Covid: Biden calls 500,000 death toll a heartbreaking milestone

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Media caption,

Biden: "This nation will smile again"

President Joe Biden has addressed the nation as the US passed the figure of 500,000 Covid-related deaths, the highest number of any country.

"As a nation, we can't accept such a cruel fate. We have to resist becoming numb to the sorrow," he said on Monday.

The president and vice-president, and their spouses, then observed a moment of silence outside the White House during a candle-lighting ceremony.

Confirmed US infections now stand at 28.1 million, also a global record.

"Today I ask all Americans to remember. Remember those we lost and remember those we left behind," President Biden said, calling for Americans to fight Covid together.

Media caption,

The 'colourful' lives lost to Covid - how obituaries are helping us all mourn

How did Biden mark the occasion?

The president ordered all flags on federal property to be lowered to half mast for the next five days.

At the White House, he opened his speech by noting that the number of American deaths from Covid was higher than the death toll from World War One, World War Two, and the Vietnam War combined.

"Today we mark a truly grim, heartbreaking milestone - 500,071 dead," he said.

"We often hear people described as ordinary Americans," he went on to say. "There's no such thing, there's nothing ordinary about them. The people we lost were extraordinary. They span generations. Born in America, emigrated to America."

"So many of them took their final breath alone in America."

Image source, Reuters
Image caption,
Family mourn Gregory Blanks, 50, who died with Covid in January in Texas

He drew on his own experience with grief - his wife and daughter were killed in a car crash in 1972 and one of his sons died from brain cancer in 2015.

"I know what it's like to not be there when it happens. I know what it's like when you are there holding their hands; there's a look in their eye and they slip away," he said.

"For me, the way through sorrow and grief is to find purpose."

Mr Biden's approach to the pandemic is different to his predecessor, Donald Trump, who cast doubt on the impact of the deadly virus and was viewed as having politicised the wearing of masks and other measures needed to prevent the spread of the virus.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
President Biden, Vice-President Harris, the First Lady and the Second Gentleman during a moment of silence

On 19 January, one day before Mr Biden took office, he held an event to mark 400,000 Americans dying of the disease.

Monday's event, marking the latest death toll, comes about one month later.

Elsewhere in Washington, the bells at the National Cathedral tolled 500 times, once for every 1,000 Americans lost during the pandemic.

How has Covid affected the US?

Although numbers are now going in the right direction, hospital admissions - and deaths - remain high, as the key statistics show:

  • The 28.1 million confirmed US infections is nearly double that of second-highest India (11 million) and Brazil (10.1 million), according to Johns Hopkins University research
  • But the US ranks ninth in terms of deaths per 100,000 population, behind countries like the UK and Italy
  • At least 90,000 more Americans are expected to have died with the virus by 1 June, an Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) projection says. By late May, the virus will kill around 500 Americans per day - down from approximately 2,000 now
  • Hospital admission rates have fallen for 40 straight days
  • Average vaccine administrations per day now stand at 1.7 million, twice as many as when Mr Biden took office
  • The growing number of variants, which could spark new deadly outbreaks, remains a concern

Dr Ashish Jha, dean of the school of public health at Brown University, told BBC News: "A year ago I could not have imagined that half a million Americans would lose their lives to this disease.

"We have so much capability, so many resources... this was all preventable and should not have happened. And yet here we are."

The nation's top immunologist, Dr Anthony Fauci, told CNN on Sunday: "People decades from now are going to be talking about this as a terribly historic milestone in the history of this country, to have these many people to have died from a respiratory-borne infection."

Americans' average life expectancy has dropped by one full year due to Covid-19, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week. The change has been most acute among racial minorities, who have been disproportionally affected by the deadly virus.

Black men suffered the largest decline, with life expectancy dropping by three years between January and June 2020.

And Hispanic men saw a fall in life expectancy of 2.4 years during that period.

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