Supplement to Friday Stats

In the last Friday’s COVID-19 stats, the FEHBlog pointed out that while cases have been rising rapidly, deaths fortunately have not over weeks 20 through 27 of 2020 (counting from Friday through Thursday). The FEHBlog decided to go back an take a look at the preceding six weeks which started at the beginning of April and ended in mid-May. The great hunkering down began in mid-March.

Week141516171819
New Cases    180,867 177,930166,382180,917162,154144.995
New Deaths8,2419,88613,50411,12610,7458.949

As you can see from the supplemental stats, the weekly deaths in the U.S. peaked in mid-April and have been falling since then notwithstanding the increasing number of cases which spiked in mid-May and again in July.

The CDC last week posted a helpful discussion of similarities and differences between COVID-19 and the flu. The CDC notes

[While the flu and COVID-19 generally spread in similar ways,] COVID-19 is more contagious among certain populations and age groups than flu. Also, COVID-19 has been observed to have more superspreading events than flu. This means the virus that causes COVID-19 can quickly and easily spread to a lot of people and result in continuous spreading among people as time progresses.