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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsMore young people in the South seem to be dying from COVID-19. Why?
worth reading the whole article.
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The Coronaviruss Unique Threat to the South
More young people in the South seem to be dying from COVID-19. Why?
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2020/04/coronavirus-unique-threat-south-young-people/609241/
Vann R. Newkirk II 5:00 AM ET
In a matter of weeks, the coronavirus has gone from a novel, distant threat to an enemy besieging cities and towns across the world. The burden of COVID-19 and the economic upheaval wrought by the measures to contain it feel epochal. Humanity now has a common foe, and we will grow increasingly familiar with its face.
Yet plenty of this viruss aspects remain unknown. The developing wisdom....................
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The world is about to find out. So far, about one in 10 deaths in the United States from COVID-19 has occurred in the four-state arc of Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia, according to data assembled by the COVID Tracking Project, a volunteer collaboration incubated at The Atlantic. New Orleans is on pace to become the next global epicenter of the pandemic. The virus has a foothold in southwestern Georgia, and threatens to overwhelm hospitals in the Atlanta metropolitan area. The coronavirus is advancing quickly across the American South. And in the American South, significant numbers of younger people are battling health conditions that make coronavirus outbreaks more perilous.
The numbers emerging seem to indicate that more young people in the South are dying from COVID-19. Although the majority of coronavirus-related deaths in Louisiana are still among victims over 70 years old, 43 percent of all reported deaths have been people under 70. In Georgia, people under 70 make up 49 percent of reported deaths. By comparison, people under 70 account for only 20 percent of deaths in Colorado. Under 70 is a broad category, not really useful for understanding whats going on. But digging deeper reveals more concerning numbers. In Louisiana, people from the ages of 40 to 59 account for 22 percent of all deaths. The same age range in Georgia accounts for 17 percent of all deaths. By comparison, the same age group accounts for only about 10 percent of all deaths in Colorado, and 6 percent of all deaths in Washington State. These statistics suggest that middle-aged and working-age adults in the two southern states are at much greater risk than their counterparts elsewhere; for some reason, they are more likely to die from COVID-19.
All data in this stage of the pandemic are provisional and incomplete, and all conclusions are subject to change. But a review of the international evidence shows that, as far as we know, the outbreaks currently expanding in the American South are uniqueand mainly because of how many people in their working prime are dying. Spains official accounting of the pandemic last week showed that deaths among people under 70 years old make up only about 12 percent of total deaths in the country. Case-fatality rates around the world are notoriously tricky because they are based in part on the extent of testing, but a recent study of the outbreak in Wuhan, China, found a case-fatality rate of 0.5 percent among adults from the ages of 30 to 59. The current estimate of fatality rates in the same age range in Louisiana is about four times that.
Tricia Neuman, a senior vice president at the Kaiser Family Foundation, says this analysis points to the underlying issues that might complicate or worsen the pandemic in the South. Due to high rates of conditions like lung disease and heart disease and obesity, the people living in these states are at risk if they get the virus, Neuman told me. These arent people who are sick, but these are people who have underlying comorbidities that put them at higher risk of serious illness if they get infected.
Read: Even dead bodies pose risks
The KFF analysis doesnt include potential complications from hypertensionwhich is also suspected to be driving coronavirus-linked hospitalizationsbut the data are predictable on that front. ...................................................
SuprstitionAintthWay
(386 posts)at all ages, including the young
all the Honey Boo-Boos and Mama Junes
way too much deep fried food eaten, by white and black alike
SWBTATTReg
(22,137 posts)and perhaps there is more mingling of younger folks than there should be? An interesting article. Perhaps it'll provide some clues to our valued doctors and researchers.
Leghorn21
(13,524 posts)Tell the Governors of The South that the Coronavirus is a new minority that just wants to vote.
Then I think they will figure out a way to stop it.
Link to tweet
Hawaii Hiker
(3,166 posts)but they smoke cigarettes, or marijuana....Wonder what effect smoking is having on COVID-19 ?
empedocles
(15,751 posts)crimycarny
(1,351 posts)Much higher rates of obesity and diabetes in Southern States:
https://stateofchildhoodobesity.org/diabetes/
KY_EnviroGuy
(14,492 posts)resulting in lung and heart damage at an early age......
Some southern states have a high prevalence of smokers, past and present along with several other states including Kentucky.
See: https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1142&pid=23016
and......
https://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1142&pid=23009
GoCubsGo
(32,086 posts)More obesity, and with it more hypertension and diabetes.
More smokers. Lots of vaping.
Many have not been taking this seriously--Probably the biggest reason. Blame a lot of that on the governors, who have been criminally negligent. But, I'm still seeing many of them taking this as a big joke. I'm sure there's the usual "It can't happen to me" mentality that a lot of young folks have.
rownesheck
(2,343 posts)"It can't happen to me" attitude is everywhere where I'm located in northeast Houston area. We have a shelter in place order, yet the store where I work is busier now than before the order (except for the first few days of panic buying). And that's with us closing 2 hours earlier than usual! People are out walking together and going to parks. And so many of them get so annoyed at our social distancing attempts at the store. I don't know what it's going to take to get people to take it seriously.
Side note:
The company I work for has stores all over the world. The president of our division told me that once a municipality put a shelter in place order in, the sales dropped significantly at our stores. That data is true all over the world and in other parts of the U.S. So far, it ain't happening here.