Middle America now... 3rd case in Illinois
https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/cook-county-state-health-officials-confirm-coronavirus-case/2228843/
Fizban said:
Search #Costco...
What does it say about our society that when people panic-buy it is toilet paper above all that they are hoarding?
thirdcoast said:
I read the study, but discount it considering its early in an outbreak and fact that it's Chinese reports.
Yes, the number of deaths will go up, but at a slower rate than non-lethal cases, IMO. That causes mortality rate to decrease. You seem to think deaths will increase at a rate that increases mortality rate?
Quote:Quote:
Coronavirus epidemy in Iran has past the crisis level. The country is imploding - law and order to disappear in the next days. A number of officials already died and mass infection among hospital staff and police forces reported.
Ali
@aliostad
#irancorona all of this, why?
The regime hid the initial cases since:
1) it was just before election and needed high turnout
2) due to political need, did not stop flights to china
3) source seems to becleric students from china arrived in Qom
4) did not close religious shrines
5) instead of providing information on the gravity of the risks to the public, played down and resorted to the same tactic of rhetoric "we will fight and beat it"
Now it has spread everywhere. The world now has an example on what failure to contain the virus can do.
My parents, brother, uncles and in-laws there and I am so worried about them. #irancorona #irancoronavirus
Try that math againAg$08 said:
Where are you getting a 5% mortality in Hubei? The current death toll is 2,761. The current recovered number is 31,187. Deaths/(Deaths+Recovered) puts the rate at .08%.
I imagine we'll wee a similar drop eventually in all countries. The recovered count takes a lot longer than the death count for each case, so it takes a while for the true rate to materialize.
Quote:
As recorded by the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (China CDC), by Feb 16, 2020, there had been 70 641 confirmed cases and 1772 deaths due to COVID-19, with an average mortality of about 2.5%.1 However, in-depth analysis of these data show clear disparities in mortality rates between Wuhan (>3%), different regions of Hubei (about 2.9% on average), and across the other provinces of China (about 0.7% on average). We postulate that this is likely to be related to the rapid escalation in the number of infections around the epicentre of the outbreak, which has resulted in an insufficiency of health-care resources, thereby negatively affecting patient outcomes in Hubei
thirdcoast said:
I read the study, but discount it considering its early in an outbreak and fact that it's Chinese reports.
Yes, the number of deaths will go up, but at a slower rate than non-lethal cases, IMO. That causes mortality rate to decrease. You seem to think deaths will increase at a rate that increases mortality rate?
RGV AG said:
Torreon, Coah, Mexico is reporting a case. Lot's of interaction in that city with US. Will be concerned to see how the LatAm countries deal with this deal.
Unless what takes over makes Al-Qaeda and ISIS look like a group of boy scouts.GE said:
If this is the straw that breaks the Iranian regime's back it may have been worth it
k2aggie07 said:thirdcoast said:
I read the study, but discount it considering its early in an outbreak and fact that it's Chinese reports.
Yes, the number of deaths will go up, but at a slower rate than non-lethal cases, IMO. That causes mortality rate to decrease. You seem to think deaths will increase at a rate that increases mortality rate?
Lol so you read an article in the New England Journal of Medicine following 1000 cases from beginning to end and discounted it because reasons?
So what are you actually basing this off of then?
Username checks outUncoverAg00 said:
I have no problem deferring the masks to health care workers. They're the front line. Protect them so they can fight.
Trump's response to a question at today's presser indicated that closing the southern border is a serious consideration at this time.the last of the bohemians said:
Biggest US concern for me would be a Mexico outbreak, for the obvious unscanned flow of people reasons.
Quote:
I'm basing it off data sample size and the maturity of science fighting this illness.
I see you conveniently ignored my very simple math point on mortality rate. Do you disagree with that common sense logic around non-lethal cases increasing much faster than deaths? If not, what do you base an increased COVID-19 mortality rate on?
And within 24 hours, a judge in Hawaii, Washington, New York, California, or DC will issue an injunction.Rossticus said:Trump's response to a question at today's presser indicated that closing the southern border is a serious consideration at this time.the last of the bohemians said:
Biggest US concern for me would be a Mexico outbreak, for the obvious unscanned flow of people reasons.
Yeah that concern is why I said may have beenRapier108 said:Unless what takes over makes Al-Qaeda and ISIS look like a group of boy scouts.GE said:
If this is the straw that breaks the Iranian regime's back it may have been worth it
During a crisis in the Middle East, it is very common for radical Islam to exploit it.
k2aggie07 said:Quote:
I'm basing it off data sample size and the maturity of science fighting this illness.
I see you conveniently ignored my very simple math point on mortality rate. Do you disagree with that common sense logic around non-lethal cases increasing much faster than deaths? If not, what do you base an increased COVID-19 mortality rate on?
I think you're making an assumption. Namely that the experience in China of 70,000+ cases somehow isn't representative of the disease.
If the severity breakdown is the same, the ratios stay the same. Numbers just get bigger. So you're basically saying China was underreporting minor cases more than we will underreport minor cases. I don't see any reason to assume that. They presumably have as much motivation or more to overreport minor cases or underreport severe ones.
I don't see any reason to expect it to change, frankly. I think the disease has a mortality rate of 1% when good treatment is available, and if good treatment isn't available it will rise.
And one question about China is how many deaths are the result of their piss poor management and trying to ignore it in the first 3-4 weeks.thirdcoast said:k2aggie07 said:Quote:
I'm basing it off data sample size and the maturity of science fighting this illness.
I see you conveniently ignored my very simple math point on mortality rate. Do you disagree with that common sense logic around non-lethal cases increasing much faster than deaths? If not, what do you base an increased COVID-19 mortality rate on?
I think you're making an assumption. Namely that the experience in China of 70,000+ cases somehow isn't representative of the disease.
If the severity breakdown is the same, the ratios stay the same. Numbers just get bigger. So you're basically saying China was underreporting minor cases more than we will underreport minor cases. I don't see any reason to assume that. They presumably have as much motivation or more to overreport minor cases or underreport severe ones.
I don't see any reason to expect it to change, frankly. I think the disease has a mortality rate of 1% when good treatment is available, and if good treatment isn't available it will rise.
I think mortality rate is being reported as high as 4% in China and 2% elsewhere. You believe the ratio of deaths to confirmed cases is going to stay the same, just bigger numbers. I think cases will outstrip deaths such that mortality decreases. We will see who is right.