Now this is my opinion, but I talk with multiple doctors and health care providers every day. I don't think this is as prevalent as it was a few months ago, but there were significant deaths from preventable conditions that were due to patients not seeking treatments. Heart attacks, strokes, diabetic complications, thrombosi (everywhere), trauma, etc. From March to May, one large hospital in SC had more patients present with ruptured appendix than they had in three years prior. I'm sure there were some folks that died at home or on hospice that had COVID and were never diagnosed and because they had a terminal condition, it wasn't counted, but I'm not it should have been anyway, but that's just water cooler talk. And I would bet there have a been a number of "pneumonia" deaths early on that were probably COVID. But most people that actually die of COVID have serious respiratory complications that require ICU level treatment. These folks aren't sitting in their lazy boy and just dying and no one knows why.
This doesn't take into account people that have a terminal or near terminal condition who die of that terminal condition but who may have also had COVID and it "contributed" to their death. The only person I directly know that has died had lupus and renal failure. Not to be crass, but she was one foot in the grave and COVID came along and kicked her in. She would have lived 3-12 months longer, but combine an auto-immune disorder and renal failure, COVID definitely contributed to and hastened her death.