RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (Full Version)

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RangerJoe -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:24:43 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
Just because they have the GDP does not mean that they will have the ability to pay the bill for the testing, nor the equipment and supplies needed be available, nor the trained people to take the samples, and do the testing.


I suppose any rational strategy is based on what can or can't be done. You're talking about a new outbreak (hopefully not) or wave (next winter they say?). I'm pretty sure every state is already thinking about that future scenario (if it can't be avoided and / or vaccines don't fix the problem). Needless to say, I don't know these plans.


True, I don't know these plans. For the 1918 influenza outbreak, from what I read, the second wave was worse.

But I did hear that if the original SARs vaccine were available then it might offer some protection. But when that virus went away, work was not funded. We could be in a better place if it had been finished.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:33:50 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

But look at the number of active cases and then the number in intensive care. Yes it's arithmetic but fits nicely into the lies, damned lies and statistics camp. Sure, the number of intensive care cases within the active cases may increase - and the number that dies increases, but then I'm not hanging my hat on the assumption that none of the active cases not in intensive care get worse either.


Cases that are unresolved are irrelevant to the analysis. Think of it like this: Flip 10,000 coins in the air. Take a snapshot at some point. You only evaluate the coins that are on the ground and stopped. The ones that are still in the air or rolling around on the ground are irrelevant.




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:40:59 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

But look at the number of active cases and then the number in intensive care. Yes it's arithmetic but fits nicely into the lies, damned lies and statistics camp. Sure, the number of intensive care cases within the active cases may increase - and the number that dies increases, but then I'm not hanging my hat on the assumption that none of the active cases not in intensive care get worse either.


Cases that are unresolved are irrelevant to the analysis. Think of it like this: Flip 10,000 coins in the air. Take a snapshot at some point. You only evaluate the coins that are on the ground and stopped. The ones that are still in the air or rolling around on the ground are irrelevant.
warspite1

Irrelevant? Well if you want to paint a worst case situation (for whatever reason) then there is lots of arithmetic that can be done. As said, I don't choose to go down that route, not because its uncomfortable, not because I don't want to believe its that bad (though I don't) - I choose not to go down that route because its incorrect, imprecise and serves no purpose whatsoever other than to feed the fear of those who are stripping shelves of everything.




Canoerebel -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:43:16 PM)

Curtis, your methodology is hopelessly flawed.

Using your method results in a ridiculously skewed mortality rate. You asked to see the math. Here it is:

Compare recoveries to deaths, as you stated below (in bold).

Currently in the USA we've had 56 recoveries and 60 deaths. That's a death rate, by your method, of 93.33%. (I was off a bit about it being more than 100%, but you get the idea).


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay

Hate to be bearer of bad tidings, but I think we've been looking at the statistics wrong. Here are the current figures:

156,478 cases
75,844 recovered
5833 deaths
(Source Wikipedia)

We had been comparing cases to deaths (5833/156478 = 3.7%).
But, we should compare recovered to deaths (5833/75844 = 7.7%), since those are the cases that have resolved the life vs. death issue (the rest have not).

That puts it far past a tour in Nam. I'm trying to find something that compares. So far I've got the Battle of Shiloh with 1728 vs 40335 = 4.3% for the Confederates (that doesn't count missing - many of which were dead). Gotta find something even worse.

This is definitely something you don't want to get.

(Edit: Confederate dead at Gettysburg sound closer. Stay tuned).





Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:46:45 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I choose not to go down that route because its incorrect, imprecise and serves no purpose whatsoever other than to feed the fear of those who are stripping shelves of everything.


How is it incorrect? It's just a simple arithmetical conclusion from the data we have at our disposal.




RangerJoe -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:49:17 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

But look at the number of active cases and then the number in intensive care. Yes it's arithmetic but fits nicely into the lies, damned lies and statistics camp. Sure, the number of intensive care cases within the active cases may increase - and the number that dies increases, but then I'm not hanging my hat on the assumption that none of the active cases not in intensive care get worse either.


Cases that are unresolved are irrelevant to the analysis. Think of it like this: Flip 10,000 coins in the air. Take a snapshot at some point. You only evaluate the coins that are on the ground and stopped. The ones that are still in the air or rolling around on the ground are irrelevant.


You are also not factoring in the cases that are resolved that are not reported.

As an example, I know someone who never had the chicken pox nor the vaccine yet has the antibodies to the virus.




RangerJoe -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:50:57 PM)

What would be interesting to note is if the people who had SARS are wholly or partially immune. If so, finish that SARs vaccine and try that!




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:53:00 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

I choose not to go down that route because its incorrect, imprecise and serves no purpose whatsoever other than to feed the fear of those who are stripping shelves of everything.


How is it incorrect? It's just a simple arithmetical conclusion from the data we have at our disposal.
warspite1

Its incorrect because you are manipulating data to get a worse scenario than the situation warrants. It's scare-mongering based on what we know. You are completely removing a key variable. Now, because we don't know where that variable will end up (death or recovery) one can reasonably make assumptions. I choose to look at active cases and intensive care cases. You choose to ignore this key variable completely for a reason I don't understand.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:53:46 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Curtis, your methodology is hopelessly flawed.

Using your method results in a ridiculously skewed mortality rate. You asked to see the math. Here it is:

Compare recoveries to deaths, as you stated below (in bold).

Currently in the USA we've had 56 recoveries and 60 deaths. That's a death rate, by your method, of 93.33%. (I was off a bit about it being more than 100%, but you get the idea).


The more samples you get the more valid statistics become. Very early small sets do give skewed results. But, even US numbers can be expected to approach the World numbers further down the process. Once you get to very high samples (what we have in the World figures), we can have more confidence.




TulliusDetritus -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:54:29 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe
But I did hear that if the original SARs vaccine were available then it might offer some protection. But when that virus went away, work was not funded. We could be in a better place if it had been finished.


It's life. We're here and ten seconds later *poof gone*




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 2:56:43 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Its incorrect because you are manipulating data to get a worse scenario than the situation warrants. It's scare-mongering based on what we know. You are completely removing a key variable. Now, because we don't know where that variable will end up (death or recovery) one can reasonably make assumptions. I choose to look at active cases and intensive care cases. You choose to ignore this key variable completely for a reason I don't understand.


I'm not manipulating data at all. I'm using raw figures for resolved cases. If this is scaring you, it's scaring me as well!




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:00:41 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe

You are also not factoring in the cases that are resolved that are not reported.


Yes, I'm sticking strictly to the evidence we have.




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:01:36 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Its incorrect because you are manipulating data to get a worse scenario than the situation warrants. It's scare-mongering based on what we know. You are completely removing a key variable. Now, because we don't know where that variable will end up (death or recovery) one can reasonably make assumptions. I choose to look at active cases and intensive care cases. You choose to ignore this key variable completely for a reason I don't understand.


I'm not manipulating data at all. I'm using raw figures for resolved cases. If this is scaring you, it's scaring me as well!
warspite1

You've removed a major variable - its data manipulation. And no, it is not scaring me in the slightest because I do not believe what you are saying is true so how could it?




Canoerebel -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:06:04 PM)

Wow, what can you do when people refuse to see the truth and insist on making a mistake?

By the way, I actually inverted your numbers. By your reckoning, the death rate (deaths/recoveries) in the USA is 60 to 56. That's a death rate of 107%.

Of course, that's impossible.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:08:12 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

You've removed a major variable - its data manipulation. And no, it is not scaring me in the slightest because I do not believe what you are saying is true so how could it?


The only variable I've removed are the unresolved cases (like those coins that were still in the air in our snapshot.)




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:10:42 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Wow, what can you do when people refuse to see the truth and insist on making a mistake?

By the way, I actually inverted your numbers. By your reckoning, the death rate (deaths/recoveries) in the USA is 60 to 56. That's a death rate of 107%.

Of course, that's impossible.

Actually, the correct evaluation would be 60/(56 + 60) = 52%.

And, again, that's based upon a very small sample set. The World figures are a large sample set, and have plenty of validity.




Red2112 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:14:47 PM)

What really matters statistically, when other real life issues are not sorted? Statistics should have stopped the bubble in 2006-7 then, which it didnīt, same goes for climatic change! UK is taking another approach with a built health immune society to reduce the risk of infection.

A action is more efficient then a reaction. Right now thereīs not enough mask for medical personell, or civilians. Civilians are using mask that are not protective, they are only preventive for the user to not spread the infection. The protective mask (type) are limited even to govermental personell (police etc.). You can leave your home for shopping food, go to work, or buy medical supplys etc, BUT most pharamcies (none in my town) have mask to sell, and if they did, I wonder what type they would have. So it makes no freaking sense to be able to go out for supplys but be exposed because you canīt buy a mask (a proper one).

In Spain if you have been detected as a positive host, you are then permited to be in sick-leave from your job and the goverment will pay 80% of youīre wage while youīre on sick-leave. This is the usual when sick in Spain, but I ask myself, what about other countrys? How are small business going to deal with a shut-down of a minimum of 15 days? What happens to those who live day-by-day, in other words make it barely to the end of the month, without being able to save a penny?

Thereīs money to rescue banks, but none for mask and supplys?

Italy asked for help to the EU when the outbreak, no one offered help, they then looked at China which did help. After this issue, the EU has changed itīs posture and has rectified itīs initial decision of not giving help due to the mass criticism they recieved from the rest of the EU countrys. Whatīs the use of being in the EU then?

Donīt know but I think these things are more important to deal with right now, and thatīs were goverments should be firm.

What a BIG mess! Meanwhile, some will loose there loved oneīs.




RangerJoe -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:16:04 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

You've removed a major variable - its data manipulation. And no, it is not scaring me in the slightest because I do not believe what you are saying is true so how could it?


The only variable I've removed are the unresolved cases (like those coins that were still in the air in our snapshot.)


How many resolved cases are you including because they were not reported because the symptoms were minor or were non-existent?




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:17:14 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

You've removed a major variable - its data manipulation. And no, it is not scaring me in the slightest because I do not believe what you are saying is true so how could it?


The only variable I've removed are the unresolved cases (like those coins that were still in the air in our snapshot.)
warspite1

And you seriously think that variable is so unimportant you can simply ignore it? Despite the size of the number within the overall data set, you believe it can simply be ignored. No assumptions, no educated guestimates, just simply ignore it? Erm.... okay, but that's not science, that's not maths, that's scaremongering for no reason.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:18:00 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe

How many resolved cases are you including because they were not reported because the symptoms were minor or were non-existent?

Again, I'm sticking strictly to the known evidence.




Canoerebel -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:18:57 PM)

Now you've changed the formula, apparently acknowledging that your first post was incorrect (as indeed it was).

But you latest method is also flawed. Surely you understand that mortality isn't 52%. In South Korea, the mortality and recoveries were at one time the same, but most active cases transitioned to recoveries instead of mortalities. Now, South Korea is somewhere above 90% recoveries. And that will continue to improve, as only 1% of its active cases are deemed serious. When all is said and done, South Korea will likely be at something in the neighborhood of 3% or less mortality, perhaps less than 1%.

The same is likely to hold true in the USA.

Your original methodology was completely wrong and your new one is basically useless - and certainly useless for the purpose you're trying to use it for.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:23:21 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

And you seriously think that variable is so unimportant you can simply ignore it? Despite the size of the number within the overall data set, you believe it can simply be ignored. No assumptions, no educated guestimates, just simply ignore it? Erm.... okay, but that's not science, that's not maths, that's scaremongering for no reason.


You're just being silly. Let's change that coin flipping experiment so that maybe you can finally get it:

Let's flip coins one at a time and accumulate the results as they come in. We plan to do 10,000 flips, but, after 5,000 flips, we evaluate the results. That's perfectly valid. The flips that haven't occurred yet are irrelevant at that snapshot in time.




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:24:59 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: RangerJoe


quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

You've removed a major variable - its data manipulation. And no, it is not scaring me in the slightest because I do not believe what you are saying is true so how could it?


The only variable I've removed are the unresolved cases (like those coins that were still in the air in our snapshot.)


How many resolved cases are you including because they were not reported because the symptoms were minor or were non-existent?
warspite1

I don't think you can blame Curtis Lemay for using numbers we don't know about because they weren't reported. But the active cases are known. Take for example the case of the Arsenal FC manager. He is an active case, he has the virus, he is on the list. So what's his situation. Well he's recovering at home and his wife has confirmed he isn't even unwell enough to have missed work had this not been Coronavirus.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:29:51 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Now you've changed the formula, apparently acknowledging that your first post was incorrect (as indeed it was).


I corrected it in my second post (#398).

quote:

But you latest method is also flawed. Surely you understand that mortality isn't 52%. In South Korea, the mortality and recoveries were at one time the same, but most active cases transitioned to recoveries instead of mortalities. Now, South Korea is somewhere above 90% recoveries. And that will continue to improve, as only 1% of its active cases are deemed serious. When all is said and done, South Korea will likely be at something in the neighborhood of 3% or less mortality, perhaps less than 1%.

The same is likely to hold true in the USA.

Your original methodology was completely wrong and your new one is basically useless - and certainly useless for the purpose you're trying to use it for.


My original method was slightly wrong. I fixed it. And I'm basing everything on evidence, not speculation (which is what you're engaged in).




Orm -> RE: OT - The New Coronavirus (3/15/2020 3:30:20 PM)

I think this will be tough to evaluate because we do not know the real number infected, nor recovered, and probably not even the number of dead. Nor do we know how many that are immune to the disease.




warspite1 -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:34:22 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Curtis Lemay


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

And you seriously think that variable is so unimportant you can simply ignore it? Despite the size of the number within the overall data set, you believe it can simply be ignored. No assumptions, no educated guestimates, just simply ignore it? Erm.... okay, but that's not science, that's not maths, that's scaremongering for no reason.


You're just being silly. Let's change that coin flipping experiment so that maybe you can finally get it:

Let's flip coins one at a time and accumulate the results as they come in. We plan to do 10,000 flips, but, after 5,000 flips, we evaluate the results. That's perfectly valid. The flips that haven't occurred yet are irrelevant at that snapshot in time.
warspite1

We are having a grown up debate Curtis Lemay, please don't go down the route of condescension - its not helpful. I didn't go to university but I'm not silly and I do 'get it' - I just don't happen to agree with you.

But let's go with your test. You are looking to see which way a coin will land. All you know is that the coins will land, and if they do, then they will land heads or tails - there is no alternative. So what could you do? Well you could do what you have done, because this is about coin flipping.

However the Coronavirus isn't coin flipping. Its very real and, potentially very serious and we the public need to make decisions based on information we are given. What we don't need is people manipulating data to make this whole thing appear as bad as possible. What does that achieve exactly?

Now if you want, you can use the active cases and, if you want, you can assume everyone dies (or whatever you choose). But at that point you have made an assumption and that assumption is made known along with the calculation and result.

But you've simply stated - having simply removed this key variable - that the mortality rate is over 7%. That is not helpful, not accurate and simply alarmist.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: OT - The New Coronavirus (3/15/2020 3:35:42 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Orm

I think this will be tough to evaluate because we do not know the real number infected, nor recovered, and probably not even the number of dead. Nor do we know how many that are immune to the disease.


But we need a number now - to base our behavior on. How we function will vary wildly depending upon how deadly it really is.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:40:14 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

But let's go with your test. You are looking to see which way a coin will land. All you know is that the coins will land, and if they do, then they will land heads or tails - there is no alternative. So what could you do? Well you could do what you have done, because this is about coin flipping.

However the Coronavirus isn't coin flipping. Its very real and, potentially very serious and we the public need to make decisions based on information we are given. What we don't need is people manipulating data to make this whole thing appear as bad as possible. What does that achieve exactly?


They are both random processes. In both cases evaluating just the resolved samples is valid.

I'm not trying to scare you. I'm soberly evaluating the numbers. Period.




Canoerebel -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:43:46 PM)

Okay, keep using the Curtis Lemay method of grossly inflated statistics that have no bearing on what's actually going on.




Curtis Lemay -> RE: FROM THE RED ZONE (3/15/2020 3:46:03 PM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Okay, keep using the Curtis Lemay method of grossly inflated statistics that have no bearing on what's actually going on.

Got any evidence for that?




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