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What changed inside Denver hospitals after COVID vaccine rollout

Have Over 343,000 More Americans Died From COVID?

Have Over 343,000 More Americans Died From COVID? A memorial and vigil for victims of COVID-19 held in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, in early March. Photo: Aimee Dilger/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images According to a new analysis by the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, the coronavirus pandemic may have already killed 905,000 people in the U.S. as of May 3. That is 61 percent higher than the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s official estimated count of deaths attributed to COVID-19 up to about that date, which is nearly 561,600. The IHME’s estimate for the total number of global deaths, meanwhile, is more than double the official count: 6.93 million people, rather than 3.24 million and it predicts that 2.5 million more will die of COVID-19 around the world by September, including an additional 44,000 in the U.S.

Covid-19 deaths may be more than double the official total

Manish Rajput/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images The world may have undercounted Covid-19 deaths by a staggering margin, according to an analysis released Thursday by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington School of Medicine. The actual count may actually be 6.9 million deaths, more than double official tolls. The United States alone is estimated to have had 905,000 Covid-19 fatalities, vastly more than the 579,000 deaths officially reported, and more than any other country. The calculation is based on modeling of excess mortality that has occurred during the pandemic. The drastic difference highlights how difficult it is to keep track of even basic metrics like deaths when a deadly disease is raging. The higher toll also means the ripples of the pandemic have spread wider than realized, particularly for health workers on the front lines who have repeatedly faced the onslaught with limited medical resources and personal protec

How COVID-19 Will Help Denver Doctors Revolutionize Health Care

How COVID-19 Will Help Denver Doctors Revolutionize Health Care The COVID-19 pandemic has spawned collaborations in the Denver medical community that could help usher in a new golden age of medicine. Spencer Campbell •   As the medical director of the Medical Intensive Care Unit at Denver Health, Dr. Ivor Douglas knows better than most how devastating a toll COVID-19 has taken. “We’ve lost 400,000 people, which is as many Americans as were lost in the Second World War,” he says. (The number topped 520,000 in early March.) “And we’ve done it in a year.” At the same time, Douglas understands that the unwelcome arrival of the novel coronavirus presents an opportunity to advance health care at an unprecedented rate. “Absolutely it’s going to have long-term effects on human health and scientific discovery,” Douglas says. He believes such rapid progress will occur because, well, he’s seen it happen.

March 11, 2021: Overcoming The Tsunami Of COVID-19 Cases; Preserving Family Legacies

March 11, 2021: Overcoming The Tsunami Of COVID-19 Cases; Preserving Family Legacies
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