To: scion who wrote (12736 ) 2/23/2021 8:30:38 PM From: scion Respond to of 12881 Live updates: Congress holds moment of silence for 500,000 lives lost to coronavirus Latest: Analysis: Putting 500,000 covid-19 deaths into perspective By Erin Cunningham, Paul Schemm and Paulina Firozi Feb. 24, 2021 at 1:13 a.m. GMTPLEASE NOTE The Washington Post is providing this important information about the coronavirus for free. For more free coverage of the coronavirus pandemic, sign up for our Coronavirus Updates newsletter where all stories are free to read. A day after a similar gesture by President Biden, on Tuesday evening congressional leaders from both parties held a moment of silence on the steps of the U.S. Capitol for the 500,000 lives lost to the coronavirus. Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious-disease expert, called the U.S. death toll “stunning” and said “intense” political divisiveness contributed to the nation’s poor handling of the pandemic. ... 1:13 a.m. Link copiedAnalysis: Putting 500,000 covid-19 deaths into perspective By Philip BumpWe don’t actually know how many people have died of complications from covid-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus that likely arrived in the United States at some point last year. There are a lot of reasons for that, including the uncertainty around when the virus actually arrived. We don’t know how many people may have died of covid-19 without the disease having been confirmed. We can compare the death toll with prior years and see that the United States recorded hundreds of thousands more deaths in 2020 than in 2019, but at this point we’re talking about a scale at which individual tragedies become blurry. To historians, the difference between 500,500 deaths and 499,500 deaths is a subtle one in the “a million deaths is a statistic” sense. In human terms, those 1,000 deaths are 1,000 people vanished from the Earth sooner than would otherwise have happened. It’s also unclear how many deaths have occurred because the data we have are necessarily out of date, playing catch-up as deaths occur each day or are tallied from deaths in the past. Virginia, for example, is still logging deaths that occurred during the holidays. As the pandemic emerged, there was no real-time central clearinghouse of data on coronavirus deaths, leading media outlets to generate their own varying counts. Those are usually not in sync. But even if we knew with certainty that the country’s 500,000th coronavirus death occurred this week, it’s a scale that’s simply beyond our ability to apprehend. Read the full story washingtonpost.com