shocked-pikachu

The new study provides the most compelling data yet to suggest that excess mortality rates from chronic illnesses and other natural causes were actually driven by COVID-19 infections.

For the study, Stokes, Paglino, and colleagues utilized novel statistical methods to analyze monthly data on natural-cause deaths and reported COVID-19 deaths for 3,127 counties over the first 30 months of the pandemic, from March 2020 to August 2022. They estimated that 1.2 million excess natural-cause deaths occurred in US counties during this time period, and found that roughly 163,000 of these deaths did not have COVID-19 listed at all on the death certificates.

Now if we could get an estimate of how much chronic illness covid is causing…

  • Apparently not many remember this now, but there were big debates at least where I live amongst the covid minimizers (including experts) where they pushed for death certificates to not mention covid if it could in any way be concluded that the death wasn’t only from covid or if covid wasn’t “the leading cause of death” which of course is a debatable moving target. The think tank ghouls were involved if I remember right.

    This means that someone who gets covid that results in pneumonia or a heart attack is officially counted as having not died from covid, because it wasn’t “a covid death” per se.

  • solrize@lemmy.ml
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    22 hours ago

    This is from February 2024 (i.e. it’s a year old) and the undercount was significant but was not all that enormous. The study indicated that the official count was about 14% low.

    • dolores_clitoris [mirror/your pronouns]@hexbear.net
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      20 hours ago

      “This work is important because our ability to detect and correctly assign deaths during an epidemic goes to the heart of our understanding of the disease and how we organize our response,” says Nahid Bhadelia.

      The undercount is pretty enormous, when you consider that the motive behind it is to avoid properly responding to epidemics/pandemics (now and in the future).