Geopolitical turmoil is distracting Washington from a volatile southern border
A new study published in Science Advances found that approximately 156,000 more Americans may have died from COVID-19 in the pandemic's first year than officially reported. The research indicates COVID-19 deaths were most likely to go unrecognized in southern states, with the West South Central region showing death estimates 31% higher than official counts. These additional deaths occurred primarily outside of hospitals between March 2020 and December 2021.
The study methodology identified excess deaths that were likely COVID-related but went unrecognized in official tallies. Regional disparities in reporting suggest systematic gaps in death certification and surveillance systems, particularly affecting southern states during the pandemic's early phase.
Death certification during a novel pandemic presented unprecedented challenges, especially early on when testing was limited and understanding of the virus was evolving. Official counts reflected the information and systems available at the time, though they acknowledged potential undercounting throughout the pandemic.
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Worried About Job Security? The US Still Has an Edge
Bloomberg
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Nearly 156,000 more Americans may have died of COVID-19 in the first year of the pandemic than officially reported. COVID-19 deaths were most likely to go unrecognized in southern states. The estimated number of COVID-19 deaths was 31% higher than officially reported in the West South Central region
r/science
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Geopolitical turmoil is distracting Washington from a volatile southern border
The Hill
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Early COVID-19 pandemic death toll much higher than official count: Study
The Hill
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Early COVID pandemic death toll much higher than official count: Study
The Hill