Normal flu in Italy usually takes a toll of 4000-8000 deaths per year, considering all the indirect cases. The direct ones are around 400.Angelo, I'd be curious for your take on this paper, published back in November:
Investigating the impact of influenza on excess mortality in all ages in Italy during recent seasons (2013/14–2016/17 seasons) - ScienceDirect
It suggests that in 2016/17, there were 25,000 fatalities in Italy due to the regular flu (it was a bad flu year).
At the moment, Italy has had fewer than 10,000 deaths due to COVID. There are reports that Italy is nearing the top of its steep COVID fatalities curve. If that is true, one might expect the total number of fatalities in Italy to be under 25,000 before the pandemic subsides in your country. In other words, the number of fatalities due to COVID would be consistent with a bad year of the regular flu.
2016/2017 was truly anomalous.
It is yet quite too early for counting the number of deaths caused by COVID-19. If we continue this complete shutdown, the infection will slow down significantly, but of course you cannot keep the people reclused in their home for long periods, already now we are close to the bearable limit... And the economic impact will be unsustainable.
So I suppose that in 2-3 weeks the severe limitations to personal mobility we have now will be relaxed. And this will cause the number of infected and of deaths to raise again, with a stable number of new infections per day, perhaps with some oscillation.
We hopefully could manage to keep the situation stable for more than one year accepting that every day a number of newly infected people is processed by our health system, which in meantime will be empowered, so that it will not be in crisis as now.
But the situation will continue going on, until most of the population will be passed through being infected and healing. And we know that 20% of the infected need medical assistance, and 5% needs artificial breathing support.
We are 60 millions. Let be optimistic, and assume that only 50% gets infected: 30 millions. Of them 80% will be asymptomatic or with minimal inconvenience (just a normal cold), but leaves 6 millions which will need to be hospitalized. It is a HUGE number.
And the average time spent in the hospital is 3 weeks. We hope to spread this in one year or more, but in the end at least 5% of these 6 millions is going to die. It is 300,000 deaths, which is by far much more than any flu in the past, with the exception of the Spanish flu, which killed 600,000 people (in 3 years).
So I do not see anything going easy here in the next future...
Nor in the rest of the world, I fear...