We are approaching 800,000 deaths in the US alone.
At the present moment, this virus is killing more people every three days than 9/11 did.
It has killed more than the entire opioid crisis.
Soon, every new car will be required to have a backseat monitor as a standard safety feature, because there have been 1,000 instances of babies dying from being left in the backseats of cars in the last 30 years. Where are the editorials decrying this overblown fear?
And at what point do these obtuse editorials stop? When Covid kills more than the combined combat fatalities of all wars fought by the United States? Would it be a real and rational fear then?
I think our response, as a nation, to 9/11 was excessive and ill-considered. But I also remember what those days were like, the real concerns that further attacks were imminent... you can only judge actions based on the information available to leaders at the time.
And given what we know about Covid, and what could have happened, and what might yet still happen, I think our leaders have managed as best they can. And they have done so despite the this persistent denial of the reality and lethality of this virus... It's just a bad flu year... what's all the fuss about?
800,000 deaths later... a decade's worth of bad flu years in under 2 years... I think we should give this a rest.
But those 800,000 deaths are not deaths from COVID, they are deaths with COVID. There is a huge difference. Car accident victims, gun shot victims, heart attack victims, etc. who died from THOSE causes were/are included in the COVID deaths if they had (or even, in some cases, if it was merely suspected that they had) COVID.
I believe the CDC and other public health authorities have worked overtime to dispel this myth. For instance:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/podcasts/2021/20210319/TRANSCRIPT_STATCAST_031921.pdfMoney Quote:
HOST: Another example that has confused people in the past: someone is in a car crash and maybe the victim had COVID or develops COVID, and people get confused - how can COVID be responsible for somebody who's been injured in a car crash? What will you tell folks who are confused about that?
ROBERT ANDERSON: Well it really depends on the circumstances. In cases where the death is clearly the result of trauma caused by the crash, whether the decedent had COVID-19 or not should be irrelevant. COVID-19 is not a factor in those cases. Now, in these cases it should not be counted as COVID-19 deaths - because the trauma caused the death, not any sort of viral infection that person might have had.
However, we do know of cases where people have been hospitalized with serious but not life-threatening trauma from a car crash, who contracted COVID-19 in the hospital and then subsequently died as result of COVID-19. So in a case like that the crash and the trauma might be a contributing factor, but the underlying cause was COVID-19. So that was the primary cause of death because that's what caused them to die when they died - it wasn't the trauma. So it's complicated and it does depend on the circumstances.
And the argument of died "from Covid" versus died "with Covid" is akin to the old saw about AIDS… no one "technically" died from AIDS, after all. But if you got HIV before there were effective treatments, that technicality wasn't going to give you much comfort. Accordingly, every measure of excess mortality in the known world is showing that people are, actually, dying in this pandemic. And in large numbers.
And meanwhile, we're not even talking about all the other lasting effects of Covid… I've been part of a CDC recognized rehab program for long covid for the last six months. They are treating everyone from octogenarians who barely survived to NCAA athletes who were, previously, in peak physical condition. It took me 6 months of bi-weekly PT to be able to recover enough stamina to lead a halfway normal life, and I'm 39, but sure… covid is only a big deal for the elderly.