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Coronavirus: US death toll passes 50,000 | |
(32 minutes later) | |
The US virus death toll has surpassed 50,000, according to data from Johns Hopkins University, in what is the world's deadliest Covid-19 outbreak. | |
More than 3,000 deaths came in the last 24 hours, and there are now over 870,000 confirmed cases nationwide. | |
But the US still has a lower mortality rate than most European nations based on current case counts, as the White House task force has emphasised. | |
Recent rises are also partly due to the inclusion of "probable" virus deaths. | |
The US has by far the highest death toll and case count in the world. | |
However, it has a population of 330 million, much higher than other worst affected countries such as Spain and Italy. | |
Dr Deborah Birx, an expert on the White House Covid-19 task force, has said the country has "one of the lowest mortality rates in the entire world". | |
On a per capita basis, the reported US death rate of 1.4 is lower than Spain, Italy, France, Belgium and the UK. | |
A grim report - but not the whole picture | |
The US is top of the grim league table for reported coronavirus deaths, but that's not the whole picture. | |
Part of the reason is population - many countries in Europe have reported more deaths per head of population than the US and Europe as a whole has reported more deaths overall. | |
But beware of comparing huge countries in this way. | |
The picture in New York is very different to the picture in the rest of the US and the same goes for other countries. | |
Italy really has two epidemics - one in the north of the country that overran health care and another down south that is much less advanced. | |
Death rates also depend on how you count - France's and Belgium's figures include suspected Covid cases, making their figures look a lot worse. |