Economy

U.S. hits 700,000 deaths despite widely available vaccine

The U.S. exceeded 700,000 COVID-19 deaths Friday night, half of them in the last nine months alone as the delta strain drove a brutal rise across the weary nation.

The United States reached 600,000 deaths in June, when daily deaths had fallen to under 400 amid hope that the crisis was near an end. As we know, vaccines were widely available to Americans for free.

However, three months 2,000 Americans are dying per day. The reason for the surge in infections is that individuals lost interest in the fight. Stadiums are full with maskless people, some in states that ban vaccination and mask requirements.

According to an associate professor and public health specialist at Butler University in Indianapolis, Ogbonnaya Omenka, COVID-19 death will likely reach 800,000, saying that the specter of even 1 million deaths looms. Omenka said that winter will urge people will socialize inside, which increases transmission risk.

In September, Biden announced that all hospitals that take Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement must vaccinate their staff. However, health leaders are concerned workforce disruptions punctuate a widespread shortage of health care workers at hospitals and clinics around the world.

Florida suffered the most death of any state during the COVID-19 pandemic. Remarkably, the COVID-19 virus has killed around 17,000 residents since the middle of June. Meanwhile, Texas was second with 13,000 deaths. The two states account for 15% of the U.S.’s population. Meanwhile, they account for more than 30% of the nation’s deaths since the nation crossed the 600,000 threshold.

Two studies this week has found that lingering COVID-19 symptoms to be common

Two studies this week that has found lingering coronavirus symptoms to be common, especially among individuals with severe cases.

Notably, the National Institute for Health Research and the Oxford University published study on Tuesday. The study showed that among 270,000 patients recovering from coronavirus that researchers examined, 37% still had at least one symptom three to six months later.

Notably, the study concluded that coronavirus seems to be associated with long-term effects that are common and diverse.

Furthermore, the study showed that the most common lingering symptoms were trouble breathing, abdominal issues, fatigue, pain, anxiety, and depression.

Moreover, the study also made a note of cognitive symptoms, including brain fog. It is characterized by word-finding difficulties or poor concentration. Cognitive symptoms are showing up in around 8% of patients and are more common among the elderly.

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Amanda Hansen

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