It's far lower than that. 0.013% was my calculation using the world health organization and johns hopkins numbers from their worldwide antibody study a few months ago, and the total number of deaths worldwide at that same time.
Exactly on par with the CDC's 2018 flu numbers, as far as mortality goes. Obviously the rate of spread and infection is way higher than the flu, so more people die, but not a higher percentage.
It's far lower than that. 0.013% was my calculation using the world health organization and johns hopkins numbers from their worldwide antibody study a few months ago, and the total number of deaths worldwide at that same time.
Exactly on par with the CDC's 2018 flu numbers, as far as mortality goes. Obviously the rate of spread and infection is way higher than the flu, so more people die, but not a higher percentage.