The Pandemic’s Hidden Toll Is Revealed in Excess Death Counts

Many of the unexpected deaths in rural U.S. counties last year were not recorded as caused by COVID

The Pandemic's Hidden Toll Is Revealed in Excess Death Counts
Credit: Amanda Montañez

The official U.S. death toll from COVID has surpassed 600,000, but the true number is likely much higher. In a preprint study, global health professor Andrew C. Stokes of Boston University and his colleagues found that in 2020 in U.S. counties with significant excess deaths (deaths beyond the expected number), only 82 percent of them on average were attributed to COVID.Some of the biggest gaps were in rural counties, particularly in the South and West. These gaps may reflect COVID deaths that were misattributed to other causes or indirect deaths resulting from the pandemic’s social and economic impacts.

An acute shortage of COVID testing early on meant that many patients never got tested. Coroners or other elected officials who lack medical experience may not have recognized COVID as the cause of death or may have declined to list it for political reasons, Stokes and his team hypothesize. Some New England counties actually had negative excess deaths last year—fewer people died than usual—possibly the result of reductions in other causes of death while people stayed at home, the researchers say.

Bar graph compares excess death rates and COVID death rates for 2020 in all U.S. counties with at least 100,000 residents.
Credit: Amanda Montañez; Source: Calvin A. Ackley, Dielle J. Lundberg, Irma T. Elo, Samuel H. Preston and Andrew C. Stokes

*Excess deaths were calculated using provisional mortality data reported as of June 3 and may be subject to change.

This article was originally published with the title “COVID’s Hidden Toll” in Scientific American 325, 3, 84 (September 2021)

doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0921-84

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)

author-avatar

    Tanya Lewis is a senior editor at Scientific American who covers health and medicine.

     Follow Tanya Lewis on Twitter

    Credit: Nick Higgins

    author-avatar

      Amanda Montañez is an associate graphics editor at Scientific American.

       Follow Amanda Montañez on Twitter

      Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

      Related Posts
      Where to Find the Best Online Detective Forums (and Help Solve Real Crimes) thumbnail

      Where to Find the Best Online Detective Forums (and Help Solve Real Crimes)

      Photo: SFIO CRACHO (Shutterstock)Everybody loves a good mystery, and some internet users have taken that to the next level. Sleuthing forums and online crime-solving groups have emerged across the web, letting ordinary people help solve high-profile cases.Where can you find online crime-solving groups?You don’t have to be a professional detective to help solve mysteries and…
      Read More
      Omron robots, liquid bot and molecule-magnets, the best-of techno of the week thumbnail

      Omron robots, liquid bot and molecule-magnets, the best-of techno of the week

      Industrie et Technologies Publié le 07/01/2022à 16h15 © Guittet Pascal Cette semaine, vous avez apprécié notre tour en image du « roadshow » des robots mobiles d’Omron. Vous vous êtes aussi intéressé à la comparaison des deux technologies d’électrolyse de l’eau pour produire de l’hydrogène. Également, les nouvelles parutions scientifiques ont retenu votre attention, comme…
      Read More
      A look inside BMW’s carnival-like simulation center in Germany thumbnail

      A look inside BMW’s carnival-like simulation center in Germany

      The Sapphire vehicle dynamics simulator at a BMW facility in Munich consists of a huge white bubble that evokes the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man lurching around New York City in Ghostbusters. It’s just one of 14 different simulators in the company’s new Driving Simulation Centre, a $105-million, 123,000-square-foot space that is the world’s most advanced simulation…
      Read More
      What we know about the firefight at Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant on Friday thumbnail

      What we know about the firefight at Europe’s biggest nuclear power plant on Friday

      This story originally published on Task & Purpose. Russian troops have reportedly captured the world’s largest nuclear power plant in Ukraine following a battle overnight that left the facility damaged. The assault on the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in southern Ukraine was live-streamed on the plant’s official YouTube channel. During the battle, a fire broke out in a training…
      Read More
      Index Of News
      Total
      0
      Share