On January 11, 2023

Health Dept. data review finds 86 additional Covid deaths in Vermont

Following an analysis of Covid-19 data, the Vermont Dept. of Health is reporting a cumulative 86 additional Covid-associated deaths that occurred over the course of the pandemic but had not been previously reported. Most of these deaths occurred in 2022. This  brings the total number of Covid-19 deaths in Vermont to 877, as of Jan. 6.

 The additional deaths were identified through a health dept. review of Covid-19 data that took place shortly before the holidays. Deaths are reported by the Office of the Chief medical examiner and must be manually entered into the state’s epidemiology surveillance system. An analyst reviewing the data identified several reports that had not been entered. The  department said this was due in part to the reduction in staff capacity as it scaled back from peak emergency operation. 

Health Commissioner Mark Levine said, “I regret that these data were not reported in a more timely manner, but it is important to understand that because these deaths occurred over time — and spread across many months from across the state — we are confident this would not have had an impact on the trajectory of the data or on our approach to the pandemic.”

While Vermont’s Covid-19 death rate will now increase from 126 per 100,000 to 140 per 100,000, it is still the lowest in the continental U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Levine said the data team moved quickly to compile, review and enter the additional reports into the surveillance system.

For more information and current data, visit healthvermont.gov/covid-19 .

Do you want to submit feedback to the editor?

Send Us An Email!

Related Posts

Good news, progress,and more work to come

May 7, 2025
The best news of the week was that Mohsen Madawi was released from detention here in Vermont.  The federal government offered no acceptable justification for Madawi’s detention, and, as a result, Judge Crawford of Vermont’s U.S. District Court freed him. The conditions of his release seem relatively simple: he is now free to go back…

Threading the needle

May 7, 2025
Last Thursday, May 1, the full Senate approved its version of the state budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1 with numerous changes from the House. On Friday the House and Senate appointed a conference committee (three House and three Senate members) to work out the differences between the two chambers. Once that happens,…

Sanders introduces Medicare for All

May 7, 2025
U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders, ranking member of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP), alongside Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) and Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.), introduced the Medicare for All Act last Tuesday, April 29. Hundreds of nurses, health care providers and workers from around the nation joined the lawmakers for a press conference in…

Why did the herp cross the road? ‘Big Nights’ mean big risks for amphibians and reptiles

May 7, 2025
By Theresa Golub Editor’s note: This story is via Community News Service in partnership with Vermont State University Castleton. Across Vermont, the songs of spring peepers marking the change in seasons. Temperatures rise, snow melts and water runs into the dips and divots of the land to form vernal pools.  Biologists call those springtime basins the…