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Too early to answer that clearly. The average stats have dipped a little, probably. They vary a lot per day, which is really more about reporting.
The old hotspots have calmed down a bit, but new ones have been rising. |
Illinois 136 yesterday and 138 today, vast majority Cook County (Chi)
what's raising the most alarm is that the average time from contraction to death is 20 days. The Illinois stay-at-home order went into effect March 21, so we are more than two "death cycles" distant from that. which means it is continuing to spread despite everything being shut down. there are only so many nurses and first-responders in that mix, so people are still getting it environmentally at grocery stores and so forth |
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SCIENCE! |
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Because: A. If younger people get it, they'll carry it to the older people. Most sheltered people interact with non-sheltered people. B. It's still dangerous for younger people, just less so. C. If the number of serious cases gets above a certain level, the death rate per case goes way up. D. We've never had enough PPE for essential workers, let alone the general public. E. Getting the numbers way down will mean we might be able to start responding to individual breakouts vs. focusing on rules for everyone. F. And so on. In any case, posts like yours are against the rules, and I'm guessing it'll be deleted. |
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B. This is false unless they have underlying health conditions, including obesity. Or at least the risk is so low that applying the same risk avoidance standard would preclude most daily activities, like getting behind the wheel of a car. C. This can be monitored, but the risk of overwhelming the health system appears to have passed. D. Most people don’t need PPE. E. This will only be possible with comprehensive testing, which isn’t going to be feasible. F. Not an argument. And why on earth is his post against the rules? There’s no link to a bogus source, no ad hominem attack, and nothing “offensive”. |
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Wow, yeah, Chicago is normal, all right. :( As for 10023, you don't think our numbers are still high? 3000 new cases, 130+ deaths just yesterday? The vast majority being in Cook County? Nah, just statistical noise. Sheesh. Aaron (Glowrock) |
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Sweden: -6.1% Denmark: -5.9% Careless policies resulted in an even worse economic performance. And as Denmark and Norway put the outbreak under control and are resuming activities, their economy will probably even better for the rest of 2020 while Sweden are still dealing with 100 deaths daily. |
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I think Chicago even closed parks and the lakefront; if that isn't saying "don't go outside", then what is? |
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I've been taking my kids out on bike rides on the northshore channel trail (which goes through several city and suburban parks) 3 - 4x per week for the past several weeks without issue. We find big open fields away from other people and let our little ones run out their excess energy. We also frequently walk over to the athletic field at the school a block south of us to let them run around and do active stuff as well, though sometimes it gets a little crowded and we have to wait for our "turn". all of the parents in our neighborhood seem to understand how important it is for everyone's sanity to let young children run around and be wild and crazy and loud. It's been a lifesaver. |
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A. You can't separate the young from the old unless they go to separate islands. There will be cross-contamination, starting with service staff. PPE and social distancing are partial measures, particularly when people come into direct contact. B. The young are at risk for a variety of reasons including hidden conditions. C. The risk of overwhelming the system has diminished for now...because we shut things down. This is one reason why partial reopening is starting to make sense. D. Most people DO need PPE to avoid the situations in A, B, C, etc. E. The ability to track and respond to localized outbreaks instead of mass-rules...doing it well requires a lot of testing, but a moderate level of social distancing, PPE, and basic temperature checks can lower that bar. This is a basic point behind why we're trying to get things to a lower level currently. |
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