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Covid trend by age....

Cygarin

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Gold Member
Jul 3, 2001
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There are getting to be increasingly more usable data as it applies to Covid.

Here is a link to a graph of death by age that you can click between Covid deaths and all deaths.

https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid_weekly/index.htm#AgeAndSex

Make note the drop-off at the end, clearly this indicates insufficent data, since it shows up as a drop on both graphs. This period should be ignored.

Deaths under age 45

Make note that for ages 0-34 there has been virtually no deaths whatsoever from Covid, and for 0-44 it has been negligible.

Covid appears to have never been a morbid threat to anyone under 45 during the entire crisis.

Covid deaths compared to total deaths

I would advise you to click on "total deaths" to change the graph. This is a graph showing the trend of all deaths in the United States since the first of February.

Largely, Covid deaths in America did not start occuring until after the first of March, with the New York outbreak. Therefore, pre-March data represents the United State's pre-Covid death rate.

Make note of the "New York spike" that has gone away, and no national "spike" has ever returned.

Make note that by all indications...the death rate in the United States has returned to a normal pre-Covid death rate for all ages.

Make note that the death rate for ages 85 and older has dropped to lower than the pre-Covid death rate immediately after the New York spike.

Make note that for ages 45 and under....there never was an increase in death rate at all in the United States, even New York.




So I ask.....why is this crisis not considered already over?
 
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