it would also be interesting to compare flu/pneumonia deaths for 2020 vs 2019 & 2018
1 year delta tomorrow: https://t.co/gztxlVqitL pic.twitter.com/edxt98gMAn— Julian's Rum 🥃 (@JuliansRum) July 29, 2020
New York Mail-In voting is in a disastrous state of condition. Votes from many weeks ago are missing - a total mess. They have no idea what is going on. Rigged Election. I told you so. Same thing would happen, but on massive scale, with USA. Fake News refuses to report!— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) July 29, 2020
If you find a report for “flu deaths: 2020”, please ping the list.
I believe that Birx called the flu *over* and everything was COVID from March (?) onward.
Just about the time that impimp started the Flubros thread.
Cuz, it’s just the flu (with a cool sounding name...)
I agree it would be interesting to see a study of overall deaths by all causes, year over year, in order to get a better handle on the true impact of Chinavirus.
Unfortunately I don’t have time to undertake this study myself.
The goals I have set are to try and keep them from “Changing their story” by rewriting history a la Orwell’s warnings; and, hopefully, keeping track of the trends that can be discerned from the data (much of it FAKE) that is released to the public.
I haven't found that, but I do have this deaths from all causes information, which tells us a lot I think-but only to May.
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Before mid‐March, overall U.S. deaths were trending at a level no different from recent years at between 55‐60,000 per week.
Beginning in the week ending on March 28, all‐cause deaths began rising sharply, peaking in the week ending April 11 at around 75,000, or 137% of Expected Deaths for the week. Immediately thereafter, all-caused deaths began dropping sharply.
Within five weeks, all‐cause deaths were back to their typical range. By the week ending May 16, the measurable pandemic death impact had ended even though Covid19‐related deaths most certainly had not.
At least in this 8‐week period, the Covid19 pandemic was considerably worse than a typical flu season. To the extent that all‐cause deaths fell back to expected levels during May, the excess mortality attributable to the pandemic has passed.
Many states actually saw lower than expected deaths during the period. To be sure, an excess death rate of 5% for the entire U.S. is considerable but also far short of the apocalyptic narrative the pandemic has received.
Variation by policy environment To the extent that policies have varied across the states, it is not clear that the imposition and/or presence of stringent lock‐down policies hadmuch to do with the variation in excess deaths. Less stringent lockdown policies were not associated with higher death rates.
In fact, the 5 states that chose not to impose a lockdown are among the roughly 20 jurisdictions with no excess deaths at all. ...snip...
Somehow, the changing pattern of American life during the lockdowns has been saving the lives of hundreds of infants, over 200 per week.
Deaths in infants and children occur at a higher rate in minority groups. So the reduction in childhood deaths during the lockdowns has meant that the lives of black and Hispanic infants and children have been saved at a higher rate.
Combining the number of lives saved in infants and children aged 1‐4, demonstrates a smaller but comparably large and beneficial effect ...snip...
Since March 2020, routine childhood immunization services have been disrupted on a global scale that may be unprecedented since the inception of expanded programs on immunization (EPI) in the 1970s.
Are fewer children dying because their parents are skipping their routine childhood vaccines? If lives are being saved during the pandemic, this is a question that urgently needs answering.
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/news/lessons-from-the-lockdown-why-are-so-many-fewer-children-dyin