Win At Life said:
By flattening the curve, here are a few things they expect as a result:
1) Instead of 80,000 ICU patients hitting the system all at once and running out of critical care beds and equipment, you spread that out over time, allowing multiple people to cycle in and out of the same bed over the year. So, you can ultimately have the same number of ill, but spreading them out over time prevents you from running out of ICU beds during the peak (what happened to Italy; and they have more ICU beds per person than we do, BTW).
2) Push the time further out when most need treatment, to give the medical community more time to develop more effective treatments and/or drugs to reduce the death rate.
3) Pushing the time further out allows us more time to produce the test kits. We are basically rationing test kits right now and only the most severe are being tested. Once everyone can be tested immediately, we can identify those that need invasive care much earlier in their illness, thus reducing the death rate (see item #1).
4) Pushing the timeline further out allows the possibility of a vaccine to be develop that can be used on more of those at the tail end of this.
Probably other reasons that aren't coming to mind right now.
The primary talking point, and really the only one MSM spewed, in the beginning was #1. #2-4 were secondary talking points at best. Now, they are grabbing on to #4 as an excuse to stay shut down longer.
#2-4 aren't really an element of flattening the curve in its purest of definitions (although the definition has been altered over the last few months). The term "flattening the curve" is NOT designed to reduce the number of cases. Take the definition from WebMD:
Quote:
The flatter curve shows what happens if the spread of the virus slows down. The same number of people may get sick, but the infections happen over a longer span of time, so hospitals can treat everyone.
We flatten the curve to allow, or attempt to allow, proper treatment of all cases. Doing doesn't limit the death toll to patients who are unable to fight the virus with or without treatment (ie. they couldn't be saved in the end). It does limit the potential death toll for patients who wouldn't have an opportunity to be treated because of the stress on the hospital systems.
#2 and #3 are added bonuses, but are not intended to be a component of flattening the curve. Whether it's a pandemic or an every day elective procedure, we should benefit from the improvement of treatments, processes and procedures. When you make these a component of flattening the curve, you introduce a subjective element that can be manipulated. When do you "open back up"? When the procedures and treatments evolve to improve mortality by a certain percentage?
And #4 should have never been introduced as an argument for flattening the curve for a number of reasons. The timeframe to develop, test and introduce a viable vaccine is indefinite. Then you don't even have a picture of the efficacy of the vaccine until several months to a year of data accumulates. Some flu vaccines hit an effective rate of as low as 50%. As the COVID strain evolves over time, you lose sight of whether the vaccine will continue to work.
Whether we flattened the curve or not, I firmly believe that the toll from poverty will be multiples of what we see with COVID. There are too many around the world barely getting by that will be hit hard by the economic impact of shutdowns. I think this is a net worldwide killer every day we keep the economy at a standstill.