Democrats and their candidate Joe Biden have pounced on the opportunity to turn the presidential election into a referendum on Mr. Trump's 'bungling' of the pandemic. The theme taps into a rich vein of public anger over the never ending outbreaks, lockdowns, job losses and work-from-home issues.
Understandably, the patience of Americans is all but exhausted. The nation's citizens feel imprisoned by a virus they initially thought would be no worse than garden-variety flu. Tragically, some Americans have lost loved ones to the virus. A return to normalcy appears to fade with each passing day.
Americans can at least agree that doctors, nurses and staff on the front lines at hospitals are the genuine heroes in the fight to provide urgent healing in the midst of chaos, along with the scientists who have waged their own battle in labs to unravel the mysteries of the virus.
However, public angst has been heightened by sometimes conflicting scientific theories and hypothesizes. For example, on February 28, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Centers for Disease Control Director Dr. Robert Redfield and a colleague published an analysis in the New England Journal of Medicine
In an analysis of widely reported global death rates for COVID-19, they wrote the disease's fatality rate was "more akin to those of a severe seasonal influenza." Their report influenced Mr. Trump's perspective. Hindsight has proven their assessment was flawed, but scientists were grappling with a novel virus.
Scientists' work was complicated by the lack of cooperation from China, where the Coronavirus originated. No one blames scientists who worked feverishly in labs to solve the secrets of COVID-19. But when scientists are confounded, it opens the door for the media to create its own narrative.
The media klieg lights shine on infections (cases) and deaths. The numbers make scary headlines: Death toll surpasses 210,000! Coronavirus cases soar past 7 million! Instead of putting the figures into perspective through meaningful comparisons, the media flaunts the numbers to fuel public outrage.
News outlets make no secret their mission to pin the blame on the president for the pandemic. Pundits regularly cite as 'evidence' of the administration's epic failure the following statistic: the United States has only five percent (4.29%) of the population but more than 20% of global COVID-19 deaths.
Your fact-checker can confirm these statistics are true as verified by the Centers for Disease Control and Johns Hopkins Research. However, it is not a useful measurement of success or failure of the administration. The data point is skewed by the size of the U.S. population, the world's third largest.
Using the same metric (global population percentage and COVID deaths), Belgium's death count is seven-times greater than its population percentage. Chile, Spain and Britain are five times greater. Italy and Sweden have recorded fatalities that are a smidgen under five-times their population percentage.
It is a meaningless statistic if you a serious journalist determined to make apples-to-apples comparisons. But let's acknowledge critics' argument there are countries, such as Germany, who have done a better job in terms of managing the worse effects of the pandemic. Let's test that premise with data.
The statistics listed are from the following sources: World Health Organization, Johns Hopkins Research, Centers for Disease Control, Statista, a global provider of data. All numbers and percentages are as of October 2 reports.
- The United States has conducted 111 million Coronavirus tests. That is second only to China's 160 million, a country three times the size of America. The U.S. has conducted 336,250 tests per one million population. Israel (402,619) and the U.K. (368,471) are the only countries that rank higher than the U.S. on that metric, which is the fairest comparison. Germany ranks below the U.S. in tests per million (202,724).
- The U.S. ranks 48th in the world in fatality rates for the virus. The U.S. death rate as a percentage of confirmed cases is 2.87%. Italy, for example, is 11.2%. The United Kingdom is 9.2%, Germany (3.14%) and France (5.2%) are among the 47 countries with worst fatalities as a percent of confirmed cases.
- To adjust for population differences, it is fair to compare the data on deaths per 100,000 population. The U.S. ranks eleventh in the world on this metric (64.11 per million) with the United Kingdom only slightly behind. Belgium, Brazil and Mexico all rank higher. Germany has reported 15.21 deaths per million population, a lower rate than the U.S.
- The U.S. ranks seventh in the world in the number of confirmed cases per one-million population: 25,554. That means about 2.5% of America's population has been infected with the virus. Germany's rate is 3,703 confirmed cases per one-million with an infection rate of less than 1%. The U.S. has four times the population of Germany and America is more than 20 times larger than the European country in terms of land mass.
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