The following comes from the CDC link. It tells why the CDC death count is always less than the death counts published by other media sources.
"The provisional counts for coronavirus disease (COVID-19) deaths are based on a current flow of mortality data in the National Vital Statistics System. National provisional counts include deaths occurring within the 50 states and the District of Columbia that have been received and coded as of the date specified. It is important to note that it can take several weeks for death records to be submitted to National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), processed, coded, and tabulated. Therefore, the data shown on this page may be incomplete, and will likely not include all deaths that occurred during a given time period, especially for the more recent time periods."
The CDC death count can lag up to 3 weeks (see above quote) behind other counts while waiting to update. The CDC death count is provisional.
Originally Posted by Munchmasterman
Not sure of your point other than clarification and if that's it, then good, thanks for clarifying.
As it was, I was replying to another post about what is and isn't being counted as "official" Wuhan Virus deaths and linked to the site where the "official" provisional count of deaths by the CDC was.
And as another poster pointed out "official" does not mean "accurate" in any way.
Simple statistics are indeed being used/misused right now largely as a political matter.
Like the yearly influenza outbreak, we will never have very accurate numbers of total cases, infections, infection rates by area, and total deaths.
Only approximations that to date are certainly on the low end of the spectrum from many of the projections.
Did Texas re-open too soon. I think based on numbers it never should have fully shutdown to the extent it did. This all should have been handled regionally as hotspots broke out.
Shorter term isolation recommendations and far less impact to the economy as a whole.