Covid Claims 4 Million People. And The Death Toll Is Mounting
The World Health Organization warns nations against reopening too soon, as the global death tally surpasses a heartbreaking 4 million humans. In the U.S., it's estimated that an additional 250,000 lives would've been lost by now if it weren't for vaccinations.
AP:
Global COVID-19 Deaths Hit 4 Million Amid Rush To Vaccinate
The global death toll from COVID-19 eclipsed 4 million Wednesday as the crisis increasingly becomes a race between the vaccine and the highly contagious delta variant. The tally of lives lost over the past year and a half, as compiled from official sources by Johns Hopkins University, is about equal to the number of people killed in battle in all of the world’s wars since 1982, according to estimates from the Peace Research Institute Oslo. (Goodman, 7/8)
Bloomberg:
Covid Deaths Reach 4 Million As Vaccine Disparity Exposes Poor
The global death toll from Covid-19 has reached 4 million, as a growing disparity in vaccine access leaves poorer nations exposed to outbreaks of more infectious strains. Even as rapid vaccine rollouts allow life to start to return to normal in countries like the U.K. and U.S., it’s taken just 82 days for the latest million deaths, compared to 92 days for the previous million, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The real toll could be far higher than reported because of inconsistent calculations around the world. (Tam, 7/8)
The Washington Post:
WHO Sounds The Alarm As Global Coronavirus Deaths Top 4 Million
The World Health Organization on Wednesday warned nations against reopening prematurely as global deaths from the coronavirus topped 4 million and the more virulent delta variant was spotted in more than 100 countries, including those with high vaccination rates. “The world is at a perilous point in this pandemic. We have just passed the tragic milestone of 4 million recorded covid-19 deaths, which likely underestimates the overall toll,” WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a briefing. (Cunningham, 7/8)
AP:
As Global COVID-19 Deaths Top 4 Million, A Suicide In Peru
On the last day of Javier Vilca’s life, his wife stood outside a hospital window with a teddy bear, red balloons and a box of chocolates to celebrate his birthday, and held up a giant, hand-scrawled sign that read: “Don’t give up. You’re the best man in the world.” Minutes later, Vilca, a 43-year-old struggling radio journalist who had battled depression, jumped four stories to his death — the fifth suicide by a COVID-19 patient at Peru’s overwhelmed Honorio Delgado hospital since the pandemic began. Vilca became yet another symbol of the despair caused by the coronavirus and the stark and seemingly growing inequities exposed by COVID-19 on its way to a worldwide death toll of 4 million, a milestone recorded Wednesday by Johns Hopkins University. (Briceno, Cheng and Goodman, 7/8)
In related news about the covid death toll in the United States —
USA Today:
Vaccination Rollout Prevented More Than 250K COVID Deaths In The US
The U.S. has the world's highest reported death toll, at over 600,000, or nearly 1 in 7 deaths, followed by Brazil at more than 520,000. But vaccines, 3 trillion doses of which have been administered, have led to the plummeting of cases and deaths throughout the world. And the numbers are startling: the United States' vaccination program has prevented approximately 279,000 additional deaths and up to 1.25 million additional hospitalizations, according to a new study released by Yale University and the Commonwealth Fund. Nearly 50% of all Americans have been fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. (Aspegren, 7/8)
CIDRAP:
COVID-19 Surges At US Hospitals May Have Led To 6,000 Deaths
COVID-19 case surges at the most overwhelmed US hospitals in spring and summer 2020 may have contributed to nearly one in four adult inpatient deaths, according to a study yesterday in the Annals of Internal Medicine. Led by researchers from the National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, the study involved patient- and hospital-level analyses of the Premier Healthcare Database, creation of a weighted COVID-19 caseload-to-bed capacity surge index, and hierarchical modeling. The authors calculated risk-adjusted odds ratios (aORs) for death from Mar 1 to Aug 31, 2020, or release to hospice at 558 hospitals through Oct 31. (Van Beusekom, 7/7)