US becomes first country in world to 'officially' hit 100m Covid cases trends now
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America has become the first country to officially reach the milestone of 100million Covid infections - in what is likely a vast underestimate.
The latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that cumulative US cases hit nine figures on December 21.
India has the second-highest infection count at just 44million, according to the research database OurWorldInData, followed by France at 39million.
But the raw number of cases does not account for population size. When that is factored in, the US ranks just 58th worldwide.
The latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) show that cumulative US cases hit nine figures on December 21. India has the second-highest infection count at just 44million, according to the research database OurWorldInData , followed by France at 39million
Cumulative US Covid cases hit 100million on December 21 - making America the first country to surpass nine figures
The raw number does not factor in population size and is riddled with caveats - such as the US doing far more testing than most countries in the world. Here, the graph shows how the US has tamed its outbreak
Comparing Covid cases between countries is difficult because of the different testing and data collection approaches.
Only China has carried out more tests than the US — around 9 billion and 900 million, respectively.
But Beijing and places like Russia have been accused of suppressing case numbers to mask the fact that authoritarian regimes have struggled to contain outbreaks.
Dr John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and chief innovation officer at Boston Children's Hospital, said the US hitting 100million cases was a significant moment.
But he added it was likely a severe undercount because of the huge swathes of Americans who do not test or who are asymptomatic.
Dr Brownstein told ABC: 'Obviously it's a milestone that signifies the sheer amount of transmission that has occurred around this virus and the population burden that we have faced.
'At the same time, we recognize that reported cases are absolutely a massive undercount -- at the beginning of the pandemic where testing was nonexistent to the shift to home testing where a significant proportion of cases has gone unreported.
'I think we know that a large majority of the