Covid-19: Here's how projected fatalities compare to other causes of death
Different models predicting the best- and worst-case scenarios of Covid-19 deaths in the U.S. range from 60,000 to a whopping 240,000. But how do these numbers compare to other common killers? The lower number is about on par with the number of people who died of stroke in 2017 (60,833), but the upper limit is still less than the more than 252,000 people who died of cancer last year. STAT's Sharon Begley and Hyacinth Empinado have more here.Here's more of what's happening with the outbreak:
- New data published by the CDC show that Covid-19 is not infecting groups of people equally, and that men and Black patients are more likely to be hospitalized for the infection.
- A new global clinical trial is using AI to quickly figure out which patients are most likely to benefit from possible therapies, including hydroxychloroquine, for their Covid-19 infection.
- Some biotech companies developing treatments are trying to target a receptor known as ACE-2 because coronaviruses seem to use it to enter human cells.
- As the November election approaches, Democratic groups are looking for ways to use the Trump administration's response to Covid-19 as a way to inform their own health messaging.
- Despite relaxed rules allowing those who take methadone to treat their opioid addiction to take home up to a 28-day supply, some methadone clinics still have waiting rooms crowded with patients hoping to get their prescription, thus putting them at risk of contracting Covid-19.
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