I just found this:
This means 1 out of 54 adults over 75 has died of COVID in New York City, and 1 out of 142 adults 65-74 has died of COVID. It got me curious to compare to the rest of the US. About 1 out of 160 adults over 65 has died. I didn't find info on how many more ended up in the ICU or in the general hospital, but I did find an article that says, even when confounding variables are accounted for like differences in age, hospital capacity, etc. a person is 3x more likely of dying in March than August. They are mostly attributing that to better treatments because they factored out all other variables. I'm sure things have vastly changed from August though because the hospitals are much more constrained on resources. I wouldn't want to be having to get hospitalized now. I keep telling my parents just to isolate. Luckily my mom has gotten her first vaccine shot.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...new-york-city/
https://www.statista.com/statistics/...vid-by-age-us/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/a-...hy-11604502372