National

Los Angeles (US), June 14: Impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, U.S. state of Montana saw more deaths than births for the first time since that data had been tracked in 1908, but experts said this historic phenomenon in the rural state was not a particular case in the United States.
The Independent Record newspaper based in Helena, capital city of Montana, reported Sunday that early and provisional data from the state's health department showed that the state's mortality rate increased by 14 percent in 2020 to 12,018 deaths, surpassing the 10,791 live births.
In 2019, births outpaced deaths in Montana by 677, the report said, adding that last year there were approximately 1,900 excess deaths compared to the average over the five previous years.
Kenneth M. Johnson, senior demographer at the Carsey School of Public Policy and professor of sociology at the University of New Hampshire and an Andrew Carnegie Fellow, was quoted by the report as saying that not only in Montana, COVID-19 had a "dramatic and immediate impact on deaths in the U.S."
Johnson released a paper titled "Deaths Exceeded Births in a Record Number of States in 2020" last month, in which births outpaced deaths in Montana by 677 in 2019, but there were 1,200 more deaths than births in 2020.
Johnson' research showed that Montana's neighboring states like Wyoming and the Dakotas also saw similar trends, and nationwide, 25 states reported more deaths than births last year - this was the first time that happened in all but five states.
The surge of deaths was caused directly by COVID-19 as well as other factors impacted by the pandemic, Johnson explained in an email to the newspaper.
"People delaying treatment for other diseases, being reluctant to get medical tests that might have detected disease early and deaths that may have occurred because people were reluctant to go to a hospital if they had chest pains," Johnson said.
Johnson's research also noted that in 2020, the impact of COVID-19 contributed to a record 3,376,000 deaths in the United States: 18 percent more than in 2019. In addition, births diminished by 4 percent to 3,605,000 in 2020.
"The surplus of births over deaths added just 229,000 to the population in 2020 compared to 892,000 in 2019: a decline of 74 percent," the paper said. "This decline coupled with diminished immigration produced the United States' smallest annual percentage population gain in at least 100 years."
Source: Xinhua