Tom Brady received a "False" rating onPolitiFact 's "Truth-O-Meter" on Tuesday.- The Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback claimed in an Instagram story that there have been "more
suicide deaths thancoronavirus deaths [in the] last two months." - According to PolitiFact, "there are no national numbers that back this up" and that "it is impossible for the suicide rate to have increased to surpass the
COVID-19 death rate."
Tom Brady may be thriving on the gridiron in recent weeks, but he's having a bit of trouble hitting his targets off the field.
On Tuesday, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback posted an Instagram story from his personal account in which he declared that there have been "more suicide deaths than coronavirus deaths [in the] last two months."
But according to PolitiFact — a fact-checking website run by The Poynter Institute — Brady's claim has no basis in fact.
In an article published Tuesday, PolitiFact senior correspondent Jon Greenberg debunked the Super Bowl champion's claims, citing data from the National Center for Health Statistics, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the COVID Tracking Project, and the Quarterly Journal of Medicine to do so.
The most recent reliable statistics on death by suicide came from 2018, when an average of 4,026 reported suicides occurred every month in the United States. By contrast, COVID-19 has killed at least four times that amount of people in each of the last several months. And though there's no data available to determine whether or not there's been an uptick in the rate of deaths by suicide each month, President of the American Association of Suicidology Dr. Jonathan Singer says that an increase that significant is "just impossible."
"There's no way this can be true," he added.
According to Greenberg, roughly 19,000 Americans died of the novel coronavirus back in June, a month in which he reports that COVID-19 deaths in the US were falling. As a third wave of the pandemic picks up steam in the country, approximately 22,000 people are dying of COVID-19 each month.
For this reason, PolitiFact rated Brady's claim "False," adding that "there are no national numbers that back this up."
Check out Brady's inaccurate story from Tuesday below:
- Read more:
- Antonio Brown signs with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and reunites with Tom Brady, but he won't be able to play right away
- How DK Metcalf's 23 MPH full-field, chase-down tackle unfolded as one of the best plays of the NFL season
- DeAndre Hopkins flipped off Trump supporters from his Ferrari while driving through their caravan on his way to the Cardinals game
- Mookie Betts and the Dodgers were 'excited' when the Rays made the controversial decision to take ace Blake Snell out of the game