Researchers
lower forecast for U.S. COVID-19 deaths even as cases
climb
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[June 25, 2020]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - A newly revised model projects
the U.S. death toll from COVID-19 will reach nearly 180,000 by October,
down 22,000 from the last forecast despite several recent weeks of
rising case numbers, researchers said on Wednesday.
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But the latest forecast
https://covid19.healthdata.org/
united-states-of-america from the
University of Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and
Evaluation (IHME) also predicts that some 33,000 lives would be
saved if at least 95% of Americans consistently wear face coverings
in public.
"People need to know that wearing masks can reduce transmission of
the virus by as much as 50%, and those who refuse are putting their
lives, their families, their friends and their communities at risk,"
IHME's director, Dr. Christopher Murray, said in a statement.
The new IHME worst-case forecast - 179,106 U.S. lives lost by Oct. 1
- was revised downward from the 201,000 deaths projected on June 15.
Several states have reported steadily rising case numbers over the
past several weeks, "but deaths are not yet rising at the same rate,
a trend which could change in the coming weeks," the researchers
said.
At least 121,500 Americans have died from COVID-19, the respiratory
illness caused by the novel coronavirus, while reported U.S.
infections have surpassed 2.37 million, according to a tally by
Reuters.
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The revised IHME model, frequently cited by U.S. public health authorities,
assumes a re-imposition of rigid social-distancing mandates in states where the
daily mortality rates reach exceed eight deaths per 1 million people.
So far only Texas and Florida, among the states that have been the most
aggressive in reopening their economies, have reached this level of resurgence,
the researchers said.
Mask-wearing at current reported levels is included in the model, they said.
The projections are a range, with about 180,000 deaths the average between a
best-case scenario of 159,497 lives lost and a worst-case scenario of 213,715
fatalities.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Sandra Maler and Lisa
Shumaker)
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