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Sunday, March 2, 2025

COVID-19, overdoses pushed US to highest death total ever

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1054 days ago
20220412
FILE - Medical staff prepare to move the body of a deceased COVID-19 patient to a funeral home van at the Willis-Knighton Medical Center in Shreveport, La., Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021. Data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in April 2022 confirms that 2021 was the deadliest year in U.S. history. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

FILE - Medical staff prepare to move the body of a deceased COVID-19 patient to a funeral home van at the Willis-Knighton Medical Center in Shreveport, La., Wednesday, Aug. 18, 2021. Data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in April 2022 confirms that 2021 was the deadliest year in U.S. history. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert, File)

 

By MIKE STO­BBE-As­so­ci­at­ed Press

NEW YORK (AP) — 2021 was the dead­liest year in U.S. his­to­ry, and new da­ta and re­search are of­fer­ing more in­sights in­to how it got that bad.

The main rea­son for the in­crease in deaths? COVID-19, said Robert An­der­son, who over­sees the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion’s work on death sta­tis­tics.

The agency this month qui­et­ly up­dat­ed its pro­vi­sion­al death tal­ly. It showed there were 3.465 mil­lion deaths last year, or about 80,000 more than 2020′s record-set­ting to­tal.

Ear­ly last year, some ex­perts were op­ti­mistic that 2021 would not be as bad as the first year of the pan­dem­ic — part­ly be­cause ef­fec­tive COVID-19 vac­cines had fi­nal­ly be­come avail­able.

“We were wrong, un­for­tu­nate­ly,” said Noreen Gold­man, a Prince­ton Uni­ver­si­ty re­searcher.

COVID-19 deaths rose in 2021 — to more than 415,000, up from 351,000 the year be­fore — as new coro­n­avirus vari­ants emerged and an un­ex­pect­ed­ly large num­bers of Amer­i­cans re­fused to get vac­ci­nat­ed or were hes­i­tant to wear masks, ex­perts said.

The coro­n­avirus is not sole­ly to blame. Pre­lim­i­nary CDC da­ta al­so shows the crude death rate for can­cer rose slight­ly, and rates con­tin­ued to in­crease for di­a­betes, chron­ic liv­er dis­ease and stroke.

Drug over­dose deaths al­so con­tin­ued to rise. The CDC does not yet have a tal­ly for 2021 over­dose deaths, be­cause it can take weeks of lab work and in­ves­ti­ga­tion to iden­ti­fy them. But pro­vi­sion­al da­ta through Oc­to­ber sug­gests the na­tion is on track to see at least 105,000 over­dose deaths in 2021 — up from 93,000 the year be­fore.

New re­search re­leased Tues­day showed a par­tic­u­lar­ly large jump in over­dose deaths among 14- to 18-year-olds.

Ado­les­cent over­dose death counts were fair­ly con­stant for most of the last decade, at around 500 a year, ac­cord­ing to the pa­per pub­lished by the Jour­nal of the Amer­i­can Med­ical As­so­ci­a­tion. They al­most dou­bled in 2020, to 954, and the re­searchers es­ti­mat­ed that the to­tal hit near­ly 1,150 last year.

Joseph Fried­man, a UCLA re­searcher who was the pa­per’s lead au­thor, called the spike “un­prece­dent­ed.”

Those teen over­dose deaths were on­ly around 1% of the U.S. to­tal. But ado­les­cents ex­pe­ri­enced a greater rel­a­tive in­crease than the over­all pop­u­la­tion, even though sur­veys sug­gest drug use among teens is down.

Ex­perts at­trib­uted the spike to fen­tanyl, a high­ly lethal drug that has been cut in­to hero­in for sev­er­al years. More re­cent­ly it’s al­so been pressed in­to coun­ter­feit pills re­sem­bling pre­scrip­tion drugs that teens some­times abuse.

Na­tion­al death trends af­fect life ex­pectan­cy — an es­ti­mate of the av­er­age num­ber of years a ba­by born in a giv­en year might ex­pect to live.

With rare ex­cep­tions, U.S. life ex­pectan­cy has re­li­ably inched up year af­ter year. But the CDC’s life ex­pectan­cy es­ti­mate for 2020 was about 77 years — more than a year and a half low­er than what it was in 2019.

The CDC has not yet re­port­ed its cal­cu­la­tion for 2021. But Gold­man and some oth­er re­searchers have been mak­ing their own es­ti­mates, pre­sent­ed in pa­pers that have not yet been pub­lished in peer-re­viewed jour­nals.

Those re­searchers think U.S. life ex­pectan­cy dropped an­oth­er five or six months in 2021 — putting it back to where it was 20 years ago.

A loss of more than two years of life ex­pectan­cy over the last two years “is mam­moth,” Gold­man said.

One study looked at death da­ta in the U.S. and 19 oth­er high-in­come coun­tries. The U.S. fared the worst.

“What hap­pened in the U.S. is less about the vari­ants than the lev­els of re­sis­tance to vac­ci­na­tion and the pub­lic’s re­jec­tion of prac­tices, such as mask­ing and man­dates, to re­duce vi­ral trans­mis­sion,” one of the study’s au­thors, Dr. Steven Woolf of Vir­ginia Com­mon­wealth Uni­ver­si­ty, said in a state­ment.

Some ex­perts are skep­ti­cal that life ex­pectan­cy will quick­ly bounce back. They wor­ry about long-term com­pli­ca­tions of COVID-19 that may has­ten the deaths of peo­ple with chron­ic health prob­lems.

Pre­lim­i­nary — and in­com­plete — CDC da­ta sug­gest there were at least 805,000 U.S. deaths in about the first three months of this year. That’s well be­low the same pe­ri­od last year, but high­er than the com­pa­ra­ble pe­ri­od in 2020.

“We may end up with a ‘new nor­mal’ that’s a lit­tle high­er than it was be­fore,” An­der­son said.

 

 

COVID-19COVID-19 deathsDrug overdose


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