the percentages surprisingly low, or even shockingly low, perhaps this explains why they are not being discussed by CNN, MSNBC, CBS, ABC, NBC, Vox, the Washington Post, the New York Times, Snopes, the Huffington Post, etc., etc.
AGE -------- COVID-19 DEATHS AS PERCENTAGE OF ALL DEATHS
00-14 ------- 0.08% (or 12.5 times lower than 1%)
15-24 ------- 0.38% (or 2.6 times lower than 1%)
25-34 ------- 1.58%
35-44 ------- 2.70%
45-54 ------- 3.83%
55-64 ------- 3.77%
65-74 ------- 4.17%
75-84 ------- 4.19%
85+ --------- 3.54%
If you check the CDC report, you’ll see that I rounded up in every single case, and that I even assumed a slightly higher number of deaths among ages 00-14 in calculating the percentage for that age group. Even with that inflated assumption, the percentage of deaths among ages 00-14 that have been caused by COVID-19 comes to only 0.08%, as of this morning. In other words, 99.92% of the deaths in this age group have resulted from other causes, not from COVID-19.
So is COVID-19 really "a leading cause of death" in the U.S.? It is not even one of the top five causes of death in the U.S., which are as follows:
160,000 --- chronic lower respiratory diseases
169,000 –-- accidents
250,000 --- medical errors
590,000 --- cancer
640,000 --- heart disease
In Sweden, which has followed a very moderate, targeted approach to dealing with COVID-19, the overall death rate is 0.02143% (2,192 deaths out of 10.23 million people). If you applied that percentage to the U.S. population, that would equal 70,290 deaths, not even close to matching the number of Americans who die from chronic lower respiratory diseases each year.
Here is an excellent briefing by two ER doctors on the case for ending the lockdown:
Here is the CDC report on provisional deaths in the U.S. from which the above percentages were derived:
Provisional Death Counts for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
National Center for Health Statisticswww.cdc.gov
Who even said it was “a leading cause of death”? That’s just a fake quote you pulled out of your ass to reaffirm your point.
Here are some key takeaways to how the virus compares to other causes of death however:
1) COVID-19 has only been killing people since early February so comparing yearly numbers of other causes really doesn’t make any sense.
2) The actual death count is estimated to be 50% higher than the reported number of deaths.
3) Hospitals are overwhelmed regardless of the kill rate of the virus. Part of the reason the death rate is as low as it is because people’s lives are saved at hospitals. To keep these institutions running, mitigating the spread is crucial.
Why was the USA not put on lockdown in 2018 when 80000 Americans died of the flu?
The death rate is much lower for the flu and those 80,000 deaths happened in the course of a year - not 3 months. Moreover, hospitalizations for the COVID is significantly longer and more life threatening which is a strain on resources.
Flu does not occur over a 12 month period
Very contagious is Covid bu also
very unlethal. Almost all of us have likely already experienced it as unknown to us or very mild. We’ve actually already passed the point that quarantine is necessary or effective
Granted it isn’t over a 12 month period, but the death rate is still lower and as of now the death count for COVID is still rising rapidly.