Well said, thank you
angus55 said:k2aggie07 said:
OP is infectious disease physician.
Which to me is a like a fancy mechanic. A high paid guesser.
oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
Thanks for the China funny data callout. Made me laugh.Quote:
The range for death to hospitalization for COVID19, using CDC's same numbers linked above, was 5-17% of hospitalizations end in fatality. Not sure why that's more or less relevant than overall CFR.
Philip J Fry said:
They will once they start flattening out. We don't know yet when that will happen.
k2aggie07 said:
But no one is going to be convinced by someone else saying there are no firebreaks. People have to come to terms with that fact. What stops it?
Numerator is lagging an exponential denominator by 3-5 days.oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
Troutslime said:k2aggie07 said:
But no one is going to be convinced by someone else saying there are no firebreaks. People have to come to terms with that fact. What stops it?
Individual responsibility.
Bo Darville said:Troutslime said:k2aggie07 said:
But no one is going to be convinced by someone else saying there are no firebreaks. People have to come to terms with that fact. What stops it?
Individual responsibility.
You seen the average individual?
benchmark said:Numerator is lagging the denominator by 3-5 days.oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
benchmark said:Numerator is lagging the denominator by 3-5 days.oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
This is true. As testing ramps up, the CFR should initially drop. I've been watching the USA CFR fall from about 1.8% to 1.25% recently. Perhaps it starts rising again or perhaps the drug cocktail is prescribed enough off label that we stamp this virus out altogether.benchmark said:Numerator is lagging the denominator by 3-5 days.oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
dBoy99 said:benchmark said:Numerator is lagging the denominator by 3-5 days.oldarmy1 said:
With every 10k cases reported the corresponding mortality rate is dropping. Where are the deaths?
Numerator? Denominator? Are those complex or simple math words?
Can some smart guys explain them words to me?
Are you Ok with taking us back 200 years on an economic basis? I'm in if you're in.FriendlyAg said:Rattler12 said:I already have 15, 20 maybe 30 people or more that I have known and loved and that have died from something. Life has gone on. Deaths are just as much a part of living as births are. Bad things happen to good people. This will pass and life will go on. I choose not to live in fear and panic mode. Does that make me really really wrong?Sid Farkas said:Yeah. Not angry. But really really wrongSocial Distanced said:
He doesn't seem angry to me.
When this is over we will all likely know and love someone who either dies or is permanently damaged by the virus, even with extreme measures in place
However it could be even worse if we just relax and go back to normal life now.
I happen to believe government involvement will almost completely recede when the virus does. its easy to get frustrated when the people who disagree seem to have no appreciation for the complexity of the situation and simply go full throttle on the "evil gubmit" meme (it just sounds so dumb in this situation)
...I said it here before: anyone who ignores the government orders and their families should be denied a hospital bed and ventilator and be held criminally and civilly liable for anyone they make sick (directly or indirectly)
No one is disagreeing. The measures that are being taken are there to reduce death. Are you against reducing death?
aggie2812-2 said:
How many positives vs tested?
More cases are showing up because we are better at testing.Infection_Ag11 said:
Already 14k new US cases since yesterday and by the end of the day we'll have more or less doubled in 24 hours (24k to 45-48k estimate).
Worldwide we'll surpass 500k by tomorrow morning and hit a million sometime early Wednesday. We're still at least a week away from curbing the exconential growth internationally if our current measures work and it's essentially a mathematical and medical certainty we'll hit 10 million cases world wide by the start of next week.
A lot of people are about to get a very disturbing math lesson.
Troutslime said:Gordo14 said:Troutslime said:Quote:
We do not know if the projections (death) are materializing or not. We also dont know if the measure are working or not. Its March 22.
Edit and I'm not sure what historical data you are referring too. There are plenty of historical pandemics that were far worse or far better than this.
Exponential is the new buzzword yet nobody has brought up proportional. If the flu kills X, and the Swine flu kills Y, and pneumonia kills Z, why haven't past government responses been proportional? (Please don't go into infection rate because it's not relevant to my point). CV shows up, it becomes a media firestorm and now here we are. WTF? If 1.5% death rate is the norm, what can we expect for .5%?
Besides, if they really believed what they were saying (politicians) there response is woefully inadequate.
If the argument moves to "overwhelming the system", why didn't we address it in 2009 during the Swine flu? Is it because there wasn't a problem? Probably. If the concern is that CV will overwhelm it, why not focus on helping hospitals out? The solutions being implemented don't match the crime so to speak. Also, I'm 55 and have yet to see an accurate government prediction, yet I'm supposed to believe this one. I'm not a skeptic, I'm a product. A product of failed government. Don't blame me.
Good thing plenty of people whp are experts in the field and don't work for the government are also equally concerned. And if you ignore that then you can always fall back on your gut instinct, which I'm sure is well informed.
What should their response be then? The government is using every tool it has besides forcing people to stay home - what is inadequate about that?
Swine Flu was a concern. Schools were shut down... however, hospitalization rates were lower, it was less contagiois, it was less likely to cause death, and humans had some natural immunity to it being exposed to the seasonal flu regularly. Our body was well equipped to have an immune response on day one. Also the incubation period was shorter. CV19 is worse in every category I just described than Swine Flu. Therefore, it requires a different response. The problem is hospitals only have so much physical equipment to deal with things like this. Sure they are asking for aid from the government, but part of the issue is hospital beds and ventilators for which there isn't a massive supply sitting on the open market ready to be bought. PPE is well short of where it needs to be. If a hospital has say 110% of the max capacity they've ever needed of ICU beds and ventilators, and something puts some 3% of the local population or more into a condition where they need equipment on top of the standard baseline demand for that equipment... Then you end up with many times the demand you have supply for. Again the problem is we need to slow the rate of people gettint sick down. There's only one way to do that when we have no real medical tools to slow or stop this thing - keep people away from each other. 80% of infections have been passed by people who had no symptoms, yet. The only way to stop transmission is to drop those infections.
What would you expect "experts" to say? They have no skin in the game.
Are they responsible for the results of their views? No. Hell, even the politicians aren't when you boil it down.
Rattler12 said:Are you Ok with taking us back 200 years on an economic basis? I'm in if you're in.FriendlyAg said:Rattler12 said:I already have 15, 20 maybe 30 people or more that I have known and loved and that have died from something. Life has gone on. Deaths are just as much a part of living as births are. Bad things happen to good people. This will pass and life will go on. I choose not to live in fear and panic mode. Does that make me really really wrong?Sid Farkas said:Yeah. Not angry. But really really wrongSocial Distanced said:
He doesn't seem angry to me.
When this is over we will all likely know and love someone who either dies or is permanently damaged by the virus, even with extreme measures in place
However it could be even worse if we just relax and go back to normal life now.
I happen to believe government involvement will almost completely recede when the virus does. its easy to get frustrated when the people who disagree seem to have no appreciation for the complexity of the situation and simply go full throttle on the "evil gubmit" meme (it just sounds so dumb in this situation)
...I said it here before: anyone who ignores the government orders and their families should be denied a hospital bed and ventilator and be held criminally and civilly liable for anyone they make sick (directly or indirectly)
No one is disagreeing. The measures that are being taken are there to reduce death. Are you against reducing death?
FriendlyAg said:Troutslime said:Gordo14 said:Troutslime said:Quote:
We do not know if the projections (death) are materializing or not. We also dont know if the measure are working or not. Its March 22.
Edit and I'm not sure what historical data you are referring too. There are plenty of historical pandemics that were far worse or far better than this.
Exponential is the new buzzword yet nobody has brought up proportional. If the flu kills X, and the Swine flu kills Y, and pneumonia kills Z, why haven't past government responses been proportional? (Please don't go into infection rate because it's not relevant to my point). CV shows up, it becomes a media firestorm and now here we are. WTF? If 1.5% death rate is the norm, what can we expect for .5%?
Besides, if they really believed what they were saying (politicians) there response is woefully inadequate.
If the argument moves to "overwhelming the system", why didn't we address it in 2009 during the Swine flu? Is it because there wasn't a problem? Probably. If the concern is that CV will overwhelm it, why not focus on helping hospitals out? The solutions being implemented don't match the crime so to speak. Also, I'm 55 and have yet to see an accurate government prediction, yet I'm supposed to believe this one. I'm not a skeptic, I'm a product. A product of failed government. Don't blame me.
Good thing plenty of people whp are experts in the field and don't work for the government are also equally concerned. And if you ignore that then you can always fall back on your gut instinct, which I'm sure is well informed.
What should their response be then? The government is using every tool it has besides forcing people to stay home - what is inadequate about that?
Swine Flu was a concern. Schools were shut down... however, hospitalization rates were lower, it was less contagiois, it was less likely to cause death, and humans had some natural immunity to it being exposed to the seasonal flu regularly. Our body was well equipped to have an immune response on day one. Also the incubation period was shorter. CV19 is worse in every category I just described than Swine Flu. Therefore, it requires a different response. The problem is hospitals only have so much physical equipment to deal with things like this. Sure they are asking for aid from the government, but part of the issue is hospital beds and ventilators for which there isn't a massive supply sitting on the open market ready to be bought. PPE is well short of where it needs to be. If a hospital has say 110% of the max capacity they've ever needed of ICU beds and ventilators, and something puts some 3% of the local population or more into a condition where they need equipment on top of the standard baseline demand for that equipment... Then you end up with many times the demand you have supply for. Again the problem is we need to slow the rate of people gettint sick down. There's only one way to do that when we have no real medical tools to slow or stop this thing - keep people away from each other. 80% of infections have been passed by people who had no symptoms, yet. The only way to stop transmission is to drop those infections.
What would you expect "experts" to say? They have no skin in the game.
Are they responsible for the results of their views? No. Hell, even the politicians aren't when you boil it down.
You have zero credibility. Your argument is "WAHHHHHHHHHH, life has changed! NOT FAIR!"
I already am and a Dr didn't have to ask me to do it.FriendlyAg said:The_Fox said:Possibly? What is the economic cost per life saved?FriendlyAg said:Rattler12 said:I already have 15, 20 maybe 30 people or more that I have known and loved and that have died from something. Life has gone on. Deaths are just as much a part of living as births are. Bad things happen to good people. This will pass and life will go on. I choose not to live in fear and panic mode. Does that make me really really wrong?Sid Farkas said:Yeah. Not angry. But really really wrongSocial Distanced said:
He doesn't seem angry to me.
When this is over we will all likely know and love someone who either dies or is permanently damaged by the virus, even with extreme measures in place
However it could be even worse if we just relax and go back to normal life now.
I happen to believe government involvement will almost completely recede when the virus does. its easy to get frustrated when the people who disagree seem to have no appreciation for the complexity of the situation and simply go full throttle on the "evil gubmit" meme (it just sounds so dumb in this situation)
...I said it here before: anyone who ignores the government orders and their families should be denied a hospital bed and ventilator and be held criminally and civilly liable for anyone they make sick (directly or indirectly)
No one is disagreeing. The measures that are being taken are there to reduce death. Are you against reducing death?
Let me rephrase-- If a doctor looks you in the eyes and ask you to do your part to stay home in order to save someone's life, would you?
FriendlyAg said:Rattler12 said:Are you Ok with taking us back 200 years on an economic basis? I'm in if you're in.FriendlyAg said:Rattler12 said:I already have 15, 20 maybe 30 people or more that I have known and loved and that have died from something. Life has gone on. Deaths are just as much a part of living as births are. Bad things happen to good people. This will pass and life will go on. I choose not to live in fear and panic mode. Does that make me really really wrong?Sid Farkas said:Yeah. Not angry. But really really wrongSocial Distanced said:
He doesn't seem angry to me.
When this is over we will all likely know and love someone who either dies or is permanently damaged by the virus, even with extreme measures in place
However it could be even worse if we just relax and go back to normal life now.
I happen to believe government involvement will almost completely recede when the virus does. its easy to get frustrated when the people who disagree seem to have no appreciation for the complexity of the situation and simply go full throttle on the "evil gubmit" meme (it just sounds so dumb in this situation)
...I said it here before: anyone who ignores the government orders and their families should be denied a hospital bed and ventilator and be held criminally and civilly liable for anyone they make sick (directly or indirectly)
No one is disagreeing. The measures that are being taken are there to reduce death. Are you against reducing death?
No, but I am also not going to choose saving money over saving a million people's lives. The market will rebound. Don't sell. Buy continuously and your cost average will go down.
Troutslime said:FriendlyAg said:Troutslime said:Gordo14 said:Troutslime said:Quote:
We do not know if the projections (death) are materializing or not. We also dont know if the measure are working or not. Its March 22.
Edit and I'm not sure what historical data you are referring too. There are plenty of historical pandemics that were far worse or far better than this.
Exponential is the new buzzword yet nobody has brought up proportional. If the flu kills X, and the Swine flu kills Y, and pneumonia kills Z, why haven't past government responses been proportional? (Please don't go into infection rate because it's not relevant to my point). CV shows up, it becomes a media firestorm and now here we are. WTF? If 1.5% death rate is the norm, what can we expect for .5%?
Besides, if they really believed what they were saying (politicians) there response is woefully inadequate.
If the argument moves to "overwhelming the system", why didn't we address it in 2009 during the Swine flu? Is it because there wasn't a problem? Probably. If the concern is that CV will overwhelm it, why not focus on helping hospitals out? The solutions being implemented don't match the crime so to speak. Also, I'm 55 and have yet to see an accurate government prediction, yet I'm supposed to believe this one. I'm not a skeptic, I'm a product. A product of failed government. Don't blame me.
Good thing plenty of people whp are experts in the field and don't work for the government are also equally concerned. And if you ignore that then you can always fall back on your gut instinct, which I'm sure is well informed.
What should their response be then? The government is using every tool it has besides forcing people to stay home - what is inadequate about that?
Swine Flu was a concern. Schools were shut down... however, hospitalization rates were lower, it was less contagiois, it was less likely to cause death, and humans had some natural immunity to it being exposed to the seasonal flu regularly. Our body was well equipped to have an immune response on day one. Also the incubation period was shorter. CV19 is worse in every category I just described than Swine Flu. Therefore, it requires a different response. The problem is hospitals only have so much physical equipment to deal with things like this. Sure they are asking for aid from the government, but part of the issue is hospital beds and ventilators for which there isn't a massive supply sitting on the open market ready to be bought. PPE is well short of where it needs to be. If a hospital has say 110% of the max capacity they've ever needed of ICU beds and ventilators, and something puts some 3% of the local population or more into a condition where they need equipment on top of the standard baseline demand for that equipment... Then you end up with many times the demand you have supply for. Again the problem is we need to slow the rate of people gettint sick down. There's only one way to do that when we have no real medical tools to slow or stop this thing - keep people away from each other. 80% of infections have been passed by people who had no symptoms, yet. The only way to stop transmission is to drop those infections.
What would you expect "experts" to say? They have no skin in the game.
Are they responsible for the results of their views? No. Hell, even the politicians aren't when you boil it down.
You have zero credibility. Your argument is "WAHHHHHHHHHH, life has changed! NOT FAIR!"
Thanks for bringing your tactful insight to the discussion.
k2aggie07 said:
Do you really think the people who do this for a living haven't considered undetected cases?
Every paper being published right now is making a distinction between symptomatic case fatality (sCFR) and infected fatality (IFR). They're using a bunch of different metrics to try to back into the number of undetected cases. Read this, it really is fascinating. These folks aren't dumb. They're not missing glaringly obvious errors in their methods. They know they have ascertainment bias. They know there are cases they're missing.
And if we can't compare CFR of COVID19 to seasonal flu, can we drop the seasonal flu comparison altogether then?????
FriendlyAg said:Troutslime said:FriendlyAg said:Troutslime said:Gordo14 said:Troutslime said:Quote:
We do not know if the projections (death) are materializing or not. We also dont know if the measure are working or not. Its March 22.
Edit and I'm not sure what historical data you are referring too. There are plenty of historical pandemics that were far worse or far better than this.
Exponential is the new buzzword yet nobody has brought up proportional. If the flu kills X, and the Swine flu kills Y, and pneumonia kills Z, why haven't past government responses been proportional? (Please don't go into infection rate because it's not relevant to my point). CV shows up, it becomes a media firestorm and now here we are. WTF? If 1.5% death rate is the norm, what can we expect for .5%?
Besides, if they really believed what they were saying (politicians) there response is woefully inadequate.
If the argument moves to "overwhelming the system", why didn't we address it in 2009 during the Swine flu? Is it because there wasn't a problem? Probably. If the concern is that CV will overwhelm it, why not focus on helping hospitals out? The solutions being implemented don't match the crime so to speak. Also, I'm 55 and have yet to see an accurate government prediction, yet I'm supposed to believe this one. I'm not a skeptic, I'm a product. A product of failed government. Don't blame me.
Good thing plenty of people whp are experts in the field and don't work for the government are also equally concerned. And if you ignore that then you can always fall back on your gut instinct, which I'm sure is well informed.
What should their response be then? The government is using every tool it has besides forcing people to stay home - what is inadequate about that?
Swine Flu was a concern. Schools were shut down... however, hospitalization rates were lower, it was less contagiois, it was less likely to cause death, and humans had some natural immunity to it being exposed to the seasonal flu regularly. Our body was well equipped to have an immune response on day one. Also the incubation period was shorter. CV19 is worse in every category I just described than Swine Flu. Therefore, it requires a different response. The problem is hospitals only have so much physical equipment to deal with things like this. Sure they are asking for aid from the government, but part of the issue is hospital beds and ventilators for which there isn't a massive supply sitting on the open market ready to be bought. PPE is well short of where it needs to be. If a hospital has say 110% of the max capacity they've ever needed of ICU beds and ventilators, and something puts some 3% of the local population or more into a condition where they need equipment on top of the standard baseline demand for that equipment... Then you end up with many times the demand you have supply for. Again the problem is we need to slow the rate of people gettint sick down. There's only one way to do that when we have no real medical tools to slow or stop this thing - keep people away from each other. 80% of infections have been passed by people who had no symptoms, yet. The only way to stop transmission is to drop those infections.
What would you expect "experts" to say? They have no skin in the game.
Are they responsible for the results of their views? No. Hell, even the politicians aren't when you boil it down.
You have zero credibility. Your argument is "WAHHHHHHHHHH, life has changed! NOT FAIR!"
Thanks for bringing your tactful insight to the discussion.
I have tried tact... Look at my any number of responses. It's not good enough for you. You just stick your head further into the sand.