Death expectancy exceeds death count in Kansas during week ending Feb. 26

Death expectancy exceeds death count in Kansas during week ending Feb. 26
0Comments

Kansas’s death count did not exceed death expectancy during the week ending Feb. 26, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Kansas suffered 503 deaths when 572 were expected.

Excess deaths are defined as the difference between the observed number of deaths reported and the average expected number of deaths, based on the same time periods. Death counts are compared with historical trends to identify whether the number of deaths is significantly higher than expected.

A study at the University of California San Francisco examined the death rates relating to pandemic-related unemployment. It projected the spring 2020 rise in unemployment would lead to 30,231 excess deaths within the 25 to 64-year-old age range in the following 12 months.

“Adequately responding to the pandemic involves not only controlling COVID-19 cases and deaths but also addressing indirect social and economic consequences,” said Ellicott Matthay, a postdoctoral scholar with the Center for Health and Community at UCSF, in a paper published by the American Journal of Public Health.

Kansas death count compared to deaths expected during week ending Feb. 26

#c3js_svg_graph text{font-size: 14px;}#c3js_svg_graph .c3-tooltip td, #c3js_svg_graph .c3-tooltip th{font-size: 16px;}#c3js_svg_graph{max-height: 200 px;}



Related

Duston J. Slinkard Acting United States Attorney for the District of Kansas

Federal grand jury indicts several individuals for immigration and firearm offenses in Kansas

A federal grand jury in Kansas City has indicted several Mexican nationals for alleged immigration violations and gun possession offenses as announced on April 8. Authorities stress that all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

Lt. Governor Scott Bedke

Kansas sees 0.6% drop in general sales and gross receipts taxes collections in 2024

Out of the $13.1 billion in total tax revenue collected by Kansas in 2024, $4.3 billion came from general sales and gross receipts taxes, representing a decrease from the previous year, when the total was $4.4 billion, according to the U.S. Census Bureau’s Annual Survey of State Government Tax Collections (STC).

Sen. Jerry Moran, US Senator for Kansas

Sen. Moran hosts NASA Administrator Isaacman for Kansas aerospace tour and museum visit

Senator Jerry Moran welcomed NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman for tours highlighting Kansan contributions to Artemis II spacecraft development. The officials visited key manufacturing sites before attending an opening ceremony at Hutchinson’s Cosmosphere museum.

Trending

The Weekly Newsletter

Sign-up for the Weekly Newsletter from Sunflower State News.