Ain’t looking good folks.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/health/...rus-antibodies-fading-fast-focus-15414533.php
https://www.sfchronicle.com/health/...rus-antibodies-fading-fast-focus-15414533.php
"So far, though, there have been only scattered reports of reinfection and no comprehensive studies have verified that it can happen. Experts say the disease hasn’t been around long enough to determine the likelihood of contracting the disease more than once."Ain’t looking good folks.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/health/...rus-antibodies-fading-fast-focus-15414533.php
Actually "in use" or just standing by? Like most of them in Queens, NYC, and that massive hospital ship that was never utilized.I couldn’t find the graph by city of the number of refrigerated morgue trailers in use. That might be a good index to identify the hot spots.. ......
Can we also agree on these fact? More than 2 million people die in the US every year from various diseases. Of over 2.8 million total annual deaths (all causes): Heart disease ~650,000 (24% of total deaths) and cancer ~600,000 (21%).
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An interesting insight into the stats side of the pandemic has just come to light in England. (I say 'England' deliberately as opposed to 'The UK' as Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland are devolved government entities and have their own health authorities, policies, pandemic mitigation and statistics policies and practices.)
An Oxford University team has been looking at 'Covid deaths' in England (which accounts for the majority of UK cases nationally as it has the largest population by far and also most of the large cities / high population density areas). It turns out PHE (Public Health England) takes all recorded 'out of hospital' deaths in England and searches the Covid test records to find any matches. If the deceased has ever tested positive for the virus, it is chalked up as a 'Covid death' irrespective of whether the individual recovered from the disease, how long ago the test was, or the circumstances of the death. So, if I'd tested positive back in March and die tomorrow of traumatic injuries suffered in a road traffic accident, I'd go into the UK stats and on Worldometer as a UK Covid daily death. Should the policy continue indefinitely, all of the nearly 0.3M English people who've tested positive would inevitably and eventually be recorded as 'Covid deaths' unless an immortality drug appears even though some wouldn't show up in the records for 50, 60 years.
It is reckoned that this is doubling English daily 'Covid deaths' right now and explains why the death figures have failed to drop in line with the daily new case numbers, hospitalizations etc. In fact, the UK has now recorded three consecutive weeks where total deaths from all causes are lower than the five-preceding years' averages.
It's been said many times that a pandemic response is 'a numbers game', but getting the 'right numbers' is both difficult and vital, so this policy must rank high in the tables of institutional stupidity. The UK government Health Secretary has instituted an urgent review, so expect the UK Worldometer figures to be adjusted downwards. Conversely, it has been reported here that in some other countries where the per capita death rates are apparently much lower than ours, you have to die in hospital in a Covid ward almost with a ventilator tube stuck into you to be recorded as a Covid fatality.
... It is reckoned that this is doubling English daily 'Covid deaths' right now and explains why the death figures have failed to drop in line with the daily new case numbers, hospitalizations etc. In fact, the UK has now recorded three consecutive weeks where total deaths from all causes are lower than the five-preceding years' averages.
In contrast, the U.S. has substantial excess deaths, likely indicating an undercount of COVID-19 deaths as well as deaths that have occurred because people with other life-threatening conditions were afraid to seek, or could not obtain, appropriate medical care because of the pandemic.
What I was actually alluding to there (not explained) was how many of the Covid deaths - elderly, many in LTC facilities, most with underlying morbidities - would likely have succumbed anyway by the end of the year. After all, over 2 million of us die from some disease every year, and the vast majority (as with Covid) are elderly. What Covid is doing is shortening many lives by months, not years or decades. In Minnesota the median age of a Covid decedent is 83.5 years! Ponder that, it should give you pause. How many died with Covid as opposed to from Covid?Sure. But heart disease and "cancer" (a hodgepodge of many neoplasms with different etiologies) are not infectious -- i.e., my behavior doesn't affect your risk.
In just 4.5 months COVID-19 has killed more Americans than die of all other infectious diseases combined in the average year. COVID-19 is already the third leading cause of death in the U.S. since the first of March, and has killed more than twice as many Americans as lung cancer (the most common fatal "cancer" in the U.S.). Pretty impressive for a single viral agent which has a case doubling time of just over a month at the moment.
Sure. But heart disease and "cancer" (a hodgepodge of many neoplasms with different etiologies) are not infectious -- i.e., my behavior doesn't affect your risk.
In just 4.5 months COVID-19 has killed more Americans than die of all other infectious diseases combined in the average year. COVID-19 is already the third leading cause of death in the U.S. since the first of March, and has killed more than twice as many Americans as lung cancer (the most common fatal "cancer" in the U.S.). Pretty impressive for a single viral agent which has a case doubling time of just over a month at the moment.
How many die annually from the Flu?
What I was actually alluding to there (not explained) was how many of the Covid deaths - elderly, many in LTC facilities, most with underlying morbidities - would likely have succumbed anyway by the end of the year.
"Excess Deaths" is a good metric, and one I watch, but there's possibly a temporal displacement effect to consider. Many of those excess deaths in May and June may well largely be people whose deaths would otherwise have been spread over the next six months. What if there are significantly fewer than normal deaths down the road? Would that balance the ledger?So, there should be virtually zero excess deaths since COVID-19 got going. And yet, ...
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Read back through this thread. Normalized for population, 1967 (0.05% of population killed) and 1957 (0.07% killed) were deadlier. For Covid-19 to be the deadliest in the past century will take 231,700 deaths, likely to become reality. But considering it'd be nearly an order of magnitude less devastating than 1918, a mean feat. That Spanish Flu killed indiscriminately, taking as many young healthy people as old infirm ones. I'd like to see the Excess Deaths figures for it.Read back through this thread. It's been posted many times. Short answer: COVID-19 has killed more Americans than any flu, seasonal or pandemic, in the past century.
Read back through this thread. Normalized for population, 1967 (0.05% of population killed) and 1957 (0.07% killed) were deadlier. For Covid-19 to be the deadliest in the past century will take 231,700 deaths, likely to become reality.
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