2023: Seniors represented 90% of Covid deaths up to Sept 30th

Lethe200

Senior Member
Who is dying from COVID now? This group represented 90% of deaths
Almost everybody who has died from COVID so far this year was 65 or older — and many had never been vaccinated.
SF Chronicle 05Oct2023
URL (subscriber only): Who is dying from COVID now? This group represented 90% of deaths

(excerpt)
As the United States emerges from another summer COVID-19 wave, authorities have a clearer picture of who the coronavirus has affected most in the fourth year of the pandemic.

A study published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday reveals that older adults — those 65 and above — accounted for 63% of all COVID-related hospitalizations recorded from January to August, even as admissions declined for nearly all other age groups over the same period.

Only 24% of those hospitalized this year were up to date on their coronavirus vaccinations, and the vast majority had two or more underlying health conditions. The 65 and older age group also constituted 61% of intensive care unit admissions and nearly 90% of COVID-19-related deaths.

In the U.S., there are approximately 53 million adults who fall into this age group, amounting to around 16% of the population. Nationally, an average of 155 people are still dying of COVID-related causes every day, the majority of them over 70 and/or immunocompromised.

Despite their higher risk, federal data show only about 43% of adults aged 65 and older received the previous bivalent booster shot, which was available from September 2022 to May of this year. Among those hospitalized, 16% had not received any COVID-19 vaccination at all.

The study’s findings underscore the severity of cases among older adults. Those admitted to hospitals with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result faced elevated risks of severe outcomes, “including ICU admission, receipt of invasive mechanical ventilation, and in-hospital death,” the study said.

... To date, more than 1.14 million people in the United States have lost their lives due to COVID-19 since the onset of the pandemic. This figure includes nearly 52,000 Americans who have died this year.

In the new study, the agency labeled COVID-19 a “continued public health threat,” especially for those aged 65 and older.
 

I cut and pasted the article. Maybe this will help.

Who is dying from COVID now? This group represented 90% of deaths

Almost everybody who has died from COVID so far this year was 65 or older — and many had never been vaccinated.
SF Chronicle 05Oct2023
URL (subscriber only): Who is dying from COVID now? This group represented 90% of deaths

(excerpt)
As the United States emerges from another summer COVID-19 wave, authorities have a clearer picture of who the coronavirus has affected most in the fourth year of the pandemic.

A study published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Thursday reveals that older adults — those 65 and above — accounted for 63% of all COVID-related hospitalizations recorded from January to August, even as admissions declined for nearly all other age groups over the same period.

Only 24% of those hospitalized this year were up to date on their coronavirus vaccinations, and the vast majority had two or more underlying health conditions. The 65 and older age group also constituted 61% of intensive care unit admissions and nearly 90% of COVID-19-related deaths.

In the U.S., there are approximately 53 million adults who fall into this age group, amounting to around 16% of the population. Nationally, an average of 155 people are still dying of COVID-related causes every day, the majority of them over 70 and/or immunocompromised.

Despite their higher risk, federal data show only about 43% of adults aged 65 and older received the previous bivalent booster shot, which was available from September 2022 to May of this year. Among those hospitalized, 16% had not received any COVID-19 vaccination at all.

The study’s findings underscore the severity of cases among older adults. Those admitted to hospitals with a positive SARS-CoV-2 test result faced elevated risks of severe outcomes, “including ICU admission, receipt of invasive mechanical ventilation, and in-hospital death,” the study said.

... To date, more than 1.14 million people in the United States have lost their lives due to COVID-19 since the onset of the pandemic. This figure includes nearly 52,000 Americans who have died this year.

In the new study, the agency labeled COVID-19 a “continued public health threat,” especially for those aged 65 and older.
 

Covid has been a disease of the elderly in Australia as well. It was the number 3 killer.

Last year, Covid 19 was a leading cause of death in Australia. The Omicron variant, which was first detected in Australia in November 2021, drove most of the deaths in 2022, the ABS said.

The median age of people who died from COVID-19 was 85.8 years — higher than the average age of death from all causes, which was 82.2 years.

The latest causes of deaths report from the Australia Bureau of Statistics (ABS), which is released once per year, said COVID-19 accounted for 9,859 of 190,939 deaths last year.

A further 2,782 people, who died of other causes, had COVID-19 mentioned as a contributory cause of death on their death certificate, the ABS said.

In 2020, the virus was the 38th leading cause of death, and in 2021, it was 33rd on the list.

It is the first time since 2006 that there has been a change in the top five causes of death.

It is also the first time an infectious disease has been one of Australia's leading causes of death in more than 50 years.

That last time that happened was in 1968 and 1970, when influenza and pneumonia were the fifth leading cause of death, the ABS said.

The five leading causes of death, in order, were:

1 Heart disease - 18,643
2 Dementia including Alzheimer's - 17,066
3 Covid 19 - 9,859
4 Cerebrovascular diseases - 9,829
5 Lung Cancer - 9,048

Information taken from figures provided by the Australian Bureau of Statistics
 

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