Few figures tell you anything useful about how the coronavirus has spread through the U.S. Here’s one that does.
How many people have the coronavirus in the United States? More than two months into the country’s outbreak, this remains the most important question for its people, schools, hospitals, and businesses. It is also still among the hardest to answer. At least 630,000 people nationwide now have test-confirmed cases of COVID-19, according to The Atlantic’s COVID Tracking Project, a state-by-state tally conducted by more than 100 volunteers and experts. But an overwhelming body of evidence shows that this is an undercount.
Whenever U.S. cities have tested a subset of the general population, such as homeless people or pregnant women, they have found at least some infected people who aren’t showing symptoms. And, as ProPublica first reported, there has been a spike in the number of Americans dying at home across the country. Those people may die of COVID-19 without ever entering the medical system, meaning that they never get tested.
There is clearly some group of Americans who have the coronavirus but who don’t show up in official figures. Now, using a statistic that has just become reliable, we can estimate the size of that group—and peek at the rest of the iceberg.
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4 comments:
REALLY??!! People dying and no one knows from what reason?
Well - I can believe that. At a certain age it is called "natural" causes or what else - heart failure. I know of an area on the Eastern Shore where it takes forever for the coroner to arrive and then it is "heart" failure - really!
They aren't testing, that is why the numbers ate low.
*are
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