MichVandal
Well-known member
So I will admit at being very lazy....
But it seems to me that the potential of post May- look at DC. This is mostly a tightly packed area of people, much higher density than most of the country, and it has some of the lowest death rates. I very much remembering pointing that out when the Dakotas caught on fire later in the year. That may be not the best one to look at...
Looking at the data- it seems that the area that has the lowest overall death rate is Puerto Rico- where 3,563 died of a population of about 3.2M. If you extrapolate that to the rest of the country, it is just about 370,000 deaths. (have to update a spreadsheet to really model it) And I will say, I know the healthcare system there is not all that great. They did a lot to prevent the spread.
There's a lot of ways to model it, but I really think it's safe to say that under 500,000 deaths was very possible had it not been for the massive resistance. Which would also mean the economy would be a lot stronger at this point.
A follow up...
I did the deaths per state and then used that data to extrapolate to the entire country.
Hawai'i was the lowest death rate, and if extrapolated to the rest of the 330M, ~260k deaths.
But it could be worse- extrapolate Mississippi, we would be 1.18M deaths.
For the most part, the list follows redness. Michigan sucks at 1.03M extrapolated. Maine is not bad at 413k. And California seems to be better than "average" at 657k.