New Study Estimates Nearly 3,000 People Died in Puerto Rico Following Hurricane Maria
A long-awaited George Washington University study estimating the death toll in Puerto Rico as a result of Hurricane Maria has found that the number of excess deaths in the months that followed was many times that of the government’s official death toll, and was the most deadly natural disaster in the United States in more than a century.
In the new report, which was commissioned by Puerto Rican Governor Ricardo Roselló, GWU’s Milken Institute School of Public Health “estimated there were 2,975 excess deaths in Puerto Rico due to Hurricane Maria from September 2017 through the end of February 2018,” according to a press release. GWU carried out the study by analyzing death certificates “and other mortality data” over the six-month period and comparing the number of deaths to the expected total “based on historical patterns,” the release said.
The official government death toll was 64 as of this month, but the number found by the GWU study is even higher than expected; in June, the Puerto Rican government released findings that an estimated 1,427 people died between September and December 2017 relative to the average over the same time period over the last four years. The GWU report says that over that time period (without counting the first two months of 2018), an estimated 2,098 people died.