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Wednesday, May 28, 2025

COVID-19′s global death toll tops 5 million in under 2 years

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1304 days ago
20211101

By CAR­LA K. JOHN­SON, As­so­ci­at­ed Press

 

(AP, 01 Nov 2021) — The glob­al death toll from COVID-19 topped 5 mil­lion on Mon­day, less than two years in­to a cri­sis that has not on­ly dev­as­tat­ed poor coun­tries but al­so hum­bled wealthy ones with first-rate health care sys­tems.

To­geth­er, the Unit­ed States, the Eu­ro­pean Union, Britain and Brazil — all up­per-mid­dle- or high-in­come coun­tries — ac­count for one-eighth of the world’s pop­u­la­tion but near­ly half of all re­port­ed deaths. The U.S. alone has record­ed over 740,000 lives lost, more than any oth­er na­tion.

“This is a defin­ing mo­ment in our life­time,” said Dr. Al­bert Ko, an in­fec­tious dis­ease spe­cial­ist at the Yale School of Pub­lic Health. “What do we have to do to pro­tect our­selves so we don’t get to an­oth­er 5 mil­lion?”

The death toll, as tal­lied by Johns Hop­kins Uni­ver­si­ty, is about equal to the pop­u­la­tions of Los An­ge­les and San Fran­cis­co com­bined. It ri­vals the num­ber of peo­ple killed in bat­tles among na­tions since 1950, ac­cord­ing to es­ti­mates from the Peace Re­search In­sti­tute Oslo. Glob­al­ly, COVID-19 is now the third lead­ing cause of death, af­ter heart dis­ease and stroke.

The stag­ger­ing fig­ure is al­most cer­tain­ly an un­der­count be­cause of lim­it­ed test­ing and peo­ple dy­ing at home with­out med­ical at­ten­tion, es­pe­cial­ly in poor parts of the world, such as In­dia.

Hot spots have shift­ed over the 22 months since the out­break be­gan, turn­ing dif­fer­ent places on the world map red. Now, the virus is pum­mel­ing Rus­sia, Ukraine and oth­er parts of East­ern Eu­rope, es­pe­cial­ly where ru­mors, mis­in­for­ma­tion and dis­trust in gov­ern­ment have hob­bled vac­ci­na­tion ef­forts. In Ukraine, on­ly 17% of the adult pop­u­la­tion is ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed; in Ar­me­nia, on­ly 7%.

“What’s unique­ly dif­fer­ent about this pan­dem­ic is it hit hard­est the high-re­source coun­tries,” said Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, di­rec­tor of ICAP, a glob­al health cen­ter at Co­lum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty. “That’s the irony of COVID-19.”

Wealth­i­er na­tions with longer life ex­pectan­cies have larg­er pro­por­tions of old­er peo­ple, can­cer sur­vivors and nurs­ing home res­i­dents, all of whom are es­pe­cial­ly vul­ner­a­ble to COVID-19, El-Sadr not­ed. Poor­er coun­tries tend to have larg­er shares of chil­dren, teens and young adults, who are less like­ly to fall se­ri­ous­ly ill from the coro­n­avirus.

In­dia, de­spite its ter­ri­fy­ing delta surge that peaked in ear­ly May, now has a much low­er re­port­ed dai­ly death rate than wealth­i­er Rus­sia, the U.S. or Britain, though there is un­cer­tain­ty around its fig­ures.

The seem­ing dis­con­nect be­tween wealth and health is a para­dox that dis­ease ex­perts will be pon­der­ing for years. But the pat­tern that is seen on the grand scale, when na­tions are com­pared, is dif­fer­ent when ex­am­ined at clos­er range. With­in each wealthy coun­try, when deaths and in­fec­tions are mapped, poor­er neigh­bor­hoods are hit hard­est.

In the U.S., for ex­am­ple, COVID-19 has tak­en an out­size toll on Black and His­pan­ic peo­ple, who are more like­ly than white peo­ple to live in pover­ty and have less ac­cess to health care.

“When we get out our mi­cro­scopes, we see that with­in coun­tries, the most vul­ner­a­ble have suf­fered most,” Ko said.

Wealth has al­so played a role in the glob­al vac­ci­na­tion dri­ve, with rich coun­tries ac­cused of lock­ing up sup­plies. The U.S. and oth­ers are al­ready dis­pens­ing boost­er shots at a time when mil­lions across Africa haven’t re­ceived a sin­gle dose, though the rich coun­tries are al­so ship­ping hun­dreds of mil­lions of shots to the rest of the world.

Africa re­mains the world’s least vac­ci­nat­ed re­gion, with just 5% of the pop­u­la­tion of 1.3 bil­lion peo­ple ful­ly cov­ered.

“This dev­as­tat­ing mile­stone re­minds us that we are fail­ing much of the world,” U.N. Sec­re­tary-Gen­er­al An­tónio Guter­res said in a writ­ten state­ment. “This is a glob­al shame.”

In Kam­pala, Ugan­da, Cis­sy Kaga­ba lost her 62-year-old moth­er on Christ­mas Day and her 76-year-old fa­ther days lat­er.

“Christ­mas will nev­er be the same for me,” said Kaga­ba, an an­ti-cor­rup­tion ac­tivist in the East African coun­try that has been through mul­ti­ple lock­downs against the virus and where a cur­few re­mains in place.

The pan­dem­ic has unit­ed the globe in grief and pushed sur­vivors to the break­ing point.

“Who else is there now? The re­spon­si­bil­i­ty is on me. COVID has changed my life,” said 32-year-old Reena Ke­sar­wani, a moth­er of two boys, who was left to man­age her late hus­band’s mod­est hard­ware store in a vil­lage in In­dia.

Her hus­band, Anand Babu Ke­sar­wani, died at 38 dur­ing In­dia’s crush­ing coro­n­avirus surge ear­li­er this year. It over­whelmed one of the most chron­i­cal­ly un­der­fund­ed pub­lic health sys­tems in the world and killed tens of thou­sands as hos­pi­tals ran out of oxy­gen and med­i­cine.

In Berg­amo, Italy, once the site of the West’s first dead­ly wave, 51-year-old Fab­rizio Fi­dan­za was de­prived of a fi­nal farewell as his 86-year-old fa­ther lay dy­ing in the hos­pi­tal. He is still try­ing to come to terms with the loss more than a year lat­er.

“For the last month, I nev­er saw him,” Fi­dan­za said dur­ing a vis­it to his fa­ther’s grave. “It was the worst mo­ment. But com­ing here every week, helps me.”

To­day, 92% of Berg­amo’s el­i­gi­ble pop­u­la­tion have had at least one shot, the high­est vac­ci­na­tion rate in Italy. The chief of med­i­cine at Pope John XXI­II Hos­pi­tal, Dr. Ste­fano Fag­iuoli, said he be­lieves that’s a clear re­sult of the city’s col­lec­tive trau­ma, when the wail of am­bu­lances was con­stant.

In Lake City, Flori­da, LaTasha Gra­ham, 38, still gets mail al­most dai­ly for her 17-year-old daugh­ter, Jo’Ke­ria, who died of COVID-19 in Au­gust, days be­fore start­ing her se­nior year of high school. The teen, who was buried in her cap and gown, want­ed to be a trau­ma sur­geon.

“I know that she would have made it. I know that she would have been where she want­ed to go,” her moth­er said.

In Rio de Janeiro, Eri­ka Macha­do scanned the list of names en­graved on a long, un­du­lat­ing sculp­ture of ox­i­dized steel that stands in Pen­i­ten­cia ceme­tery as an homage to some of Brazil’s COVID-19 vic­tims. Then she found him: Wag­n­er Macha­do, her fa­ther.

“My dad was the love of my life, my best friend,” said Macha­do, 40, a sales­woman who trav­eled from Sao Paulo to see her fa­ther’s name. “He was every­thing to me.”

___

AP jour­nal­ists Ra­jesh Ku­mar Singh in Chhit­pal­garh, In­dia; Cara An­na in Nairo­bi, Kenya; Rod­ney Muhu­muza in Kam­pala, Ugan­da; Kel­li Kennedy in Fort Laud­erdale, Flori­da; Colleen Bar­ry in Berg­amo, Italy; and Di­ane Jean­tet in Rio de Janeiro con­tributed.

COVID-19


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