In my view there are three simple reasons why this won't be so huge:Even if the death rate were 5% of those infected, that wouldn't equate anywhere near 5% of the total population. Communicable diseases are common and with no controls at all come no where near infecting 100% of the population. — Hanover
I don't know where you're getting your figures, — frank
Based on a recent report by the WHO-China joint mission on COVID-19, 20 percent of the confirmed cases will be severe and require hospitalization for sustained monitoring and supportive treatment. The report indicates that 6 percent of total confirmed cases (or about 30 percent of those hospitalized) will become critical and require specialized intensive care, such as mechanical ventilators.
1800+ as of yesterday. I can't find if there's a separate number for triage deaths though. — Benkei
368 die of coronavirus in Italy in 24 hours — CNN
I’m an epidemiologist. When I heard about Britain’s ‘herd immunity’ coronavirus plan, I thought it was satire — https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/mar/15/epidemiologist-britain-herd-immunity-coronavirus-covid-19
Apparently the UK is walking back the whole "herd immunity strategy" and some officials are now explaining it was just "a medical concept" but not an actual strategy. — boethius
Even if the death rate were 5% of those infected, that wouldn't equate anywhere near 5% of the total population. Communicable diseases are common and with no controls at all come no where near infecting 100% of the population. — Hanover
Something very infectious, like the flu, basically does infect close to 100% of people, just not in any given year as a large portion of the population still has immunity. But eventually, nearly everyone gets the flu at least once. — boethius
The answer to whatever your'e trying to figure out will be found by looking at actual infection rates over time, not by whatever calculations you're throwing together. I can say that I've never been in a school or work situation where 70% of the people were gone due to the flu.Which is why I used 70 percent of people get infected in my calculation. — boethius
Looks like there's going to be a short fall of maybe 50 million ventilators. — Punshhh
The flu" doesn't really describe a particular disease, but each year it's a different strain. If you're saying that at some point in everyone's life they'll get some viral infection, I think that's obvious, but that doesn't equate to saying that each year we should expect 100% (or anywhere close to it) will get that year's particular virus. — Hanover
And if it keeps coming back like the flu where one part of the population has lost immunity due to a new strain, — boethius
The answer to whatever your'e trying to figure out will be found by looking at actual infection rates over time, not by whatever calculations you're throwing together. I can say that I've never been in a school or work situation where 70% of the people were gone due to the flu. — Hanover
Something very infectious, like the flu, basically does infect close to 100% of people, just not in any given year as a large portion of the population still has immunity. But eventually, nearly everyone gets the flu at least once. — boethius
There is no need to pretend. A Libertarian is both a fiscal conservative and a social liberal. Libertarians are often mischaracterized, which is probably why you don't even understand what a Libertarian is.I think that a true libertarian’s ideas might sound more reasonable if they pretended to be a conservative or liberal — praxis
Socialists can only be authoritarian as they think they know what is "good" for everyone, and want to impose their morality on everyone else. It really is no different than a religion.Anyway, a ‘socialist’ could stand for a wide range of things. — praxis
"The flu" doesn't really describe a particular disease, but each year it's a different strain. — Hanover
Even though only 40% (+ or -) of adults get vaccinated for influenza each year, that is still many millions of people who won't get, and thus won't transmit, the influenza virus. — Bitter Crank
Socialists can only be authoritarian as they think they know what is "good" gor everyone, and want to impose their morality on everyone else. It really is no different than a religion. — Harry Hindu
The implications is those that survive will be immune. Viral Vaccines are often an injection of a lesser form of the virus so that your body builds immunity to the real thing. Some people even get a symptoms of the flu after getting the vaccine.Flu vaccine doesn't really change the conclusion, as it does not provide 100% immunity, flu is constantly evolving to defeat the vaccine policy.
And what is essentially for certain is there won't be a vaccine for this first wave, which I'm currently focusing on as lot's of members of the discussion don't seem to understand the implications of this first wave. — boethius
Thanks, China.What's different today is that global travel, because there was no travel freeze when it could have made big difference, has done a great job of mixing up the disease in the major economies in a short period of time. — boethius
global travel — boethius
The implications is those that survive will be immune. — Harry Hindu
Thanks, China. — Harry Hindu
SARS (Severe acute respiratory syndrome) is a good example. SARS (another corona virus) jumped from animals to humans and first appeared in China in 2002, then showed up in several distant places. SARS has a very high fatality rate (15%, and 55% for elderly patients). — Bitter Crank
Lol. Do you even understand what that means? It means that we don't need a bloated govt to tell everyone else how to live. A Libertarian is fine with a restructured police force (the one we have now gives them too much power to avoid the repercussions of abusing their power and they often do). Libertarians want less govt and that means minimizing any one group or individual imposing their ideals on others.But don't you want to impose your morality of fiscal conservatism and social liberalism on everyone else? — boethius
Lol. Do you even understand what that means? It means that we don't need a bloated govt to tell everyone else how to live. — Harry Hindu
Really? Care to point out where you said that?Yes, I've made that assumption clear. One of the unknown risks of the disease is re-infection rates of the same strain, which can happen with some disease, and of course mutation into a new strain.
If you're just repeating my points, thanks for pointing that out. — boethius
All of which wouldn't matter if China had closed their borders first and didn't produce misinformation from outset. The outrage about this whole crisis is misplaced. People are so emotional about Trump that they blame him more than the Chinese. It's pathetic to see one's politics overcome one's reason.Yes, I think it very plausible China wanted to maintain air travel to make sure everyone else suffered as much or worse, in a zero-sum game view of geopolitics.
However, we've had all the data needed to make an optimum containment strategy regardless of what China wants. The West didn't pursue an optimum containment strategy, for neo-liberal ideological reasons according to my analysis, and the West is now paying the price for inviting the virus in to grow in an explosive manner, and soon essentially everyone will pay the price.
There were lot's of policy tools available to slow the spread to something manageable and all the information needed to design such policy since the start of the year. — boethius
If he does go to hospice care, he will kill off everyone else in the care home — Punshhh
Libertarians want less govt and that means minimizing any one group or individual imposing their ideals on others. — Harry Hindu
You still dont get it. Libertarians arent concerened with telling others how to live. They only rule is "Do as you will but dont tread on me".But you still need a government to tell people to live within the laws that you have in your system, and maintain the institutions to accomplish that. — boethius
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