The article was concerned with "US Covid-19 Death Counts". You flippantly mention "nearly half a million excess deaths" — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you really think there will be an increase of half a million deaths from TB in the US because of Covid lockdowns? That seems extremely far fetched. — Metaphysician Undercover
We can assume that there has to be at least similar if not larger amount of infections at the spring as now. — ssu
Based on what it says there on the chart: "Limited testing meant that most infections were not confirmed during this wave". I get your point, that partly might be an issue to be noted, but notice that the statistical difference is huge: from April to June there is hardly any correlation, while starting from July the correlation between deaths and infections is obvious.Are you serious? What do you base that on, the death rate? The first wave swept through the most vulnerable, and exposed, the nursing homes, where the numbers of vulnerable are concentrated and the virus spread easily. — Metaphysician Undercover
Based on what it says there on the chart: "Limited testing meant that most infections were not confirmed during this wave". — ssu
but notice that the statistical difference is huge: from April to June there is hardly any correlation, — ssu
while starting from July the correlation between deaths and infections is obvious. — ssu
Yet you say...You cannot proceed logically from the premise of a lack of information, to your conclusion of a similar or larger amount of infections. — Metaphysician Undercover
Which I agree.What's different in the April-June time frame is a higher proportion of deaths per infections. That's probably due to a combination of the reasons you stated (insufficient testing), and the reasons I stated (rapid infection in the most vulnerable population). — Metaphysician Undercover
Yet highly less than earlier.And we can still assume that there are many infected today who do not test. — Metaphysician Undercover
Breathing issues, brain fog and a lingering loss of taste are just some of the long-term effects seen in coronavirus patients. Now, experts are warning that COVID-19 could also make it difficult to get an erection.
We can assume that there has to be at least similar if not larger amount of infections at the spring as now. — ssu
So you assume it went through all the nursing homes? It's not like the pandemic has gone through the population, which is obvious when you look at the debate around herd immunity and the Swedish-model (or the first adopted UK-policy).The initial wave culled the most vulnerable portion of the population both from the point of view of first quickly finding those who were open to getting infected and those with the highest mortality rate by age and sex. The nursing home patients. — magritte
First ask yourselves, how much investment and focus is put into vaccine research generally? Compare that with what is now happening with Covid-19. You think those billions now poured into various vaccine programs by major countries won't have an effect? — ssu
Yes, absolutely I think that (or at least not the scale of effect relied on). Developing a vaccine involves a very great number of resources and those resources are spread sufficiently thinly such that it takes a considerable amount of time to complete all the stages. Not all of those resources can simply be bought by throwing money at them. How is money going to increase the number of trained staff? How is money going to increase the supply of minority condition groups to test against? How is money going to speed up the long-term monitoring period?
It's lunacy to invest this amount of money in a medicine which might not even work when there's absolutely proven interventions which we know will save tens of thousands of lives not only now but in the next one, and the next one... — Isaac
Oooh, frank, that's too positive. Especially being positive about technological innovation and that it will improve things in the future.
People don't like that. Far more trendy and smart looking to be doom and gloom. We're on the Titanic and people are just rearranging the deck chairs. That stuff. — ssu
So you assume it went through all the nursing homes? It's not like the pandemic has gone through the population, which is obvious when you look at the debate around herd immunity and the Swedish-model (or the first adopted UK-policy). — ssu
Well, coming back to the discussion above with Isaac just two months ago: I think we can say that indeed yes, when there is an urge to do something, a concentrated effort to do it and far more resources are put on something than normally, it does have an effect on the timetable:
The vaccine development took nine months, not two to five years. Something worth noting. — ssu
I think your point was that we don't need a vaccine because we have working therapeutics. What drugs were you talking about? — frank
That's partly because the mRNA vaccine is a new technology. Future vaccine production will also be sped up due to this innovation. Cool, huh? — frank
No, my point was firstly, that a rushed vaccine based on new technology may be either falsely effective, have unexpected side effects (already we're getting allergic reaction that was not anticipated), or too expensive to help poorer countries. — Isaac
And secondly that a huge proportion of the deaths are in poor communities coupled with poor healthcare services. Investing in core service provision and community healthcare is a far more efficient as it helps not only this pandemic, but also future ones. — Isaac
Thirdly, investment doesn't spring out of nowhere. It's taken from other budgets. — Isaac
I've just cited figures for TB excess deaths which result from only a fractional drop in the availability of frontline services. — Isaac
If, however, your aim is to look after the immediate and future health of the population with the scarce resources we have available then the fact that a few rich countries have used up years of healthcare investment on a luxury vaccine is hardly the Holy Grail. — Isaac
Seriously. Would we trust a massive multinational business to act in the interests of the wider community under any other circumstances? Do we need to go through the track record of giant multinationals with social welfare? — Isaac
They're in business to make money. — frank
It sounds like you don't have faith in the three stage testing system. You're not alone there. — frank
Yep. It's right there in black and white in the company's articles of association. Their objective is to make a profit for their shareholders. Why would we even expect them to produce a product which has a net benefit to society? It's not even on their list. — Isaac
What's really worrying is that anti-cancer drugs are now so profitable that it is actually an economic viability to simply run enough trials to ensure at least one is positive simply by chance. Since there's no requirement to publish failed trials, we could soon see companies producing drugs which are no better than placebo but seem so on the basis of one chance trial...if we haven't already...we wouldn't know. — Isaac
It's astonishing what fear will do. You couldn't make a more archetypal villain than big pharma if you tried, now they're the shining white knights. — Isaac
the FDA has given the mRNA vaccine the big Checkity Check — frank
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