Doctors sound alarm over 1.5m 'missing Americans' killed by silent epidemic
Share this @internewscast.com

Doctors are sounding the alarm after discovering 1.5million Americans died after the Covid pandemic from a ‘silent epidemic’ gripping the US.

Boston University researchers compared the fatality rate in the US over 2022 and 2023 to that in 21 similar developed countries — including the UK and Australia.

After accounting for population sizes, results showed that an extra 820,000 Americans died in 2022 than would the case if the US had a fatality rate comparable to peer nations.

There were an extra 705,000 ‘excess deaths’ in the US in 2023 when the same logic was applied.

Both totals were roughly 30 percent higher than pre-pandemic levels — when 631,000 excess deaths were logged in 2019.

Excess deaths — the number of fatalities above what’s typically expected — surged during Covid due to direct virus deaths, overwhelmed healthcare systems, and economic hardship. But while the pandemic has officially ended, the elevated death toll has persisted.

Researchers blame the ongoing crisis on a combination of drug overdoses, gun violence, traffic accidents, and chronic diseases like heart failure and diabetes, all of which are hitting the US harder than other countries.

They also cited the lack of a robust social safety net — common in many European countries — as a major factor worsening the toll. 

The researchers said the uptick was linked to surging overdose deaths from drugs among other factors. Pictured above are people suffering from drug dependency in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The researchers said the uptick was linked to surging overdose deaths from drugs among other factors. Pictured above are people suffering from drug dependency in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

The above shows people suffering from drug dependency in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They were pictured on May 7

The above shows people suffering from drug dependency in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. They were pictured on May 7

Dr Jacob Bor, an epidemiologist who led the research, said: ‘The US has been in a protracted health crisis for decades, with health outcomes far worse than other high-income countries.

‘This longer-run tragedy continued to unfold in the shadows of the Covid pandemic.’

For the study, published in JAMA Health Forum, the researchers calculated the rate of deaths per year for the US and that in 21 other developed countries.

These were: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and the UK.

These figures were compared, and analysis was carried out to reveal how many extra deaths the US was recording per year compared to the average for other developed countries.

For the study, researchers used data from the Human Mortality Database, the world’s leading scientific data resource on mortality in developed countries covering the years 1980 to 2023.

The analysis included 107million deaths in the US and 230million deaths recorded in the 21 other countries between 1980 and 2023.

The above graph shows the excess number of deaths being recorded in the US every year compared to that in similar nations. Zero means they both recorded the same number of excess deaths, while a minus figure means the US is recording fewer deaths than the other nations

The above graph shows the excess number of deaths being recorded in the US every year compared to that in similar nations. Zero means they both recorded the same number of excess deaths, while a minus figure means the US is recording fewer deaths than the other nations

Excess deaths have been treding upward in the US for years (shown above), before surging during the Covid pandemic

Excess deaths have been treding upward in the US for years (shown above), before surging during the Covid pandemic

Over the 1980 to 2023 period, there were an estimated 14.7million extra deaths in the US compared to other countries.

US excess deaths have been rising slowly since 1980, the report found, and jumped during the Covid pandemic. 

They remain high today, with the data showing nearly 23 percent of all US deaths were excess deaths in 2023.

Senior study author and global health expert Dr Andrew Stokes said: ‘These deaths reflect not individual choices, but policy neglect and deep-rooted social and health system failures.

‘The Covid pandemic exposed structural weaknesses—including gaps in healthcare access and social supports—that have continued to fuel premature deaths even after the acute phase of the pandemic ended.’

Dr Stokes added: ‘Other countries show that investing in universal healthcare, strong safety nets, and evidence-based public health policies leads to longer, healthier lives.

‘Unfortunately, the US faces unique challenges; public distrust of government and growing political polarization have made it harder to implement policies that have proven successful elsewhere.’

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

Doctor Uncovers Chilling Sign That May Indicate Less Than a Day Left to Live

An eerie symptom can manifest itself when a dying patient is close…

Why Stretching Can Cause Pain: Doctor Shares the Specific Reasons

A doctor has explained the exact reason why we feel a painful…

Biohacker Bryan Johnson’s Favored Longevity Pill Falls Short in Slowing Aging, Study Finds

A supplement beloved by Bryan Johnson and other biohackers for its age-defying…

New ‘Nimbus’ Covid Variant Sparks Rise in Hospitalizations as NB.1.8.1 Strain Spreads Across UK

Health chiefs have sounded the alarm and urged Britons to stay indoors…

Revealed: The Drama Behind Trump and Musk’s Rocky Relationship and Which Billionaire Was Secretly Clingy

The abrupt break-up between President Donald Trump and his First Buddy played…

The Hidden and Untreatable Illness That May Reveal Itself During a Bathroom Visit

If you’ve noticed changes in your bowel habits – such as going…

Dr. Ellie Unveils the Facts: Should You Take Fish Oil for Brain Health?

I’m 77 and my pharmacist told me that taking an omega-3 supplement…

Kathy Bates Reveals She ‘Feels Transformed’ After Shedding 100 Pounds

Kathy Bates has enthused that her whopping 100-pound weight loss has given her…

Statins Significantly Reduce Mortality Risk in Critically Ill Sepsis Patients

Taking statins can improve the chances of surviving sepsis by 40 per…

Discover: The Doctor-Developed 20-Minute Routine That May Help Prevent Bowel Cancer Amid Rising Cases

It sounds too simple to be true. Exercise works just as effectively…

Numerous People Sickened by Salmonella Outbreak Tied to California Eggs

Federal food and health agencies are investigating a multistate outbreak of salmonella…