warspite1 -> RE: OT: Corona virus (3/23/2020 11:10:41 PM)
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ORIGINAL: ITAKLinus quote:
ORIGINAL: Chickenboy quote:
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel That's another drop in daily mortality for Italy. Good news, if trending (but last week the numbers flattered only to deceive). Mortality is a lagging indicator of the leading edge of the infection 'wave'. Those that die from this virus and its complications were infected some weeks ago. I too want to see the mortality drop off, but I'm more interested in the waning of 'new cases' to track the progression of the virus through a given population. Also, I've been following Japan more closely. They've got one of the oldest populations on the planet and they've had comparatively few cases to date, in spite of widespread testing. As far as I'm concerned, they're the champs at social distancing and 'flattening the curve'-a model for others. I'd like to hear more about how they've successfully stemmed the tide so far. Of course, they're an island. Relatively xenophobic culture. Social distancing is their normative behavior anyways. No PDAs or touchy-feely in public. Perhaps that's the key to all this. There is a major flaw in this reasoning. It relies on a number, the new infections, that is not really reliable. Deaths are much easier to count and are "certain" by definition (unless the population starts to massively hide dead bodies, something I find quite... unlikely). Now, it's probable that the number of infected people is grossly underestimated and that it reflects more the capability of a system (region/city/country) to test its citizens. Basically, if I have 10.000 positive people per-day and I can do 3.000 tests, I will never ever be able to track/test all of the 10.000. On the other side, deaths are very easy to track even if the information we receive is delayed. I suppose another important indicator is the number of people who got accepted in intensive care units. I'm a strong proponent of deaths as the most reliable information. Secondarily, people admitted to ICUs and hospitalized. warspite1 But it could be that deaths are unreliable too? I've no idea if this is true but there is talk of the way the Germans are dealing with deaths and whether they count as coronavirus victims. I would love to know more on this as, whichever way one tries to rationalise it, Germany's deaths and intensive care/critical numbers just seem totally at odds with the likes of Italy or Spain.
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