US endures worst one-day death toll yet as states reopen

Authored by thehill.com and submitted by dingo8yobb
image for US endures worst one-day death toll yet as states reopen

The U.S. saw its largest one-day death toll from the coronavirus pandemic to date on Thursday as several states began to reopen parts of their economies.

According to data from the World Health Organization (WHO), 2,909 people in the U.S. died on Thursday, shattering the previous record of 2,471 deaths reported on April 23, CNBC reported.

The grim news comes as Americans grow weary of the stay-at-home measures that have shuttered businesses and put millions of people out of work. State leaders around the country continued to see protests from demonstrators who want to reopen the economy and return to their jobs. Demonstrations took place in California, Colorado, Delaware, Florida, Illinois, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Tennessee and Washington on Friday.

Many demonstrators believe stay-at-home orders are impinging on their constitutional rights and freedoms.

However, some states, such as Texas, Georgia and South Carolina, have already opened up select businesses. Other states have rolled out guidelines detailing how and when their economies can reopen.

Data compiled by the WHO is different from data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as the CDC hasn't historically reported daily deaths from the pandemic. The agency's website says 2,349 people in the country died from the virus on May 1.

CDC spokeswoman Kate Grusich told CNBC that the agency’s data is “validated through a confirmation process with jurisdictions.”

“CDC does not know the exact number of COVID-19 illnesses, hospitalizations, and deaths for a variety of reasons,” the government agency said, according to the network. The CDC has also noted it might not have a more accurate death toll until December 2021.

As of Saturday night, the U.S. has more than 1.2 million cases of the coronavirus and more than 66,000 deaths from it, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

Summebride on May 3rd, 2020 at 04:18 UTC »

COVID-19 kills in an average of 17 days.

That means today's record-shattering death toll is a snapshot of 17 days ago, approximately Easter weekend.

At Easter, a lot of citizens and states were still taking the quarantine advice (somewhat) seriously. Since then, apathy and hubris have created an obvious shift of people bending and breaking isolation guidelines. Some states with science-impaired governors are even overtly "re-opening".

We are undoubtedly being less careful and less preventive today than 17 days ago. The numbers will reflect this foolishness.

TheFirstBardo on May 3rd, 2020 at 00:15 UTC »

2,909. That’s fewer than 90 deaths short of 9/11. In one day.

10390 on May 3rd, 2020 at 00:02 UTC »

Easter was 3 weeks ago. I don't think we've peaked yet

The maximum incubation period is assumed to be up to 14 days.

The median time from onset of symptoms to intensive care unit (ICU) admission is around 10 days.

The time between symptom onset and death ranged from about 2 weeks to 8 weeks.

https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30195-X/fulltext