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State Says Harvey's Death Toll Has Reached 88

Jorge Sanhueza-Lyon
/
KUT
Cars are submerged in water after Hurricane Harvey caused record flooding in Houston.

Hurricane Harvey has directly or indirectly taken the lives of as least 88 Texans, according to preliminary numbers released Friday by the Department of State Health Services.

The majority of deaths – 62 – were caused by wind, rain and floods, which led to drownings or trees falling on people. 

Meanwhile, 26 deaths were caused by "unsafe or unhealthy conditions" related to the loss or disruption of services such as utilities, transportation and medical care. The state health agency found deaths caused by medical conditions, electrocution, traffic accidents, flood water-related infections, fires and burns.

Deaths from natural causes are considered indirectly related to Harvey if physical or mental stress caused by the storm exacerbated "pre-existing medical conditions and contributed to death," the agency said.

The agency said another five deaths could be related to Harvey, but there's still not enough information to prove a connection. The final death count for Harvey isn't expected to be released until next year. 

The preliminary death toll is lower than that from Hurricane Rita in 2005, when a chaotic evacuation caused 73 deaths before the hurricane even reached Texas. That was more than half of the 139 deaths attributed to Rita, which veered away from Houston at the last minute and made landfall near the Texas-Louisiana border.

A dozen smaller Texas cities ordered residents to evacuate before Harvey, a category 4 hurricane that hit the Texas coast between Port Aransas and Port O'Connor on Aug. 25. Corpus Christi issued a voluntary evacuation, while Houston and Harris County — which didn't get a direct hit but experienced historic rainfall and flooding — didn't issue evacuation orders.

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From The Texas Tribune

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