fightingfarmer09 said:
Flattening the curve was never, and should not be, about reducing the area under the COVID19 curve.
This is just wrong. Maybe political leaders have done a bad job of communicating it, but transmission rate and attack rate are directly related. The faster an infection moves through a population, the more people ultimately get it.
If we flatten the curve, we reduce total infections. The longer you suppress the transmission rate, the fewer people will get it. If we hold this to 1.3, like seasonal flu, ~20% will get it. If it runs over 2, >50% will get it.
I don't think it's economically feasible or even sensible to do what we're doing now for a long time. But there are degrees of non-pharmaceutical interventions ranging from hand washing PSAs to full on lockdown. All flatten the curve to some extent, and all reduce total infections / area under the curve.