New Cases: 405,656 (⬆︎ .35%)
New Deaths: 7,742 (⬆︎ .30%)
USA
New Cases: 58,228 (⬆︎ .20%)
New Deaths: 1,515 (⬆︎ .28%)
Vaccination Scorecard
Total Vaccinations: 57.4million
Total Priority Population: 47.1%
Total Population: 17.3%
The number of deaths due to COVID could be as much as 50% higher than the official count.
It's probably more like 10-15%, but it's not impossible that we could actually be closer to 700 thousand or 800 thousand dead Americans already, because of the way we report deaths - coupled with political considerations - which means the numbers almost always reflect a "reality" that's not all that real.
According to my mom's death certificate, she died of sepsis due to multi-organ failure - there was no mention of the cancers that riddled her body.
NYT: (pay wall)
A Family’s Search for Answers: Did Their Brother Die of Covid?
When a healthy 41-year-old died a year ago, an autopsy blamed heart disease. But his family wants to know if the coronavirus was lurking before anyone realized it.
The Hidalgo siblings buried their younger brother, Patrick, six days after he had texted them in the middle of the night last March to say that something was wrong: He was gasping for air. Two days after that, paramedics found his body in his Miami Beach apartment. One of his hands still held a rosary.
To his Mass of Resurrection came relatives from California and Maryland, ex-classmates from Boston, former colleagues from Washington. A woman he loved flew in all the way from Dubai.
In the following days of March 2020, the coronavirus brought life in the United States to an abrupt halt. Only then, as their shock subsided and grief deepened, did the Hidalgo family start to wonder if Patrick, their 41-year-old brother who had radiated light and glued them together, had died of Covid-19.
Families who lost someone with little warning and no obvious explanation in those whirlwind early days of the pandemic were robbed of the comfort of knowing exactly what took the person they loved.
Patrick died in that murky period a year ago when the nascent virus outbreak — where it came from, how far it had traveled — was only beginning to be understood. As the first deaths were recorded across the country, families like his found themselves in a state of haunting uncertainty that has never gone away.
There have likely been half a million more deaths linked to the virus than what has been officially reported, including more than 68,000 in the U.S., according to analyses of death rates around the world. Some families have gone to great lengths to try to get death certificates revised to list Covid-19, or to prove that the deceased had the virus in the first place. They often have little help from the authorities, who are swamped — or, some people fear, downplaying the virus.
Unable to obtain definitive proof, families are left with the uneasy feeling that, had it not been for the pandemic, their loved one might still be alive.
“I don’t know that we’ll ever have closure or fully understand,” said Rosie Hidalgo, one of Patrick’s four older siblings. “And that’s hard.”
That the virus could have contributed to Patrick’s death had not immediately occurred to them. Patrick died on March 2, 2020, the day after Florida announced its first confirmed Covid-19 cases. He was buried on March 7. The National Basketball Association suspended its season, a decision that made the crisis feel real to many people, on March 11.
On March 13, a cousin who had gone to Patrick’s funeral, Mayor Francis Suarez of Miami, tested positive. Others attendees wondered if Mr. Suarez had exposed them before realizing that he had likely become infected after the funeral.
In June, the Miami-Dade County medical examiner concluded after an autopsy that Patrick had died of undiagnosed hypertensive heart disease, noting an enlarged heart. Some of Patrick’s siblings rushed to doctors to check if they too might have sick hearts that could give out.
But it nagged at them. Heart disease? Patrick suffered from serious acid reflux, but he ate egg whites and spinach and frequented the gym. He went to the doctor right away when he felt ill. What if the autopsy was wrong?
“Within literally days of his death, Covid became a thing — it kind of burst into the social consciousness,” said Mike Llorente, a friend. “It seemed to me to be a much simpler answer.”
The siblings — Ellie, Rosie, Manny and Bibi — could not stop thinking about the possibility. The children of Cuban exiles, they were raised in a deeply Catholic family big on community service and civic duty. Their mother, Eloísa Suárez Hidalgo, had been a political prisoner in Cuba. Their father, Manuel J. Hidalgo Sr., whom Patrick took to Mass on Sundays, made a point to bring his young children with him when he went to vote.
Patrick grew up in Miami, left for Georgetown, Harvard and M.I.T., and returned as a political organizer and social entrepreneur five years before his death, sending his siblings, all of whom lived in other states, updates about their parents via videos and texts.
“Every morning I wake up in shock,” said his sister Bibi, who hardly let a day go by without speaking to her brother. “Every night, I can’t go to bed, thinking, ‘I can’t tell my little brother good night. I’m not going to get one of his funny memes tomorrow.’”
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