In the USA, we have 34,273 deaths out of 3,723,634 tested.
That's a one percent death rate (well, actually less than that) out of symptomatic patients who met the testing criteria of fever and difficulty breathing - a credible candidate for a test in the judgement of medical professionals who have gotten a lot of experience by now.
Originally Posted by friendly fred
Look at it this way instead.
As of April 21, we have 42,458 dead and 788,920 confirmed cases. That includes all of the over 4 million tested as of today.
That is a death rate of 5.4% of those infected. So the main question is what percentage of the country is going to ultimately get it - i.e., become confirmed cases.
Let's assume only 20 percent of the country gets it and they have a death rate of 5.4%. That is about 1.1% of the total population of 330M. So, that is about 3.5M dead.
Scale it back to only 10 percent of the country getting it. That is still about 1.75M dead.
How about 5% of the people? Still have about 900,000 dead. And let's be real - this is a highly transmissible disease. A lot more than 5% are going to catch it.
I don't know where that death toll of 68,000 went. Maybe that was only for the first wave. But it is WAY low. We are already at 42K dead. Does anyone think we are only going to lose 26K more? NY will get that many by itself in the next couple of months.
And one other thing. NEVER COMPARE THE WUHAN FLU TO THE SEASONAL FLU EVER AGAIN. They are an order of magnitude apart.
We have 42K+ dead in seven weeks. The seasonal flu kills about 20K-30K in an entire YEAR.