How the coronavirus death toll compares to other pandemics, including SARS, HIV, and the Black Death
- The new coronavirus, and the illness it causes, COVID-19, have killed more than 44,000 people around the world so far.
- The viral illness is extremely contagious, and spreads from person to person easily through close contact.
- The most severe coronavirus cases (20%) often include difficulty breathing, and may require hospitalization, where patients may be hooked up to ventilators, which help blow more oxygen into a person's lungs.
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The novel coronavirus has already killed more than 3,000 people in China, 9,000 in Spain, 12,000 in Italy, and it isn't done yet.
In the US, the White House's Coronavirus Task Force has recently estimated that in a best case scenario, the virus may kill upwards of 200,000 people nationwide.
"We're very worried about every city in the United States, and the potential for this virus to get out of control," US coronavirus response coordinator Deborah Birx told NBC News on Monday morning. "If we do things together well, almost perfectly, we could get in the range of 100,000, 200,000 fatalities."
As of April 1, here's how the body count of COVID-19 - thus far - compares to other pandemics that have spread far and wide, with devastating consequences:
And get the latest coronavirus analysis and research from Business Insider Intelligence on how COVID-19 is impacting businesses.