First is that we have a much better grip on how to lock down nursing homes/LTC facilities. Around the time that the US hit 100K a study showed that 40K deaths were associated with those facilities
As sad as that is, if you are talking correct numbers then you should probably subtract the numbers of elderly that would have died from flu like viruses annually anyway. In effect just lumping covid in as another one of the infectious respiratory illnesses which is what it technically is. In my mum's small retirement village alone there are half a dozen deaths a year due to the flu, they "drop like flies every flu season" to use my mum's words.
Yes, I've been saying from the start that this whole thing is arse-backwards in terms of who's being protected. There should be police and a testing station and a system in place at the entry to every retirement village.
You will get no argument from me on how backwards this has been. The worst of what happened I think was at the medicaid-type facilities. Folks who have no money left for much of anything. That might also mean the most lower-skilled labor and the less sufficient amount of labor. Maybe I am being to pessimistic, but I think that they had only later Government involvement and the numbers were already staggering.
In one state, the Governor went out and bought 500K testing kits from, and get this, South Korea. After a while people wanted to know where all the deployment was and he told them - to cover the State's nursing homes.
As just a technical matter, they track documented corona deaths. There has been a lot of discussion about that and we (in the US) started added 'probable' deaths, but they make up a much smaller percentage. So, yeah, many of these folks were very vulnerable to a lot of things like all of the usual flu strains, but this is what was documented for that bin.
Nobody with much SME thinks that those documented case numbers are inflated - that is, most everyone thinks it is a low estimate.
But they got a handle on it eventually. People are basically not allowed to visit and some cases where the family looks through the window and with a phone is how they are spending their last days and it is heart wrenching.
Here is today's graph of corona deaths in the US showing what I was saying before regarding the decrease.