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RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 12:02:53 PM   
JohnDillworth


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?





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_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 391
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 12:04:16 PM   
Canoerebel


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New York faced unique circumstances and did its best. Same with every state.

But unless we're equating asymptomatic positive cases with deaths, I'd take Arkansas any day.

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Post #: 392
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 12:33:54 PM   
JohnDillworth


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

New York faced unique circumstances and did its best. Same with every state.

But unless we're equating asymptomatic positive cases with deaths, I'd take Arkansas any day.

quote:

New York faced unique circumstances and did its best. Same with every state.

But unless we're equating asymptomatic positive cases with deaths, I'd take Arkansas any day.

OK, Arkansas is doing just fine. Trends are looking just great





Attachment (1)

< Message edited by JohnDillworth -- 6/24/2020 12:34:37 PM >


_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 393
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 12:56:15 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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I think to get a better picture you need to have the two states on the same graph with cases/100,000 pop as the y axis. As presented the NY graph is running to a peak of 10,000 daily cases whereas the Arkansas one is going up towards 500 daily cases. So 20x difference but presented as similar (NYs population is c.6x that of Arkansas)

I remember in the previous thread one of the topics discussed was whether Covid was present in all areas of the US from the same starting point. My suggestion was that the outbreak had started in the North East and was gradually spreading outwards. Others disagreed and felt that most states were starting from the same point in time and that NY was sticking out because of population density.

I think that some of what we are seeing now supports what I was suggesting (a little while back there was also supportive evidence re viral strains if anybody wants me to try and dig it up). The current 'problem' states locked down at pretty much the same time as NY before the virus had had a chance to spread. Now the restrictions are being lifted they are experiencing the 'first wave' epidemic curve that NY/UK/Italy/Spain has already been through.

I don't think that we will see a repeat in terms of death tolls though. For a start whilst lockdown restrictions have been lifted a lot of the social behaviours remain and these seem to be extending the 'doubling period', flattening the curve and spreading strain on health services. Second, lessons will be have been learned about the need to protect the care homes. Third I would think that the hospital care provided to Covid patients will have improved through experience so that more of the most seriously ill will pull through. That prediction comes with one caveat though - it relies on lockdowns potentially being reintroduced at a local level if things start running out of control - particularly in those high risk (in terms both of population density and demographics) urban areas.







< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 6/24/2020 1:01:47 PM >

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 394
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 1:41:56 PM   
Canoerebel


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Sammy is right.

With one additional distinction - the ultimate measure of the virus is mortality, not positive cases. If there are major outbreaks that for some reason don't result in a correlating increase in mortality, then a rise in cases now is not equivalent to a rise three months ago. That was, as Sammy notes, bushwhack time. At this point, jurisdictions have been able to protect the elderly and ramp up countermeasures, when necessary - major advantages.

You can't look at a state that has 100 deaths/million rising slowly and conclude that they should follow the model of states that have 1,500 deaths/million. Unless there ends up being that correlation. There probably shouldn't be, since the nursing homes seem to be key in this war.

(in reply to Sammy5IsAlive)
Post #: 395
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 2:06:18 PM   
obvert


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Sammy is right.

With one additional distinction - the ultimate measure of the virus is mortality, not positive cases. If there are major outbreaks that for some reason don't result in a correlating increase in mortality, then a rise in cases now is not equivalent to a rise three months ago. That was, as Sammy notes, bushwhack time. At this point, jurisdictions have been able to protect the elderly and ramp up countermeasures, when necessary - major advantages.

You can't look at a state that has 100 deaths/million rising slowly and conclude that they should follow the model of states that have 1,500 deaths/million. Unless there ends up being that correlation. There probably shouldn't be, since the nursing homes seem to be key in this war.



There are a lot of factors that relate to success in fighting this disease, and now that more is known using state vs state data isn't going to work to see how to fight this for so many reasons. Culture, population density, political climate, demographics of population, time of first cases and so many other things.

What John is obviously saying here is that trends make a difference in this battle. A rising case load is bad. A descending case load is good. Many states that have fared well so far have to consider when and if they'll put more restrictions in place if case loads grow higher. Many states are now seeing a huge influx of hospital cases. NY got cases down to almost nothing before opening, which is critical to being able to then track and trace and control outbreaks.

Other factors that could help to keep now rising states from having catastrophic mortality rates include access to more effective treatments for severe cases, like the steroid found in the UK study to be very useful to limit severity, as well as younger populations getting the disease on average.

The danger is that people now all over the US are relaxing both restrictions and personnel practices. Opening shops and having people going into indoor areas with groups without masks for whatever reason will mean a danger of big super-spreaders. One guy was responsible for hundreds of cases in South Korea. What's it going to be like when the checkout clerk of a major Wallmart has Covid, or the server at a local restaurant?

Here distancing recommendations have lessened and restaurants and pubs will soon open along with other businesses. Economically this has to happen. Practically and scientifically there is huge risk in it happening now while cases are still relatively high, now just under 1,000 new a day in the UK.

_____________________________

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 396
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 2:24:24 PM   
Canoerebel


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We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.


(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 397
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 3:23:30 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel


Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.




From a UK perspective I'm not sure I'd go that far. A while back our government set out 'alert levels' that were supposed to link the progress of the epidemic with corresponding levels of response in terms of social distancing measures. As far as I am concerned we seem to be racing well ahead of that road map and without the testing and tracing system that we had previously been told would be the cornerstone of being able to open up safely.

But I think the reality is that we are taking the only course of action available - the economy simply cannot afford to continue paying for lock-down. What frustrates me is that there is no transparency - so we are not only opening up prematurely from a public health perspective but also not giving people the appropriate information in terms of the ongoing risks to encourage them to continue to take informal social distancing measures. I don't know what it's like north of the river but in South London everything seems to have broken down. People have been told it is safe to go back to normal and that is precisely what they are doing. Edit - this is actually perhaps harsh on the govt. who have been paying lip service to the importance of maintaining social distancing. I think my issue is more that they know what the fundamental message is that people will be taking and are being reckless to this - see for example this article by a behavioural scientist https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/24/boris-johnson-ease-lockdown-england

The other point for me is that whilst we are now probably taking the only available course of action economically, as things stand the examples of other countries both elsewhere in Europe and further afield suggest that we didn't have to be in this position in the first place had we reacted quicker.

On both counts it seems to me that the US is in a similar position.

I'm happy to live where I live for lots of other reasons. I'd be much happier if I could add to those reasons a government that had reacted well to this epidemic.

< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 6/24/2020 4:02:55 PM >

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 398
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 3:53:06 PM   
JohnDillworth


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.


.

I guess that is the distinction. While things have quieted down in my little village by the sea I am concerned for the entire country in particular, and the world in general. We are fighting thousands of little battles instead of one great war if we let "Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county)" decide what is best for themselves. I submit that a unified, national, response would be be a better way to attack a global pandemic that have every county do their own thing.


_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 399
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 3:54:29 PM   
JohnDillworth


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More number fudging from Florida. Lets change the way we count ICU bed availability to cloud the picture:
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/coronavirus/fl-ne-coronavirus-icu-bed-reporting-rules-change-20200623-dmf4p5nf3few5mvjvh53vixewm-story.html


< Message edited by JohnDillworth -- 6/24/2020 3:55:57 PM >


_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 400
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 3:59:04 PM   
obvert


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.




Well, the balancing act has to be based on something tangible. The prevalence of the disease can't be completely ignored in order to prioritise the economy, or you get what happened to the UK in the first wave. At the same time there is a moment where the case load reaches a more maneageable point and you can more safely open risky parts of the economy, which is imperative in order to get people working and stave off the other negative effects of lockdowns.

I'm not at all happy with the response so far from the UK government, and I'm very happy with how many other places have dealt with this. South Korea, Germany, Taiwan, etc.

The point of the my rambling post is that opening and restrictions should be balanced with the actuality of known case numbers and hospital inputs (as well as predicted asymptomatic cases) in each regional area, knowing what we know about how outbreaks spiral upward and asymptomatic cases abound.

Many states in the US and some countries in the rest of the world aren't using the now established best practices to fight this disease. John Dillworth was pointing this out.

_____________________________

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 401
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:04:29 PM   
obvert


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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.


.

I guess that is the distinction. While things have quieted down in my little village by the sea I am concerned for the entire country in particular, and the world in general. We are fighting thousands of little battles instead of one great war if we let "Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county)" decide what is best for themselves. I submit that a unified, national, response would be be a better way to attack a global pandemic that have every county do their own thing.



Regional approaches are actually quite effective if they look at what is working elsewhere. With a novel disease it makes a lot of sense that each country is doing something different. Where decisions have gone wrong it has usually been not acting on current understandings early enough.

If there was a WHO directed worldwide response, and each country adhered rigidly to that I think we wouldn't also get the extreme success stories of SK and Germany, which have their own methods that have been matched with available resources and cultural abilities and constraints.

Some of what happened early on everywhere could have been avoided if all just locked down before the crisis was established, and some countries actually did that. They're actually doing very well now. Humans respond better to tragedy though, and it was really only after news from Italy that most began to take this seriously to some degree.

_____________________________

"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 402
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:10:30 PM   
JohnDillworth


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quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert


quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.


.

I guess that is the distinction. While things have quieted down in my little village by the sea I am concerned for the entire country in particular, and the world in general. We are fighting thousands of little battles instead of one great war if we let "Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county)" decide what is best for themselves. I submit that a unified, national, response would be be a better way to attack a global pandemic that have every county do their own thing.



Regional approaches are actually quite effective if they look at what is working elsewhere. With a novel disease it makes a lot of sense that each country is doing something different. Where decisions have gone wrong it has usually been not acting on current understandings early enough.

If there was a WHO directed worldwide response, and each country adhered rigidly to that I think we wouldn't also get the extreme success stories of SK and Germany, which have their own methods that have been matched with available resources and cultural abilities and constraints.

Some of what happened early on everywhere could have been avoided if all just locked down before the crisis was established, and some countries actually did that. They're actually doing very well now. Humans respond better to tragedy though, and it was really only after news from Italy that most began to take this seriously to some degree.

quote:

look at what is working elsewhere.


Well that is kind of the key now isn't it? Look around, emulate what was successful. I submit New York and Western Europe (not you Sweden!) were successful in flattening the curve. Many parts of the United States, have not been successful and continue to not be successful. Yet they continue to do what has not worked and they are getting the same unsuccessful results. Step 1 is admitting you have a problem.

_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 403
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:17:39 PM   
BBfanboy


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The recent outbreaks in Germany show a determination to trap and crush the epidemic there. A meat processing plant suddenly showed 1500 cases out of 7000 workers and Merkel sent in the army to lock down the plant and enforce a quarantine of workers and their families and the immediate shops in the area where workers families would have contacted the local population. Heavy handed but necessary. The soldiers were required because many of the workers are itinerants who do not speak German so they were not understanding what was happening with the lockdown and violated the quarantine at first. They also were very poor and had no savings to buy groceries. I think the Germans have addressed those problems now.

The other outbreak was in a tall apartment building which was isolated with an enforced quarantine for entry/exit. I presume testing on the spot would play a role in letting people out of the building.

So there will be hot spots but the government needs to be strong-willed about containing them even at political cost.

_____________________________

No matter how bad a situation is, you can always make it worse. - Chris Hadfield : An Astronaut's Guide To Life On Earth

(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 404
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:28:22 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth


quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert


quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

We've all been there (or will get there). Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county) has to decide when it's prudent to ease restrictions and what's economically necessary. Tough balancing act. It seems like Erik is satisfied that this has to happen now in UK. It seems like John is satisfied that NY has done about as well as it could. And you know I'm pleased with the response by Georgia and my local county.

Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.


.

I guess that is the distinction. While things have quieted down in my little village by the sea I am concerned for the entire country in particular, and the world in general. We are fighting thousands of little battles instead of one great war if we let "Each nation (and, here, each state, city and county)" decide what is best for themselves. I submit that a unified, national, response would be be a better way to attack a global pandemic that have every county do their own thing.



Regional approaches are actually quite effective if they look at what is working elsewhere. With a novel disease it makes a lot of sense that each country is doing something different. Where decisions have gone wrong it has usually been not acting on current understandings early enough.

If there was a WHO directed worldwide response, and each country adhered rigidly to that I think we wouldn't also get the extreme success stories of SK and Germany, which have their own methods that have been matched with available resources and cultural abilities and constraints.

Some of what happened early on everywhere could have been avoided if all just locked down before the crisis was established, and some countries actually did that. They're actually doing very well now. Humans respond better to tragedy though, and it was really only after news from Italy that most began to take this seriously to some degree.

quote:

look at what is working elsewhere.


Well that is kind of the key now isn't it? Look around, emulate what was successful. I submit New York and Western Europe (not you Sweden!) were successful in flattening the curve. Many parts of the United States, have not been successful and continue to not be successful. Yet they continue to do what has not worked and they are getting the same unsuccessful results. Step 1 is admitting you have a problem.


I think that is a bit of a weird way to look at it? NYC/Italy/Spain/UK all show a big drop in cases precisely because things got so bad in the first places. There are plenty of extenuating circumstances that we can discuss but that does not represent success.

Other states in the US locked down much earlier comparatively. But they can't remain in that situation for ever waiting for a vaccine.

Where I probably agree with you more is at least from a UK perspective there has been very little reflection on what has worked well elsewhere. We've had 2 months at least to look at things and try and replicate those approaches but no we find ourselves basically crossing our fingers and hoping for the best.

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 405
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:43:47 PM   
RangerJoe


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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Wait....

New York set the standard on how to handle this?

I'd rather follow the lead of Arkansas.

New York went from worst to pretty much first. Arkansas has a much higher R-T value as of yesterday. New York has flattened the curve, Arkansas has not. Not really following your logic. New York and Western Europe got absolutely crushed and now are in much better shape than the rest of the United States, particularly the South. So why not follow that model? I understand I might have to go to Georgia for an "essential tattoo" but other than that I think New York is doing a heck of a lot better than Dixie


I think that is because so many vulnerable people in New York have already died.

_____________________________

Seek peace but keep your gun handy.

I'm not a complete idiot, some parts are missing!

“Illegitemus non carborundum est (“Don’t let the bastards grind you down”).”
― Julia Child


(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 406
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 4:58:12 PM   
JohnDillworth


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Speaking of Arkansas.........New York State just hung a quarantine on them because they are a hot spot

https://www.ky3.com/content/news/NY-NJ-Conn-to-quarantine-visitors-from-worse-off-states-including-Arkansas-571464421.html


_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to RangerJoe)
Post #: 407
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 5:28:27 PM   
USSAmerica


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

The situation in the US is interesting and counterintuitive. Something has to give, soon.

1. The 7-day rolling average continues its long decline. That's good.
2. The 7-day rolling average of new cases is increasing, as the improving situation in NY and vicinity is more than countered by increases elsewhere. That's not good.
3. With cases rising, how can mortality be dropping? If it's the lag period, then mortality will soon increase. The gradual decline in new cases ended about two weeks ago, so rising mortality should kick in soon, if there's a correlation (as you'd expect).
4. Cases have been rising in Georgia since about May 25, but mortality continues to decline steadily. If there is a lag in Georgia, it's nearing a month. That's long enough to begin to strain credibility.
5. Could the new cases be more often asymptomatic or mild, so that not as many are hospitalized or dying? Maybe. In my county, we've had a steady increase in new cases over the past month or more, but the number of hospitalizations is holding steady at seven. Ditto total mortality at 15 (no new deaths since late May).

But maybe this county and state are outliers, the data flattering only to deceive. We should know soon - local, state and nationwide.







Dan, I think part of the disparity can be explained by the high concentration of cases in the NYC area and others that overwhelmed their medical systems back in April. I believe that many of those deaths could have been avoided if the capacity to treat them properly was available. Despite the widespread rising case numbers now, they are just that... widespread.

Using NC as an example, we have had record numbers of COVID-19 hospitalizations for the last week or more, with the numbers still slowly climbing. Despite that, we are still at no more than 10% of the ICU bed capacity in the state. Everyone who needs medical care has it available, for now and likely for a long time, in NC.

So, I think the 7 day moving average of Daily Deaths is decreasing toward something resembling the actual mortality rate of the virus from it's inflated earlier peak.

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 408
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 5:47:38 PM   
sPzAbt653


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Local Radio here in Baltimore opened this morning reporting that spikes all across the country are attributed to the Memorial Day activities.

There has been talk for many years that it would take a world wide problem to unite all countries. It's a laughable premise, how could anyone make such a silly statement? We've had global issues for eternity and still no unity. One of my favorite films, Arrival [2016] with the great actress Amy Adams the great actor Forest Whitaker, covers it a bit.

What did happen in Sweden? I never followed it.

(in reply to JohnDillworth)
Post #: 409
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 5:59:36 PM   
JohnDillworth


Posts: 3100
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quote:

ORIGINAL: USSAmerica


quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

The situation in the US is interesting and counterintuitive. Something has to give, soon.

1. The 7-day rolling average continues its long decline. That's good.
2. The 7-day rolling average of new cases is increasing, as the improving situation in NY and vicinity is more than countered by increases elsewhere. That's not good.
3. With cases rising, how can mortality be dropping? If it's the lag period, then mortality will soon increase. The gradual decline in new cases ended about two weeks ago, so rising mortality should kick in soon, if there's a correlation (as you'd expect).
4. Cases have been rising in Georgia since about May 25, but mortality continues to decline steadily. If there is a lag in Georgia, it's nearing a month. That's long enough to begin to strain credibility.
5. Could the new cases be more often asymptomatic or mild, so that not as many are hospitalized or dying? Maybe. In my county, we've had a steady increase in new cases over the past month or more, but the number of hospitalizations is holding steady at seven. Ditto total mortality at 15 (no new deaths since late May).

But maybe this county and state are outliers, the data flattering only to deceive. We should know soon - local, state and nationwide.







Dan, I think part of the disparity can be explained by the high concentration of cases in the NYC area and others that overwhelmed their medical systems back in April. I believe that many of those deaths could have been avoided if the capacity to treat them properly was available. Despite the widespread rising case numbers now, they are just that... widespread.

Using NC as an example, we have had record numbers of COVID-19 hospitalizations for the last week or more, with the numbers still slowly climbing. Despite that, we are still at no more than 10% of the ICU bed capacity in the state. Everyone who needs medical care has it available, for now and likely for a long time, in NC.

So, I think the 7 day moving average of Daily Deaths is decreasing toward something resembling the actual mortality rate of the virus from it's inflated earlier peak.

At no time were New York hospitals overwhelmed. At no time was a bed or treatment unavailable. No one in New York did not get a bed if they needed one. No one in New York was denied a ventilator. New York got killed because we thought we had a couple more weeks only to learn the virus was already here for a month plus density. There is not other place in the country as dense as NYC, particularly the neighborhoods that got hit hardest.

< Message edited by JohnDillworth -- 6/24/2020 6:11:14 PM >


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Post #: 410
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 6:09:04 PM   
JohnDillworth


Posts: 3100
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quote:

ORIGINAL: sPzAbt653

Local Radio here in Baltimore opened this morning reporting that spikes all across the country are attributed to the Memorial Day activities.

There has been talk for many years that it would take a world wide problem to unite all countries. It's a laughable premise, how could anyone make such a silly statement? We've had global issues for eternity and still no unity. One of my favorite films, Arrival [2016] with the great actress Amy Adams the great actor Forest Whitaker, covers it a bit.

What did happen in Sweden? I never followed it.

I suspect that is partially true but if Memorial Day is the entire cause then we should be expecting one hell of a spike in a couple of weeks because of the protests. No sign of anything so far but the critical mass of gestation seems to be longer than previously thought.

Arrival was a fantastic film. It took about 24 hours after seeing it before I completely comprehended the story I had been told. A masterpeice

< Message edited by JohnDillworth -- 6/24/2020 6:27:22 PM >


_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to sPzAbt653)
Post #: 411
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 6:34:44 PM   
BBfanboy


Posts: 18046
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quote:

ORIGINAL: JohnDillworth
At no time were New York hospitals overwhelmed. At no time was a bed or treatment unavailable. No one in New York did not get a bed if they needed one. No one in New York was denied a ventilator. New York got killed because we thought we had a couple more weeks only to learn the virus was already here for a month plus density. There is not other place in the country as dense as NYC, particularly the neighborhoods that got hit hardest.


When NY got hit, testing was nearly non-existent because few were available and what was available was terribly inaccurate. Thus it was hard to get a handle on what was happening. We also had little info in the symptoms, the speed of transmission, the gestation period and arc of the infection in people at various ages. So NY was the experimental lab for North America and had to sort out the cacophony of info/disinfo coming from other places in the world that had it already. Then there was the shortage of PPE and the need to come up with temporary fixes to handle it. (Did that mask sterilizer truck ever get put to use?)

I think NY handled it well considering the obstacles it had. Many of those obstacles have been reduced or removed for current responses so I am less inclined to rationalize their spikes as "beyond their control". BTW, that applies in Canada as well - some areas have done better than others.

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Post #: 412
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 10:55:03 PM   
Canoerebel


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Very good news today. IHME has taken a hard look at the data and concluded that rising cases don't much correlate to an increase in mortality.

IHME's projections dropped US mortality by 10%, to about 179k. Georgia dropped a whopping 40%, from 10k to 6k. Many other states also dropped, but not all of them.

These drops assume that the protocols as they are now remain in place. If additional countermeasures are instituted, mortality will drop even further. All this is a major change. It would be fascinating to know what thinking went into such a major change in outlook.

Apparently, a great deal of the rising cases are indeed asymptomatic or young folks that aren't in danger of expiring.

Many of the states that eased countermeasures early on are still doing well, despite rising positives. States like Tennessee, North Carolina, Colorado, Arkansas, and Maine are doing very well. Montana is a standout.





< Message edited by Canoerebel -- 6/24/2020 11:39:08 PM >

(in reply to BBfanboy)
Post #: 413
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 11:41:17 PM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Very good news today. IHME has taken a hard look at the data and concluded that rising cases don't much correlate to an increase in mortality.

IHME's projections dropped US mortality by 10%, to about 179k. Georgia dropped a whopping 40%, from 10k to 6k. Many other states also dropped, but not all of them.

These drops assume that the current protocols remain in place. If additional countermeasures are instituted, mortality will drop even further.

Apparently, a great deal of the rising cases are indeed asymptomatic or young folks that aren't in danger of expiring.

Many of the states that eased countermeasures early on are still doing well, despite rising positives. States like Tennessee, North Carolina, Colorado, Arkansas, and Maine are doing very well. Montana is a standout.






A revision downwards is always good news and should be celebrated as such.

I would urge some caution though - we have been here before a couple of months ago with their model. IIRC there was a point where their projection got down to c.60k deaths by August and there were suggestions that the downward trend might continue to bring the 'real' numbers even below that. In hindsight it is apparent that those projections were a long way off the mark. The US is at 125k deaths in June.

The mask issue is worthy of comment also - they seem to be modelling 30-35k deaths saved nationwide if the public wear masks.

At the moment they haven't released the commentary to the update - it's only then that you can get into the nuts and bolts of their projections.

But I'll repeat once more - whilst we should always treat 'good news' (and 'bad news') critically it is always better to have good news with a margin of error than bad news with a margin of error


< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 6/24/2020 11:42:23 PM >

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 414
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/24/2020 11:46:24 PM   
Canoerebel


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Yeah, IHME has been all over the place. Some here have noted that can be an attribute. I'm more inclined to view it as not so good.

But you'd think with this much more time under their belts, they'd be working awfully carefully. To lower mortality projections in the face of increasing case numbers and the caterwauling of the press is a major step to take.

Moreover, it holds true with the trend in data coming in, especially from the states that eased measures early on. Georgia did so two months ago but is experiencing a steady decline in mortality. That's very encouraging but hard to register on the public radar given what's coming from the press.

(in reply to Sammy5IsAlive)
Post #: 415
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/25/2020 12:36:15 AM   
Sammy5IsAlive

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel

Yeah, IHME has been all over the place. Some here have noted that can be an attribute. I'm more inclined to view it as not so good.

But you'd think with this much more time under their belts, they'd be working awfully carefully. To lower mortality projections in the face of increasing case numbers and the caterwauling of the press is a major step to take.

Moreover, it holds true with the trend in data coming in, especially from the states that eased measures early on. Georgia did so two months ago but is experiencing a steady decline in mortality. That's very encouraging but hard to register on the public radar given what's coming from the press.


Out of interest is anybody else publishing 'real time' (in the loosest sense) projections in the way that IHME are doing?




< Message edited by Sammy5IsAlive -- 6/25/2020 8:04:39 AM >

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Post #: 416
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/25/2020 1:36:10 AM   
CaptBeefheart


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A personal update from Korea as life returns to normal: The Canadian Chamber of Commerce held a networking event last night at the Four Seasons Hotel in town. It was supposed to be a rooftop event, but since it was raining, it went indoors. Maybe 100 people were there, including the Canadian ambassador. Since people were drinking beer or wine, the masks were generally off. Some people even tried to shake my hand, although I begged off stating my wife works in a hospital (and thus absolutely can't be getting Covid). Fist bumps work for me. As usual for this kind of event, people exchanged business cards. I hit up the hand sanitizer several times during the festivities.

The American Chamber had a ball at the Hyatt on June 12 attended by 400 people. I didn't attend, since I've got better things to spend $400 on, like 10 Matrix games. Anyway, if there was any kind of an outbreak from that event, I think we'd have heard about it by now.

A European embassy is thinking of hosting a trade event in Seoul in September. I hope they go through with it. The problem is will any business people come from the home country if they have to quarantine for two weeks. The answer is undoubtedly "no." The embassy guy I talked to yesterday said they are going to see if they can work out some sort of quarantine exemption with the Korean government. He also told me diplomats and their spouses and dependents are exempt from the quarantine. He had to take a Covid test upon arrival here in Korea but was free to go home even before the results were known. At some point I think business people will have to get similar exemptions. As the embassy guy said, he has companies back home interested in doing business in Korea, but that won't happen until they have face-to-face meetings, eat some BBQ and drink soju (Korean firewater) with potential business partners. Zoom can only do so much.

Cheers,
CB

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Post #: 417
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/25/2020 6:35:30 AM   
obvert


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One of the issues with this virus is the potential for long term complications. I just spoke to a parent of one of the kids in nursery and he had Covid early on (which it might have been good to know earlier, since our children were in constant close contact during that time). He is fine, but a work colleague who he might have contracted it from ha had severe complications. He has had inflammation of the heart.

Mortality is certainly the outcome we most want to avoid, but large amounts of cases in the population may cause long term affects in those who don't die as well. As always, the best case scenario is to limit cases until we know more and there are more effective treatments or vaccines.

https://www.gavi.org/vaccineswork/long-term-health-effects-covid-19

THE LONG-TERM OUTLOOK FOR COVID-19

A striking feature of COVID-19 is how long the symptoms can last. Early in the pandemic, initial medical advice on recovery times for mild COVID-19 had suggested 1-2 weeks. However, many people have seen symptoms last for 8 to 10 weeks or longer, and symptoms can seem to go away only to come racing back. A research group at King’s College London, UK, developed a COVID-19 tracker app for people to record their symptoms daily, and estimated 200,000 have been reporting symptoms for the entire six weeks since the tracker was launched.

Many people had a pattern of symptoms, where their symptoms were heightened initially, nearly disappeared, then returned again with ferocity, along with a very wide range of symptoms.

A key question is what is causing the recurring symptoms – i.e. whether it is reactivation of a persistent infection, reinfection (which seems unlikely based on current data), or whether the person has become infected with another virus or even bacteria as their immune system is still recovering.

Given the multi-organ effect of COVID-19 on the body, survivors may have a variety of long-term effects on their organs, including what some doctors are calling ‘post-COVID lung disease’. Looking at the organs that are affected during infection could give an idea of where the long-term effects on the body are likely to manifest.

As we are still in the throes of the pandemic, and at a relatively early stage of a new disease, it is too early to tell what COVID-19 survivors are likely to experience in a year’s time.

Some researchers are concerned, however, that just as with SARS, many people with the new coronavirus will go on to develop post-viral chronic fatigue syndrome.


< Message edited by obvert -- 6/25/2020 7:02:59 AM >


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Post #: 418
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/25/2020 2:20:48 PM   
fcooke

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Sammy5IsAlive

quote:

ORIGINAL: Canoerebel


Seems like we're all glad we live where we live and wouldn't want others from far away deciding how we should do things.




From a UK perspective I'm not sure I'd go that far. A while back our government set out 'alert levels' that were supposed to link the progress of the epidemic with corresponding levels of response in terms of social distancing measures. As far as I am concerned we seem to be racing well ahead of that road map and without the testing and tracing system that we had previously been told would be the cornerstone of being able to open up safely.

But I think the reality is that we are taking the only course of action available - the economy simply cannot afford to continue paying for lock-down. What frustrates me is that there is no transparency - so we are not only opening up prematurely from a public health perspective but also not giving people the appropriate information in terms of the ongoing risks to encourage them to continue to take informal social distancing measures. I don't know what it's like north of the river but in South London everything seems to have broken down. People have been told it is safe to go back to normal and that is precisely what they are doing. Edit - this is actually perhaps harsh on the govt. who have been paying lip service to the importance of maintaining social distancing. I think my issue is more that they know what the fundamental message is that people will be taking and are being reckless to this - see for example this article by a behavioural scientist https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/24/boris-johnson-ease-lockdown-england

The other point for me is that whilst we are now probably taking the only available course of action economically, as things stand the examples of other countries both elsewhere in Europe and further afield suggest that we didn't have to be in this position in the first place had we reacted quicker.

On both counts it seems to me that the US is in a similar position.

I'm happy to live where I live for lots of other reasons. I'd be much happier if I could add to those reasons a government that had reacted well to this epidemic.

Where exactly south of the river? Lots of good boroughs down there....some still working on improving. Just curious. When I lived in London I was north of the river.

(in reply to Sammy5IsAlive)
Post #: 419
RE: OT: Coronavirus 2, the No Politics Version - 6/25/2020 2:25:54 PM   
BBfanboy


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quote:

obvert: Many people had a pattern of symptoms, where their symptoms were heightened initially, nearly disappeared, then returned again with ferocity, along with a very wide range of symptoms.


That seems to fit with the research that shows the virus developing new strains quite quickly, probably as the body neutralizes the initial infection. Another reason why I think we will be fighting this beast for a long time. I know vaccines try to target immunity to some key, immutable characteristic of the virus but sometimes the best we can come up with is a vaccine that targets an RNA bit that can mutate.

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