https://edition.cnn.com/2020/07/20/politics/donald-trump-coronavirus-mortality-rate-intl/index.html
During a meandering and occasionally hostile interview with Fox News
on Sunday, President Donald Trump made a very bold claim: that the
United States has the lowest mortality rate from Covid-19 anywhere in
the world.
"I heard
we have one of the lowest, maybe the lowest, mortality rate anywhere in
the world," Trump told "Fox News Sunday" host Chris Wallace. "Do you
have the numbers please? I heard we had the best mortality rate," he
added to White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, who was
off-camera.
When McEnany
returned with a piece of paper, Trump turned on Wallace. "Number one low
mortality rate," he said, attacking Wallace for reporting "fake news"
in the process. "You said we had the worst mortality rate in the world,
and we have the best."
But the President's claim is not true. And it's not even close.
The US in fact has one of the highest death rates
from the coronavirus of any country, and is worse than several
badly-hit countries like Brazil, Mexico and Russia, according to data
collected by Johns Hopkins University
According to Wallace, Trump also waved a graph showing a slightly different metric to tout his claim -- the case-fatality rate.
This
is simply a country's number of confirmed deaths divided by its number
of confirmed cases. It's a more problematic measure because it depends
heavily on how much testing a country is or is not doing. A country that
has consistently tested its general population will have a very low
case-fatality rate, while a country that tests only sick people in
hospitals will have a very high one.
Nonetheless,
the US still ranks in the top 60 countries worldwide by this measure,
according to JHU, around the same as Brazil and Peru and worse than
dozens of other nations.
In other words, there is no measure by which Trump's claim that the US has "the best" mortality rate is true.
Myth: No vaccine for a cornovirus has yet been successfully produced.
ReplyDeleteFact check: Actually, a vaccine for Ebola, which is a coronavirus related to Covid-19 was approved in January
https://www.statnews.com/2020/01/07/inside-story-scientists-produced-world-first-ebola-vaccine/
nope!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-51665497
ReplyDeletewhat nope?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/first-fda-approved-vaccine-prevention-ebola-virus-disease-marking-critical-milestone-public-health
It was approved in December 2019 by the FDA.
Coronoviruses include Ebola, Sars and covid 19.
remdesivir - the treatment nowbeing trialled for Covid 19 was designed to treat Ebola. They are related coronaviruses.
the BBC article uses "coronavirus" when it should say Covid-19.
ReplyDeleteThere are a whole class of viruses which are coronaviruses, including Sars, Ebola , Mers, and Covid 19
see
https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/middle-east-respiratory-syndrome-coronavirus-(mers-cov)
but one vaccine does not work for all of them!
ReplyDeleteNo, not yet.
ReplyDelete