This is useful. However, the stats are international in nature and may not reflect the actual odds in your particular area.
The elderly are the most likely to die from a Novel Coronavirus infection but they are also the easiest to protect since most don’t need to interact with other people daily.
If a person has one or more of the risk factors they are in the 14% risk no matter their age.
Thanks for that chart. The numbers I saw in another study posted showed only about half of the COVID-19 victims were those over 70, but this makes more sense.
Per that chart (and using excess significant digits), 95.7% of those who die from the flu are 50+, and 89% are 65+.
For the COVID-19, 96.5% are 50+, 92.0% of those 60+, and 79.4% of those 70+ (the true elderly).
They did not provide the same age brackets, and such crude interpolation has its issues, but COVID-19 looks slightly shifted towards the younger seniors.
The difference in deaths at the rates for those 50+ based upon the 3140 currently reported as dead represents 36 people. This is an insignificant difference even before proper significant digits are applied. In short, no more deadly for the elderly than a normal flu.
Those who died in the nursing home in Washington appear to have already survived a recent flu.