I would be VERY careful with those numbers. I have a feeling that the sources being cited there to put that together are missing a lot of lagging data.wilmwolf80 said:
I saw it said somewhere that deaths in general over the last three months were down 4% from the same period last year, but I didn't follow through to see if that was actually accurate or not.
North Carolina is one of the worst for reporting deaths to the CDC for counts like these. So it could be possible that a number of states don't have their death tolls up to date and it make things look better than they are.
You will notice that in the linked charts NC has 0 COVID deaths. That shows you how far behind they are in their reports.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/COVID19/
Although, it would be interesting to see if we had a particularly weak flu year, if that didn't contribute to the later increased COVID death toll since a larger amount of the susceptible population wasn't killed by flu. At any rate, I guess we will know next year.