Description
By Samuel Stebbins, 24/7 Wall St. Harrisburg
2021-10-15
Following a months long surge driven by the delta variant, new daily cases of COVID-19 are falling once again in the United States. Still, the virus continues to claim lives. So far, 710,757 Americans have died from the virus — more than the total number of Americans killed in World War I and World War II combined.
In the Harrisburg-Carlisle metropolitan area, located in Pennsylvania, a total of 1,297 deaths have been attributed to the virus, equal to 228 fatalities for every 100,000 people. Nationwide, 217 deaths have been attributed to the virus per 100,000 people.
The higher than average per capita COVID-19 death rate across the metro area is being driven by one area in particular.
The broader Harrisburg metro area comprises three counties or county equivalents — and of them, Perry County has had the most COVID-19 fatalities per capita. So far, the per capita coronavirus death rate in Perry County stands at 242 for every 100,000 people.
Though it has the highest per capita death rate in the Harrisburg-Carlisle metro area, Perry County ranks among the middle 50% of all U.S. counties or county equivalents by COVID-19 death rate per capita.
All COVID-19 data used in this story are current as of Oct. 13, 2021.
These are all the counties in Pennsylvania where COVID-19 is slowing (and where it's still getting worse).
Can't see the article's infographic? Click here to view the original story.This story was originally published by 24/7 Wall St., a news organization that produces real-time business commentary and data-driven reporting for state and local markets across the country.
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