Here’s a vaguely similar thread from July
Though that was mostly folks talking about their own personal harmed/unharmed factors, not speculating on larger-scale statistics.
Within my circle of friends and neighbors here in one of the biggest COVID hotspots during the summer, substantially 100% of them are merely inconvenienced. In some cases they’re sheltering pretty hard and eventually that lack of social interaction is going to take a toll on their mental or physical health. But so far that’s probably not an irreversible change for any of them.
That’s a small sample of roughly 100 households, and very un-diverse.
I think that if we were to rank order people by severity of impact, we’d have the dead, the crippled, a bunch of destroyed small businesses and shattered marriages, then a very long tail of people inconvenienced to greater then lesser degrees.
A fairly small percentage of everyone has born the brunt of the disease and born the brunt of the reactions to the disease.