At least 90,000 COVID-19 deaths since June were preventable: KFF analysis

Source: The Hill | October 13, 2021 | Justine Coleman

At least 90,000 COVID-19 deaths among unvaccinated adults since June could have been prevented with vaccines that were widely available, a Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF) analysis released Wednesday found.

Most of the preventable fatalities — about 49,000 — occurred last month as the highly transmissible delta variant took its toll on the U.S. and sparked a surge in cases. 

To determine whether a death was preventable, researchers started with all unvaccinated deaths since June — about six weeks after all adults in the U.S. became eligible to receive a coronavirus vaccine, or enough time for full immunity to set in after a two-dose vaccine. Researchers then used results from a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) study that the vaccine was 91 percent effective against deaths to estimate how many unvaccinated fatalities were preventable.

September was a brutal month for COVID-19 deaths, as an average of 1,899 people died due to the virus every day, making it the second-leading cause of death that month behind heart disease, which caused about 2,000 deaths per day.

The virus also reached the highest cause of death among people ages 35 to 54 last month and reached the top seven causes in all age groups. 

COVID-19 had dropped from the leading cause of death in the U.S. to eighth place in July, before the delta variant, eased restrictions and lower vaccination rates allowed fatalities to climb, according to the analysis.

The U.S. endured more COVID-19 deaths among those ages 25 to 54 in August and September than during any other month previously during the pandemic, even though vaccines had become available. 

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