Research finds that inadequate US pandemic response cost more American lives than World War I

Research finds that inadequate US pandemic response cost more American lives than World War I

New analysis from researchers at the University of Oxford finds that from March to July this year, Europe had a 28% lower rate of excess deaths than the US - contrary to claims by President Donald Trump that Europe experienced greater excess mortality than the US.

Dr Janine Aron and Professor John Muellbauer’s research suggests that around 57,800 Americans would have survived had the US managed the pandemic as effectively as Europe. In other words, the US’s poor pandemic response may have cost the country more lives than World War I.

Excess deaths – the number by which actual deaths from all causes exceeds ‘normal deaths’ – is the best way of measuring lives lost to the pandemic. The proper way to compare the pandemic death toll across countries is to express excess deaths as a percentage of ‘normal deaths’. This eliminates differences in how countries count coronavirus deaths and differences in population sizes; and it provides a more complete picture of pandemic-related fatalities. With an apples-to-apples comparison it can then be inferred how effective different countries’ pandemic policies have been at protecting lives.

Using this measure, Dr. Aron and Prof. Muellbauer’s analysis shows that from March to July this year Europe had a 28% lower rate of  excess deaths than the US – revealing that repeated claims by Trump that Europe has experienced 33 to 40% higher excess mortality than the United States are false. 

The research notes that the US’s substantially higher statistical excess death rate is surprising since the US has had several advantages compared to Europe:

  • The pandemic hit Europe about three weeks earlier, giving the US extra preparation time and the chance to draw upon rapidly advancing knowledge regarding effective treatment, testing, and policies to suppress the virus.
  • The US’s younger population should have left it less vulnerable than Europe to a virus that hits the elderly disproportionately hard.
  • The US’s far less dense population should have meant the virus spread less easily there than it did in Europe.   

 Regional data paints an even starker picture:

  • The US Northeast – comparable to Europe in terms of population density – suffered over a third higher excess death rate than the worst-hit country in Europe, Spain.
  • The Southern US is significantly less dense than the Northeast and experienced its peak 15 weeks later, yet it suffered a higher rate of excess deaths than the European average.
  • Only the sparsely-populated US West did slightly better than the European average, but still had an excess death rate almost four times higher than densely-populated Germany.

Trump has tried to blame the US’s poor performance on Democratic governors and mayors. But the Oxford analysis adds to mounting evidence suggesting that the failure was national – coronavirus killed Americans at far higher rates than in other developed countries, whether in red states or blue.

To put the figures in perspective, if these 57,800 American lives had been lost to war, this would be the third deadliest war in US history - deadlier than both World War I and Vietnam.

Professor John Muellbauer, the study’s co-author, added, 'Studies comparing US states that explain these excess mortality patterns can lend policy insights, with proper controls for demographics, population density and racial composition, as well as for the timing of the pandemic.'

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