CT Coronavirus: 373 Deaths Projected By August

This article originally appeared on the Milford Patch

CONNECTICUT — The coronavirus pandemic could take as many as 373 lives in Connecticut over the next four months, according to projections by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.

The Seattle-based institute, affiliated with the University of Washington and supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, based its projections using the expected peak of the infection in each state and the number of hospital beds, intensive-care beds and ventilators available for COVID-19 patients when most needed.

For the United States as a whole, the institute predicted that coronavirus infections will peak on April 14, when the nationwide supply of hospital beds for COVID-19 patients will fall 50,000 short of the supply and intensive-care beds for such patients will fall short by nearly 15,000. Nationwide, deaths on that date will top 2,300, the institute predicted, and would total more than 81,000 by Aug. 4.

The authors of the research article containing these findings wrote, “Our estimate of 81 thousand deaths in the US over the next 4 months is an alarming number, but this number could be substantially higher if excess demand for health system resources is not addressed and if social distancing policies are not vigorously implemented and enforced across all states.”

In Connecticut, the institute projects the infection rate to peak April 10, when the number of beds available for coronavirus patients will be 1,738 and 1,532 beds will be needed. The number of intensive-care beds will fall 140 short of the 239 needed.

On that peak date, deaths are expected to total 181 and 378 Connecticut residents could die by Aug. 4, the institute said. (To sign up for free, local breaking news alerts from more than 100 Connecticut communities, click here.)

See related: Coronavirus CT Updates: Town-By-Town Updated Numbers

In making projections for the states, the institute took note of whether and when they issued stay-at-home orders, closed schools, closed other nonessential services and imposed travel bans.

"The estimated excess demand on hospital systems is predicated on the enactment of social distancing measures in all states that have not done so already within the next week and maintenance of these measures throughout the epidemic, emphasizing the importance of implementing, enforcing, and maintaining these measures to mitigate hospital system overload and prevent deaths," the authors wrote.

In Connecticut, schools were closed on March 17 and nonessential services were ordered closed March 23.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, one of the faces of the Trump administration's coronavirus task force, on Sunday warned that the coronavirus could infect millions of people in the United States and account for more than 100,000 deaths.

Speaking on CNN's "State of the Union," Fauci said that based on what he's seeing, the U.S. could experience between 100,000 and 200,000 deaths from COVID-19.

"We're going to have millions of cases," said Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, noting that projections are subject to change, given that the disease's outbreak is "such a moving target."