The COVID-19 pandemic has inundated people with waves of numbers about infections and positivity rates and diagnostic test performance, but the milestone Minnesota reached this weekend is sobering.
Two thousand deaths.
That's the population of Hinckley, Eyota, or Warroad.
"Two thousand is a big number," said Dr. Rahul Koranne of the Minnesota Hospital Association. "That's heartbreaking."
Minnesota took about two months to reach its first 1,000 COVID-19 deaths in late May, but then four months to reach the next 1,000 — a slowdown that reflects changes in the spread of the virus, improvements in oxygen management of hospitalized patients, and interventions that cut outbreaks in long-term care facilities that were particularly deadly.
State health leaders paused silently at a meeting Friday to absorb the death toll and contemplate what Minnesota has learned amid the pandemic and what it has lost.
"We want to acknowledge the positives, but I also think people need to realize that COVID did not magically go away or get to be a better virus over the last few months," said Kris Ehresmann, state infectious disease director. "There just have been some other factors that have contributed" to slowing the death rate.
Many trends held from the first 1,000 deaths to the second. Age was the dominant risk factor, with 81% of deaths involving people 70 or older. Minorities continue to suffer more deaths at younger ages, representing 61% of COVID-19 deaths under age 65.