An academic study is predicting that as many as 93,000 Americans could die from coronavirus by the end of July. But the University of Washington's estimate also says the peak of such deaths could begin to drop by mid-April if all 50 states take major steps towards limiting the movements of residents.

The study, published in mid-March and updated on March 30, includes projections based on all states closing schools, ending nonessential services, sheltering in place and imposing strict travel restrictions.

“If we’re putting in social distancing, it will change the trajectory of the epidemic,” founder and chair of the University of Washington’s Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation Christopher Murrary told USA Today.

Other experts have noted the study's limitations, saying assuming the U.S. response will be the same as Wuhan, China, where the virus originated, is too generous of an assumption. Dr. Scott Braithwaite, a professor at NYU School of Medicine, told USA Today the real estimate for the number of deaths "is probably two to five times higher."

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Here's what the study predicts will happen in Michigan:

Estimated peak coronavirus death toll

The study predicted that Michigan could be among the earliest states to peak when it comes to the number number of daily deaths. It projected that Michigan will peak at 173 deaths on April 11, a day after daily deaths peak at 855 in New York.

However, on April 10, the state reported more than 200 deaths in a 24-hour span, the deadliest single day in the state.

The study said the total number of deaths in Michigan could rise to as high as 3,160 by May 1. On April 1, there were 329 deaths from coronavirus in the state. By April 10, 1,282 deaths due to COVID-19 had been reported statewide.

Nationwide, the study estimated the peak daily death count will be 2,644 on April 16. By May 1, it predicted 68,022 total deaths and by June 1, there could be as many 91,074 deaths.

The White House predicted anywhere from 100,000 to 240,000 people could die from the virus if social distancing guidelines are continued to be followed.

Peak need for hospital beds, ventilators

The study also predicted that Michigan could be among the earliest states to peak when it comes to the number of hospitals, and ICU beds and ventilators needed.

It projected that 2,549 ICU beds and 2,040 ventilators will be needed by April 7 and 15,308 hospital beds will be needed on April 9, the same day New York expects to peak, albeit with much higher numbers.

The study cites the American Hospital Association in saying the state had 10,154 hospital beds available and 742 ICU beds available, meaning more of each will be needed. However, more resources are constantly being added to hospitals in order to meet demand.

Michigan's chief medical executive Dr. Joneigh Khaldun said on March 30 that the state has roughly 1,700 ventilators and two days later, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said the state had added another 400 ventilators.

Statewide there are 27,762 licensed hospital beds and as of April 1, a total of 16,295 available hospital beds and 1,379 ventilators were not in use, according to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.

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"Given the trajectory of COVID-19 in the state. We will likely need additional facilities," Khaldun said on April 2. "We will also need additional medical professionals, doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists physician assistants, and others to staff them."

Nationwide, the study estimates peak ICU bed needs will peak on April 12 at 40,646 and the need for ventilators will peak at 32,518. Hospital beds needed is predicted to peak on April 15 at 262,090 beds.

You can see the full University of Washington study by clicking here.

Nate Chute is a producer with the USA Today Network. Follow him on Twitter at @nchute.