The number is based on death certificates and other official records. But given how many diagnoses were probably missed in the spring of 2020, when testing was in short supply, and a lack of official guidance about reporting these records, that is certainly an undercount
It’s difficult to comprehend and convey the toll of the coronavirus pandemic, so it may not be surprising that there is no single way that federal agencies, newsrooms or universities have arrived at such an immense number as 1 million known U.S. coronavirus deaths.
Even the White House has acknowledged that there was no consensus method for tallying coronavirus data.
When Jen Psaki, then the White House press secretary, was asked last week how the administration would recognize the milestone, she said in part that “we look at the CDC data and the Johns Hopkins data, and different news organizations evaluate it differently.” Two days later, President Joe Biden anticipated the moment at his second COVID-19 summit.
“We mark a tragic milestone here in the United States: 1 million Covid deaths, 1 million empty chairs around the family dinner table — each irreplaceable,” Biden told the summit, which was held virtually. That came more than a week after NBC News said the mark had been reached but before some other tallies, including that of The New York Times, had crossed the threshold.
The number is based on death certificates and other official records. But given how many diagnoses were probably missed in the spring of 2020, when testing was in short supply, and a lack of official guidance about reporting these records, that is certainly an undercount, experts say.
©2019 New York Times News Service