USSAmerica
Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002 From: Graham, NC, USA Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: BBfanboy quote:
ORIGINAL: ITAKLinus Some nasty spillovers are emerging, eventually. The average deaths in the last years in Bergamo have been 98 between 01/03 and 24/03. Total amount of deaths among residents has been 446. Total amount of deaths due Cov-19: 136. There are 212 deaths more than the average, then. Is that 212 number because hospital critical care could not take in the critical non-Covid-19 patients because of lack of capacity? Think what typically happens if someone is at home and has heart pains. They call 911, an ambulance arrives within a reasonable amount of time, they are treated on the spot and transported to a hospital ER, likely to an ICU bed, maybe they survive. Quite possibly where good medical care is available nearby. Now, what happens in NYC in a day or two, or Northern Italy today. A person has heart pains, they call 911 or the equivalent in Italy, the ambulance is maybe able to get to them in 45 minutes to an hour. Maybe they are still alive and they get treatment and transport to a hospital ER. That ER is packed to the ceiling, with people on gurneys in the hallways. There are no open ICU beds and no available doctors or equipment to treat them in the first minute they arrive. What happens? That person dies when they might now under normal circumstances. Now, picture auto accidents, falling down stairs, appendicitis, etc. People who are not sick with COVID-19 will die because so many are sick with it. That 212 number probably also includes some deaths that were not counted as COVID-19 related but actually were.
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Mike "Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett "They need more rum punch" - Me Artwork by The Amazing Dixie
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