Via – International Business Times
As the COVID-19 Pandemic continues, the death toll continues to rise, especially in the United States, where more than 180,000 people have died since it began. However, a new figure released by the Centers for Disease Control has created a stir, especially after it was retweeted by the President.
The CDC updated the provisional counts on deaths that have occurred from COVID-19 on Aug. 26, and in the section on comorbidities, they revealed that only 6% of the deaths were caused by just the virus. That information has been seized on by those who believe the total deaths and the severity of the pandemic have been greatly exaggerated as an effort to undermine the President during an election year.
Only 6% of the 161,392 deaths recorded actually died solely from Covid.
— elizabethprata (@elizabethprata) August 30, 2020
That's 9,683 deaths from Covid only. Total.
The other 94% had 2-3 other serious illnesses ("comorbidities") contributing to death, &most of those were of advanced age (74-85+)
CDC https://t.co/Ze2QACVcMS pic.twitter.com/J1OQwzrdyU
However, others also quickly pointed out that the number was under the comorbidities section, meaning that 94% of those deaths that were related to COVID were in those who also suffered from comorbidities—the same groups that were considered high risk when the pandemic first took hold.
Among the comorbidities that also contributed to the high death toll were hypertensive disease, diabetes, vascular and unspecific dementia, cardiac arrest and heart failure.
The pandemic and the way it has been handled has become a sticking point in the U.S., as it is politicized ahead of the presidential election. Specifically, many have taken issue with mask mandates around the country, debating how effective they actually are at curbing the spread.
The new criticism on the death toll also comes after the CDC changed its guidelines on exactly who needs to quarantine and when, with a 14-day period no longer required for international travelers, or from state-to-state.
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