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Covid-19 3rd-highest cause of death in MT for 2020

Trails only heart disease and cancer
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HELENA — Covid-19 was the third-leading cause of death for Montanans in 2020, behind only heart disease and cancer – and is likely to maintain that spot in 2021, the state health department reported Monday.

The acting state medical officer also said these Covid-19 deaths are “almost entirely preventable” – if people are vaccinated.

“Vaccination is the best protection against Covid-19 infection and at preventing severe Covid-19 outcomes,” said Maggie Cook-Shimanek. “We continue to urge eligible Montanans who have not gotten vaccinated to get vaccinated – and for those who are eligible, to get the booster shot.”

The report also said the death rate for Native Americans in Montana, from Covid-19, is four times the rate of the White population. The report’s number are provisional and may be subject to adjustment, state officials said.

According to the report, 1,258 Montanans died last year from Covid-19 and 842 Montanans have died from the disease during the first nine months of this year, the report said. With October’s reported 258 deaths, the 2021 total for Covid-19 is 1,100.

The top two leading causes of death in Montana, for 2015-2019, were heart disease (2,206 per year) and cancer (2,088 per year), the report said.

The age-adjusted Covid-19 death rate for Montanans stands at 73 for every 100,000 people, which is below the national average of 87 per 100,000 people, the report said. Also, 1,430 of the 2,100 Montanans who died from Covid-19 through September, or 69 percent, had at least one underlying health condition.

The most common underlying conditions are diabetes, cardiovascular disease or respiratory disease.

The highest number of Covid-19 deaths occurred from last October-December, with November 2020 the highest month at 404 deaths. October 2020 was second with 363 and last month is the third-highest, at 258 deaths.

The number of monthly deaths bottomed out at 29 in May, but has been steadily increasing throughout the summer and fall.

The report also said that no one under 18 has died from Covid-19 in Montana, only five people under 30 and 100 under 50 years old.