Poverty certainly kills people.
Gap said:
Let's just all assume the flatter curve does save lives by allowing optimal care for all of the old and vulnerable. How many does it save? As a benchmark, 80,000 died two years ago in the US in the 13 week flu season. At what cost to our society are our current actions? Do we do this again next flu season? If we don't do this again next flu season, do we lose most of the vulnerable and old people we saved this year?
These are the right questions. I don't know all the answers to all of them. But they are the questions.
LOYAL AG said:Gap said:
Let's just all assume the flatter curve does save lives by allowing optimal care for all of the old and vulnerable. How many does it save? As a benchmark, 80,000 died two years ago in the US in the 13 week flu season. At what cost to our society are our current actions? Do we do this again next flu season? If we don't do this again next flu season, do we lose most of the vulnerable and old people we saved this year?
These are the right questions. I don't know all the answers to all of them. But they are the questions.
I've heard 80% will be infected. If the 15% mortality for those untreated is true then there's your math. Those are the numbers the decision makers are hearing.
LOYAL AG said:Gap said:
Let's just all assume the flatter curve does save lives by allowing optimal care for all of the old and vulnerable. How many does it save? As a benchmark, 80,000 died two years ago in the US in the 13 week flu season. At what cost to our society are our current actions? Do we do this again next flu season? If we don't do this again next flu season, do we lose most of the vulnerable and old people we saved this year?
These are the right questions. I don't know all the answers to all of them. But they are the questions.
I've heard 80% will be infected. If the 15% mortality for those untreated is true then there's your math. Those are the numbers the decision makers are hearing.
Fenrir said:
You're agreeing with his point.
The less we can overload the facilities at the hospital, the better. A normal load probably keeps them fairly busy.Matilda said:
The point is to reduce diffuse the Initial stress on the healthcare system and then leverage the reduced demand to permit time for best practices and natural innovation to dampen the marginal cost of treatment.
I think of it like a DCF. Push costs out and improve your NPV.
MouthBQ98 said:
Not how it works. If you have a spike in cases, hospitals are overrun and care is rationed and death rate goes up considerably. If you drag this out so the hospitals can keep up with the demand better, the death rate goes down considerably even though the duration of the epidemic may be lengthened somewhat.
MouthBQ98 said:
You let Hospitals get overrun, those in them for ANY critical care reason are at much greater risk of death. They all use the same resources
Home health nurses.Agnzona said:MouthBQ98 said:
You let Hospitals get overrun, those in them for ANY critical care reason are at much greater risk of death. They all use the same resources
Then we set up sanatoriums and they go there instead of hospital.
MouthBQ98 said:
That is ridiculously long. The actions and duration are still a very dynamic situation. Nobody knows how this will play out, and constant adjustment will be required.
Yes. He didn't say "flattening the curve" was from the Dukes. He said it made him think of the Dukes.Wildcat said:
Wasn't that "straitnen the curves and flatnen the hills"?
Sq 17 said:
Easter will be the it's ok to resume normal activities. The olds will still be encouraged to shelter in place. Should have adequate testing capability and hopefully a treatment regimen that improves outcomes
Sq 17 said:
Sorry thought if was obvious that it was just a guess
I will amend prior post with an IMO
a more effective treatment is regimen is not a cure
Stop talking so much sense. No room for that here.Chuck Gay said:
1,441 dead in Italy from coronavirus. That seems like a lot until you compare it to our flu season from 2 years ago where we lost 80,000 Americans from the same risk group as those 1,441 dead in Italy. Doing the math, that is less than 2 days worth of dead from out flu season 2 years ago.
Quote:
Coronavirus's economic danger is exponentially greater than its health risks to the public. If the virus does directly affect your life, it is most likely to be through stopping you going to work, forcing your employer to make you redundant, or bankrupting your business.
The trillions of dollars wiped from financial markets this week will be just the beginning, if our governments do not step in. And if President Trump continues to stumble in his handling of the situation, it may well affect his chances of re-election. Joe Biden in particular has identified Covid-19 as a weakness for Trump, promising "steady, reassuring" leadership during America's hour of need.
Worldwide, Covid-19 has killed 4,389 with 31 US deaths as of today. But it will economically cripple millions, especially since the epidemic has formed a perfect storm with stock market crashes, an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia, and the spilling over of an actual war in Syria into another potential migrant crisis.
Yes it does.Agnzona said:
Poverty certainly kills people.
what would be the economic impact of letting it run it's natural course with a couple of million dead and many more hospitalized? Talk about panic and cratering demand.Wildcat said:
Bumping this thread. Fed rate at 0. Ohio and Illinois closing businesses. Discussions of nation wide quarantine ongoing. Independent predicts more bankruptcies than deaths.Quote:
Coronavirus's economic danger is exponentially greater than its health risks to the public. If the virus does directly affect your life, it is most likely to be through stopping you going to work, forcing your employer to make you redundant, or bankrupting your business.
The trillions of dollars wiped from financial markets this week will be just the beginning, if our governments do not step in. And if President Trump continues to stumble in his handling of the situation, it may well affect his chances of re-election. Joe Biden in particular has identified Covid-19 as a weakness for Trump, promising "steady, reassuring" leadership during America's hour of need.
Worldwide, Covid-19 has killed 4,389 with 31 US deaths as of today. But it will economically cripple millions, especially since the epidemic has formed a perfect storm with stock market crashes, an oil war between Russia and Saudi Arabia, and the spilling over of an actual war in Syria into another potential migrant crisis.
Public health officials may spare healthcare system capacity, but the cost of "flattening the curve" may well be far greater.
Edit: to be fair, the article goes into far more than merely the cost of mitigation.
yupWildcat said:Yes it does.Agnzona said:
Poverty certainly kills people.