Patients wear face masks as they wait in line for a Covid-19 test at Elmhurst Hospital Center, in New York
NEW YORK, Oct 13 (NNN-Xinhua) — COVID-19 cases in the United States totaled 7,802,281 with 214,045 deaths as of 7:24 p.m. local time (2324 GMT) on Monday, according to the Center for Systems Science and Engineering (CSSE) at Johns Hopkins University.
California has so far reported a total of 857,563 cases, the highest among all states. Texas registered 820,921, followed by Florida with 736,024. The caseload of New York state exceeded 470,000.
Other states with over 210,000 cases include Georgia, Illinois, North Carolina, Arizona, Tennessee and New Jersey, according to the CSSE.
By far, the United States remains the world’s worst-hit nation, with the most cases and deaths, accounting for about one fifth of the global caseload and death toll, respectively.
Meanwhile, according to a study published Monday in the peer-reviewed Journal of the American Medical Association, said fatalities linked to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States may have gone underreported by nearly 75,000 from March to July.
Researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, in an update of an earlier analysis of “excess deaths” — the gap between observed and expected deaths — determined that nearly 75,000 more deaths of Americans may be linked to COVID-19 than previously recorded from March to July.
Previous studies of excess deaths during the COVID-19 pandemic found that publicly reported COVID-19 deaths underestimated the full death toll, which includes documented and undocumented deaths from the virus and non-COVID-19 deaths caused by disruptions from the pandemic, according to the study.
By examining death certificates, researchers found that of 225,530 excess deaths, 150,541, or 67 percent, were officially attributed to COVID-19 in the March-July period.
The COVID-19 pandemic could have indirectly caused nearly 75,000 more deaths, according to the study.
The study noted an increase in deaths attributed to causes other than COVID-19, with two “reaching statistical significance,” during the first weeks of the pandemic.
U.S. mortality rates for heart disease increased between weeks ending March 21 and April 11, driven by the spring surge in COVID-19 cases. Mortality rates for Alzheimer disease/dementia increased twice, between weeks ending March 21 and April 11, and between weeks ending June 6 and July 25, according to the study. — NNN-XINHUA