Wheeling out the dead from Covid-19, on stretchers to container morgues at the Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Brooklyn, New York City. Credit: Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu Agency/Getty

In calculating its human toll, a pandemic is similar to a war. The most precise way public health researchers can get a handle on the impact of something like COVID-19 is to compare the number of total deaths recorded in a specific place during the pandemic with death tallies from prior years.

That analysis will yield a figure known as “excess deaths” — which simply means deaths above and beyond what would normally be expected.

That figure captures not just COVID-19 deaths, but the number of people who were unable to access health care at a moment in their lives when a chronic condition was becoming life-threatening. It also includes individuals whose primary cause of death may have been something else, but who were also infected with COVID-19.

And now that the dust has settled and the data are being tabulated, America’s excess death numbers over the past year are staggering.

The importance of tabulating such a dark statistic is twofold: its record-breaking nature is due to both […]

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