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The reason being mortality rates are inflated in most countries, by the fact that very few asymptomatic people have been tested; and antibody testing has not been normative either. (showing levels of previously infected people) If we look at Germany, where we see a mortality rate of 0.4%, and falling, we all see a very high rate of testing, early on. Italy now has a higher number of tests, but far more focused on the symptomatic. Now, they will still have have a higher mortality rate than most, for a variety of reasons from demographics to a healthcare system that suffered a near-collapse locally/regionally. *** Right now, US mortality is running about 1.3%, I would expect that number to rise in the near term due to local hospitals/areas struggling to keep up. But that number will eventually decline, I would hope/assume with more widespread testing. But we are still talking thousands of deaths for sure, possibly tens of thousands; maybe into the hundreds of thousands, though hopefully not. Though whatever the number, the accretive total will be lower. (the number of deaths that were more than typical for 'x' period in a typical year.) *** None of the above should convey any lack of seriousness on my part about this situation. I very much feel that it is. But I also feel its important to work with facts and logical assumptions. |
The reporting from the get go has been misleading too. The vast majority of deaths involve comorbidity with something even deadlier killing the patient. Normal pneumonia and normal influenza combined kills 10 percent of those inflicted. This is s new bug. Many will get sick. Most will get a normal flu bug and not the novel strain. I'm not an actuary but the notion that millions!! of Americans will die sounds ludicrous and alarmist. If that happens I ll eat my hat..
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San Francisco in time of coronavirus or scenes from "The Omega Man" . . . you decide:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UoTekwmHXF0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3mbmX4EcHEc |
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Just to throw more gas on the dumpster fire: When push comes to shove I think the main issue is getting those who are medically fragile to stay home rather than shut the whole economy down. I agree it's harsh to tell specific sectors of society to limit themselves but when it comes down to it economics is in fact life for many. The family living paycheck to paycheck might only be 6-8 weeks out from simply having no food. That's kinda deadly too. Not to mention the collateral damages from social unrest. Right now, we should all shelter in place. Once everyone can get a test, those found to have had it and pass through should absolutely be let out and move on from there.... |
As a result of the influenza pandemic of 1918, Los Angeles city leaders closed down much of the city for seven weeks. So how did Los Angeles, then a city of approximately 570,000 people, cope? The answer is remarkably similar to how we're dealing with COVID-19 today.
https://www.kcet.org/sites/kl/files/...d66d-eight.jpg Pasadena, approximately 1919: Patients rest in hospital beds while nurses wearing breathing masks tend to them. This photo was likely taken in the isolation ward at Wilson High School during the 1918 and 1919 influenza epidemic. | Harold A. Parker/Huntington Digital Library From KCET.org: How Did L.A. Cope With the Influenza Pandemic of 1918? Story by Hadley Meares On December 3, 1918, Angelenos were in a euphoric mood. After seven weeks of a citywide shut-down, ordered in an attempt to stamp out the deadly Spanish Flu, the "influenza ban" had finally been lifted by city leaders. "Saturated with fiesta spirit of gaiety and good cheer, the downtown streets of Los Angeles surged yesterday with people," the Los Angeles Times reported at the time. "Some of the picture shows opened their doors early yesterday forenoon and their patronage began at once, increasing in volume as the day proceeded... long lines of people stood before the ticket window at these places." Stores rushed to put out Christmas displays to lure holiday shoppers. Community choirs, book clubs, bible studies and schoolfriends reunited, eager for life to return to normal. Two months prior, on October 1, 1918, everything in Los Angeles had changed. That was when the first civilian case of the Spanish Flu had been diagnosed in the city. This particular strain of influenza would eventually kill 675,000 people in the United States and an estimated 25 to 50 million people around the world. In L.A., it killed 494 out of every 100,000 residents, approximately .49% of the city's population. Ten days after that first case in L.A., another 680 local cases had been reported, according to N. Pieter M. O'Leary, author of The 1918-1919 Influenza Epidemic In Los Angeles. City leaders acted with remarkable speed, journalist Gustave Arellano notes, closing down much of the city by October 11. Households with a diagnosed case of influenza were quarantined and marked with placards placed outside their door, group meetings were banned and life became eerily like the situation we're experiencing now. So how did Los Angeles, then a city of approximately 570,000 people, cope? The answer is remarkably similar to how we're dealing with COVID-19 today. People developed new routines and found ways to create comfort and a sense of normality. In the early days of the outbreak, Angelenos rushed to drugstores, eager to stock up on remedies and palliatives to combat the flu. "The big run was on atomizers for the throat and nose, nasal douches, menthol inhalers, cold-breakers of many kinds, and dozens of highly-recommended gargles," the Los Angeles Times says in a recent story. "Listerine, peroxide and half a dozen other antiseptics and mouth washes sold like hot cakes, although some who carried home atomizers declared that they intended to stick to the old rule of a teaspoonful of common salt or baking soda to a glass of water for gargle or atomizer spray in the nose or throat." The media offered homespun, and sometimes dubious, advice. "You are more likely to have influenza if you think you have it then if you think away from it. Keep the germs out of your mind. And don't cool off too quickly after getting heated. If you do — kerchoo!" the L.A. Times advised. Santa Monica Police officer William Sanlin offered his remedy for warding off the dreaded flu, which the paper printed in full: "Into his briar pipe he first puts a layer of tobacco and then a layer of cubebs and tops off with tobacco. When the charred tobacco falls upon the cubebs an odor is given off that would seem able to kill even a German germ. Sandlin has remained on duty without any grippe symptoms appearing, while every other officer on his shift has been laid up for days. He says additional efficacy is secured if one has a strong enough stomach to inhale the fumes." Public school officials had closed all public schools in mid-October, so parents everywhere found themselves stuck at home with bored, antsy children. Initially given no homework, students finally received direction on October 23, when an announcement was made via the local papers. "...Speaking of the saddest words of tongue or pen (from the juvenile standpoint). Here they are: Acting Superintendent Moniux of the city schools has put a period to the influenza vacation," the L.A. Times reported. The parents of elementary school children were instructed to set aside time every day to read with their children, using schoolbooks or books from approved lists on file at the public libraries. High school students were required to study four hours a day and threatened with examinations when school reopened. Teachers could be reached by telephone for instruction. One teacher in Montrose heard her pupils' recitations over the telephone from her boardinghouse, although it "interfered with morning visits of neighbor women." [...] Read the rest here... Link: https://www.kcet.org/coronavirus-cov...1dZJmIvhcXXhJ8 |
Sounds good to me. Banish the sick, let the healthy get back to work. The overwhelming consensus still seems that it spreads most effectively from coughing. So when are we all going to stop being paranoid and get on with things?
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Man, these people shut the trail down today! |
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Yeah, there is NOTHING else related to this situation than being stuck at home. Forgot the health and economic issues related to the situation. |
"panic"
"hysertia" "overreaction" "paranoid" I keep seeing these buzzwords pop up among certain segments of the population, segments which also often conveniently ignore other sciences. I think there is a misconception among this segment of society about the most basic scientific principles. Scientists, by and large, do not panic, succumb to hysteria, or react in paranoia. As a group, they are not trying to win elections or sell newspapers or trade in stocks. It isn't the media or politicians driving this, it's the world's leading epidemiologists, virologists, and public health experts. Whatever non-experts think feels right, that doesn't matter. It also flys in the face of basic reality, as we have seen in other countries that ignored warnings to stay home. We don't even need to think theoretically, we have the proof right in front of us. My sister lives in Brescia, Italy. Perhaps I can ask her to take a picture of the military vehicles lined up near the hospitals there to store bodies since the morgues have been overrun? Quote:
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Yeah, pussies. |
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Without the economy, you have NOTHING but tribal society. Would we be happier that way? Maybe(but I like modern healthcare). But it's not realistic on a large scale. |
Well surprise, surprise. Now the US has more COVID-19 cases than Italy.
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It took about 3 months for the World to record the first 500K documented cases. I bet the next 500K will be about 2 weeks. |
I say let all the people who think we are over-reacting and need to get back to work go out and play contact sports with one another in the parks until they've all had it and recovered or died. Then maybe the virus will have trouble finding the rest of us as we emerge.
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https://uniim1.shutterfly.com/ng/ser...264126/enhance https://ourworldindata.org/covid-testing This data is 6 days old. It shows the US having done about 100,000 tests. Here's data as of today for the US only: https://uniim1.shutterfly.com/ng/ser...264864/enhance https://covidtracking.com/data/ So the US is really ramping when it comes to testing. In the last 6 days we appear to have done 4 times as many tests as in all the time before that. And I doubt many other countries are seeing that kind of increase in testing (which would produce a rapid increase in cases of the disease). And here's another tidbit: Spain, Europe's worst-hit country after Italy, says coronavirus tests it bought from China are failing to detect positive cases . . . . The Spanish newspaper El País reported that microbiologists found that tests it bought from a Chinese company called Bioeasy could correctly identify virus cases only 30% of the time. So maybe we need to apply an adjustment factor to the Chinese data. |
Hey Jmanc, someone from Kingwood just died from this. My mom is freaking out, since she still lives in Kingwood.
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Thanks for those links, Pedestrian...good stuff to play around with!
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