ya think?k2aggie07 said:
Well yeah.. don't trust anything an anonymous person on TexAgs posts.
ya think?k2aggie07 said:
Well yeah.. don't trust anything an anonymous person on TexAgs posts.
Got me. TBH, I didn't follow much if any of the explanation just saw the graphs that noted each state and the corresponding downturns. Those graphs seem to me to reinforce the findings of the Israeli scientist that the virus follows a pattern no matter where the outbreak occurs. The peak times and the downturns come at roughly the same time periods vis-a-vis the date of introduction of the virus to the population. IOW, this virus has its own life cycle, so to speak.tysker said:
Good stuff especially with the error bands fully shown.
Interesting that NY was categorized as 'Full Lockdown' even though schools, retail, parks and transportation in NYC was slow to be closed. Are the Likely Under Control results due to the lockdown or simply because the virus has run its course in those locations and is past it's peak?
Stlkofta said:
Announcement from Santa Clara County...
https://www.sccgov.org/sites/covid19/Pages/press-release-04-21-20-early.aspx
Deaths were much earlier than the first reported death in the United States in late February.
From my perspective, it would also appear that the virus made its first appearance in the United States well before January 19th.
houag80 said:
That you know of....
Left out the mode of transmission too. But we can go over this **** all damn day. You're a notorious troll that gets smacked down more than Tina Turner after Ike on a bender. Same ****, different day, but yet staff lets you persist for some reason.Shanked Punt said:
You left out the number of Ebola cases, deaths, and it's contagion rate. Troll.
but that's a massive lag. by the time you get a upwards trend in hospitalizations, there's a substantial risk that it's too lateQuote:
The monitoring that needs to continue is the realtime monitoring of hospital/bed capacity.
There is no data showing a massive lag and data shows nationwide citizen lockdown not required again...for anything.cone said:but that's a massive lag. by the time you get a upwards trend in hospitalizations, there's a substantial risk that it's too lateQuote:
The monitoring that needs to continue is the realtime monitoring of hospital/bed capacity.
and we can't and won't do this sort of lockdown again. this was a one shot deal.
you do the surveillance testing so you are weeks ahead of the uptick in hosptializations and you can do pinpoint hyperlocal quarantines
There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
Did I say otherwise? Whatever it takes to protect the vulnerable. I guess I missed what the debate was about.Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
Oh, so you want to test everyone in and around the nursing home? Because people work there and they go home to their families at the end of their shifts.
barnyard1996 said:Did I say otherwise? Whatever it takes to protect the vulnerable. I guess I missed what the debate was about.Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
Oh, so you want to test everyone in and around the nursing home? Because people work there and they go home to their families at the end of their shifts.
My point is first priority is protect the at-risk so we decrease hospitalizations. I am sure there are protocols being put in place, if not already.
Can't nursing homes make it a closed system as needed? Necessity is still the the mother of invention. People are limitless in their creative solution when given freedom to do so.Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
Oh, so you want to test everyone in and around the nursing home? Because people work there and they go home to their families at the end of their shifts. They're not closed systems.
tysker said:Can't nursing homes make it a closed system as needed? Necessity is still the the mother of invention. People are limitless in their creative solution when given freedom to do so.Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.
Oh, so you want to test everyone in and around the nursing home? Because people work there and they go home to their families at the end of their shifts. They're not closed systems.
LINKQuote:
There are no patterns indicating a surge in the number of coronavirus cases in Wisconsin related to the state's controversial April 7 election, according to Andrea Palm, the secretary of Wisconsin's Department of Health Services.
Health officials in the state have identified seven cases of the virus that appear connected to the state's in-person primary voting. They are awaiting news on the seriousness of the cases.
The state's governor and Supreme Court clashed over in-person voting in the primary election amid the coronavirus pandemic.
This. Or at the very least establish protocols. No nursing home employee or relative should be allowed to step foot in the facility unless they are screened and cleared/or have had it and now are clear and immune. This will truly save lives that shutdown folks are clamoring for, as this is statistically the preponderance of the source of deaths nationwide by my count.barnyard1996 said:So fortify the nursing homes. Is this not possible?Keegan99 said:barnyard1996 said:There is also tons of information on the demographics of those who are at risk for hospitalization.Keegan99 said:
There is TONS of data showing that hospitalizations lag infections.
People get exposed, they get sick, and then they get sick enough to require hospitalization. That can take well over a week.
Exactly. Which is why if you only use hospitalizations as a metric, but the bug gets loose in, say, a nursing home, you're screwed. Because that will result in a massive surge in hospitalizations a week or so later.