Here are the laterst updates from:
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/:
- Cases_20211126.png (68.83 KiB) Viewed 2308 times
- Deaths_20211126.png (70.64 KiB) Viewed 2308 times
That web site also provides numerical values for any point in those curves. I've used that feature to get the numeric values from the peaks of cases and deaths from the peak in April of 2020 and the recent peak in September of 2021:
Peaks from April of 2020 showing 30,108 cases and 2,256 deaths:
- Deaths_2020_04_Peak.png (94.76 KiB) Viewed 2308 times
Peaks from September 2021 showing 163,949 cases and 1,998 deaths:
- Cases_2021_09_Peak.png (83.41 KiB) Viewed 2308 times
- Deaths_2021_09_Peak.png (84.16 KiB) Viewed 2308 times
While these numbers may not be the exact peaks, they are close enough for the following analysis:
The April 2020 peaks show about 30,108 cases and 2,256 deaths. That's about 1 death for every 13.35 cases.
The September 2021 peaks show about 163,949 cases and 1,998 deaths. That's about 1 death for every 82.05 cases.
In other words, the virus is about 6 times less deadly to our population today than it was when the pandemic first started. This is likely due to vaccinations, natural immunity, better treatment, and the earlier deaths of those most vulnerable.