Esther12
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
This one from Wessely is very poor and certainly not evidence just opinion.
You have seen areas being locked down during this. eg no one in or out of a city/region without approval.
This one from Wessely is very poor and certainly not evidence just opinion.
You have seen areas being locked down during this. eg no one in or out of a city/region without approval.
Wessely said:And yet, while anxiety among people subjected to quarantine is troubling, perhaps the most pernicious effect is on how those outside the cordon come to view those on the inside. Previous incidents have seen residents of affected areas socially shunned, discriminated against in the workplace, and their property attacked
To me that was an argument that was falling back to having a cordon and claiming people inside would be stigmatized rather that the lock down that seems to be happening where people are largely confined to their houses and in large regions. (With heavy track and test policies in China)
Thought y’all might be interested in this analysis of Irish cases. Smaller numbers and earlier stage of the pandemic than some other European countries. Bit of context first:
Population is approx. 5
Ireland had its first case confirmed 29th February. (Compare to UK end January.)
Schools were closed in Ireland from 13th March, at which point 70 cases had been confirmed.
(Compare to UK where a BBC report 14th March reported 1410 confirmed cases.)
Ireland has 557 confirmed cases as of Wed 19 March. Testing is being ramped up, so as well as the spread itself increasing, Ireland’s numbers are expected to increase quite a lot.
This analysis is of the first 350 confirmed cases:
https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/c...at-as-of-midnight-tuesday-17-march-350-cases/
Median age of Irish cases to 17th March is 43.
Compare to median age of 63 in Italy in @Simon M ’s post above, although the median age of Irish cases could increase as testing and spread etc increases.
Compare also to the Chinese data:
It seems possible that the median age of cases increases as the virus spreads through the community. The younger, more mobile people might be the first to get it and then it gradually makes its way to the older ones?
31% of the 350 Irish cases were hospitalised and the stats show that more older patients were hospitalised.
2% were admitted to ICU.
There have been 3 deaths.
No information on co-morbidities unfortunately. My understanding is that the first two deaths did have other illnesses, and the third fatality did not.
There was a big jump in confirmed cases between March 18th (74 new cases) and March 19th (191 new cases).
More on how covid-19 has evolved in Ireland here:
https://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/coronavirus-how-it-has-affected-ireland-day-by-day-1.4206691
I don't think folk do get it. But because [some people] have warned the govt against scaring people too much, they seem to be much more worried about causing PTSD than they are about people actually dying. Human beings are not good at assessing risk, and sometimes we just need to be shouted at to get us to act. All this "would you mind awfully" is not terribly effective!
So many comments about the UK situation is very much relevant to the same in Sweden. I'm really worried, sad and frustratedUntil very recently, the US and UK governments were taking a relatively gentle approach to controlling the new coronavirus epidemic – compared with most other governments around the world.
Haven't read your blog yet but thanks in advance. I was surprised when I listened to the Radio 4 6pm news this evening. Apparently, they can ease restrictions/re-instate restrictions to manage the availability of ventilators in ICU. When there are ventilators available --- the cafe's will open and when the ventilators are full the cafes will close --- who would have thought it was that easy! Modelling who needs it!
The figures for coronavirus are eye-watering. But what is not clear - because the modellers did not map this - is to what extent the deaths would have happened without coronavirus.
Given that the old and frail are the most vulnerable, would these people be dying anyway?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-51979654As we get deeper into this crisis, we will need much greater intelligence on just how many lives are truly being saved, and compare that to the wider cost to society, so the government and the public can weigh up the best course of action.
It's going to be very difficult to remain polite in every circumstances...
Yes, it's not how many have died but how many will die. Given how rapid the rate of rise of known cases, presumably when someone dies you have to compare with known cases at the time they contracted the illness?So if you're able to do determine X cases of COVID-19 you have to wait two weeks or more to see how many of those X cases have died because of the illness. I think most CFR reported simply divide the number of cases and deaths momentaneously, which makes them a bit of an underestimation. It explains why the CFR has been increasing in countries like China and South-Korea where the number of cases has fallen dramatically as the death rate has a delay in catching up. Similarly, in Germany, the epidemic probably has only just started so one could expect the CFR to rise significantly over the coming weeks.
By identifying and isolating clusters of infected people, we wiped out Covid-19 in Vò
It’s now about one month since Covid-19 began to sweep across Italy. With more than total cases topping 40,000 as of 19 March, it is now the worst-affected country outside of China.
But in the last two weeks, a promising pilot study here has produced results that may be instructive for other countries trying to control coronavirus. Beginning on 6 March , along with researchers at the University of Padua and the Red Cross, we tested all residents of Vò, a town of 3,000 inhabitants near Venice – including those who did not have symptoms. This allowed us to quarantine people before they showed signs of infection and stop the further spread of coronavirus. In this way, we eradicated coronavirus in under 14 days.
We don't have full data, there is uncertainty. Ergo, you cannot believe any of it? Where have I seen that tactic before?The figures for coronavirus are eye-watering. But what is not clear - because the modellers did not map this - is to what extent the deaths would have happened without coronavirus.
Hilda Bastian said:A couple of days ago, I read John Ioannidis' opinion piece in Stat News on Covid-19, as well as tweets raging about, or defending, it. I quickly posted a rebuttal. A large part of the opinion piece centered on his estimates of the potential risk of dying from the coronavirus disease, Covid-19. But no sources were provided and it was complicated, so that was going to need more time. I've had a chance to do that now - helped along by people on Twitter who responded to my post (thank you everyone!).