The Office for National Statistics in England says that as of April 17th deaths in England and Wales due to COVID19 is undercounted by at least 54%.
Official number on the date was over 14K, actual number was over 22K.
Two recent polls suggest that support for stay at home measures is still strong right now.
Reuters/IPSOS poll last week has support for maintaining stay at home orders even if it negatively impacts the economy at 72%, 17% support re-opening even if cases and deaths increase.
The Reuters poll does show the support for stay at home measures starting to wane some among Republicans (55% in favor, 45% oppose, that's up from 24% of Republicans at the end of March)
Politico/Morning Consult poll released today puts support for the stay at home orders even if it negatively impacts the economy at 73% with opening even if deaths and cases increase at 15%.
In the Morning Consult poll 79% said it was very or somewhat likely there will be a second wave.
In the State of GA a poll released last night puts the numbers for the stay at home order as 52% favor, 24% somewhat favor, 15% neutral, 6% somewhat oppose, 3% oppose. In terms of businesses closing 51% favor, 26% somewhat favor, 14% neutral, 6% somewhat oppose, 4% oppose.
Approval for Gov Kemp's plan to re-open: 43% strongly oppose, 19% somewhat oppose, 14% neutral, 14% somewhat approve, 10% strongly approve
Measures taken by the Federal Government: 52% appropriate, 14% gone too far, 34% not gone far enough
Measures taken by the state government: 44% appropriate, 15% gone too far, 42% not gone far enough
The CDC website has 7 different models on its website currently. One looks at actual deaths due to mitigation compared to likely deaths if no mitigation was taken.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/forecasting-us.html
It has likely actual deaths as of May 18th at 89,795 (range 63,719 - 127,002). Deaths if no mitigation measures had been taken in the US as of May 13th of 1,010,974 (range of 769,511-1,315,961)