Doctor who's CNN and WaPo medical expert admits number of COVID deaths have been OVERCOUNTED

Almost three years since the coronavirus pandemic took hold, CNN medical analyst and Washington Post columnist Dr. Leana Wen has admitted the medical community is ‘overcounting’ the number of ‘COVID deaths and hospitalizations.’ 

In an opinion piece entitled: ‘We are overcounting COVID deaths and hospitalizations. That’s a problem,’ Wen cites sources that claim that most ‘patients diagnosed with COVID are actually in the hospital for some other illness.’

Wen begins: ‘According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the United States is experiencing around 400 COVID deaths every day. At that rate, there would be nearly 150,000 deaths a year. But are these Americans dying from COVID or with COVID?’

Wen states: ‘Understanding this distinction is crucial to putting the continuing toll of the coronavirus into perspective. Determining how likely it is an infection will result in hospitalization or death helps people weigh their own risk.’

Dr. Leana Wen says the number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 may be greater than the number of people actually dying from the virus

Dr. Leana Wen says the number of deaths attributed to COVID-19 may be greater than the number of people actually dying from the virus

Robin Dretler, an attending physician at Emory Decatur Hospital, who estimates that at his hospital, 90% of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 are actually in the hospital for some other illness.

Robin Dretler, an attending physician at Emory Decatur Hospital, who estimates that at his hospital, 90% of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 are actually in the hospital for some other illness.

Wen had the backing of two other infectious-disease experts who also believe that the number of deaths attributed to COVID is greater than the actual number of people dying from the virus. 

She cites one expert, Robin Dretler, an attending physician at Emory Decatur Hospital, who estimates that at his hospital, 90% of patients diagnosed with COVID-19 are actually in the hospital for some other illness. 

Dretler said that this contributes to imprecise reporting on COVID-19 deaths and hospitalizations, which he claims does not come from a place of bad intent. 

‘Since every hospitalized patient gets tested for COVID many are incidentally positive. If these patients die, COVID might get added to their death certificate along with the other diagnoses. But the coronavirus was not the primary contributor to their death and often played no role at all,’ Dretler told Wen.

The doctor also cites another infectious-disease physician, Shira Doron, who found that in recent months, only about 30% of total hospitalizations with COVID-19 were primarily attributed to the virus in Massachusetts hospitals. 

Infectious-disease physician, Shira Doron acknowledges that there is a gray zone in the data in which COVID might not be the primary cause of death but could have contributed to it

Infectious-disease physician, Shira Doron acknowledges that there is a gray zone in the data in which COVID might not be the primary cause of death but could have contributed to it

‘During some days the proportion of those hospitalized because of COVID were as low as 10 percent of the total number reported’ who had COVID.

Wen states, ‘Doron acknowledges that there is a gray zone in the data in which COVID might not be the primary cause of death but could have contributed to it.’

There is common ground between the trio of doctors who agree that ‘inadvertently overstating risk can make the anxious more anxious and the skeptical more skeptical.’ 

‘To be clear, if the COVID death count turns out to be 30 percent of what’s currently reported, that’s still unacceptably high,’ Wen declares.

Her observations have prompted some readers to criticize the timing of her column, stating that the information is ‘two and a half years late’ while others have criticized the Washington Post for not highlighting this issue earlier.

California-based Epidemiologist Dr. Tracy Høegn tweeted 'Amazing how long it has taken the U.S. to accept this is a problem.'

California-based Epidemiologist Dr. Tracy Høegn tweeted ‘Amazing how long it has taken the U.S. to accept this is a problem.’

J. Michael Waller an analyst with the far-right, anti-Muslim, Washington, D.C.-based think tank, Center for Security Policy, noted how times had changed

J. Michael Waller an analyst with the far-right, anti-Muslim, Washington, D.C.-based think tank, Center for Security Policy, noted how times had changed

California-based Epidemiologist Dr. Tracy Høegn tweeted: ‘Spring 2021 [USA] had good evidence >40% of child COVID admissions were incidental. 2021 Denmark announced they’d distinguish with vs from COVID hosp. COVID+ deaths in [Denmark] in 2022 [were] 60-70% incidental.’ 

‘Amazing how long it has taken the U.S. to accept this is a problem,’ she added

J. Michael Waller an analyst with the far-right, anti-Muslim, Washington, D.C.-based think tank, Center for Security Policy, noted how times had changed.

‘Not long ago, the Washington Post was calling us conspiracy theorists for saying such things.’

President of the Brownstone Institute, Jeffrey Tucker tweeted, ‘This is not just recently true. It’s been true for three years! We truly do not know how many actually died from COVID, which means that not even the CFR is accurate.’

The Brownstone Institute is a libertarian-leaning think tank founded to respond to government policies regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, opposing COVID lockdowns and vaccine mandates. 

Schools in Michigan and another school system in Massachusetts are bringing back requirements for people to wear face masks. A school system in Chicago, Illinois, is now asking pupils to test negative for Covid before coming to the school

There have ben almost 1.1 million covid deaths in the U.S. since the start of the pandemic and 6.7 million globally.

Covid cases in the US have risen 16 percent in a week nationally according to the latest data available, to about 67,000 new cases a day.

This is thanks to a new highly infectious variant XBB.1.5, and higher mixing this winter during the first normal festive season in years.

But experts tell DailyMail.com that XBB.1.5 is not more dangerous than other variants, and that the winter rise was always to be expected because respiratory diseases spread more in the colder months when people spend more time indoors.

Covid cases in the US remain below levels that they reached over the summer, with about 470,000 cases now being recorded every week, or 67,000 a day

Covid cases in the US remain below levels that they reached over the summer, with about 470,000 cases now being recorded every week, or 67,000 a day

This graph shows Covid deaths in the United States by week, which have risen. Experts say this could be down to reporting, however

This graph shows Covid deaths in the United States by week, which have risen. Experts say this could be down to reporting, however

As Covid cases remain steady, hospitalizations with flu have continued to decline after flu season took off early this year

As Covid cases remain steady, hospitalizations with flu have continued to decline after flu season took off early this year

While Covid cases have risen slightly after Christmas, flu has ebbed after surging early this year likely due to lower immunity levels. 

The latest CDC data shows a total of 11 states now have ‘very high’ flu levels, about half of the 21 states hitting this threshold in the previous week.

Cases and hospitalizations with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are also dropping. About 2.4 people per 100,000 were admitted to wards with the disease in the third week of December, the latest available, down from 3.3 previously.

But despite the ebbing tide of infectious diseases, schools in a total of five states have moved to bring back mask requirements.

A total of 21 states had 'very high' flu levels in the week to December 24

But by the following week this had dropped by almost half to just 11

A total of 11 states currently have ‘very high’ flu levels (left), according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That is about half the 21 at this threshold in the previous week. States with ‘very high’ flu levels are colored in purple and the two darkest reds shown on the map. Those that are purple have the absolute highest levels

Hospitalizations with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are also on the way down, after spiking early this year to above levels seen over the previous five years

Hospitalizations with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) are also on the way down, after spiking early this year to above levels seen over the previous five years

source: dailymail.co.uk