05-27-2020, 03:35 AM | #4851 | ||
Pro Starter
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Quote:
Who exactly should South Korea test ? Carpet Bomb Testing without cause is not desirable unless a new magic test arrives that is vastly easier to use truly widespread. Otherwise it would guarantee getting more false positives than actually infected* (which would lead to a poor use of further ressources in tracking/tracing etc). They test massively and quickly when there is cause. I highly doubt that SK misses nearly as many deaths as the US arguably does (backed by preliminary excess mortality), total test numbers or no. That argument is somewhat valid for countries with lots of infection activity and few tests (and the excess mortality data backs it up), not for countries that have demonstrably slowed the spread to a crawl at a low level. They just have much fewer cases and succesfully prevented wider spread from the start, that is why they tested less when looking at the whole 3 month span. Does the US by now even routinely test contacts of cases ? (Honest question) * Good vid explaining False Positives: False Positives & Negatives for COVID-19 tests | Using Bayes' Theorem to Estimate Probabilities - YouTube (And SKs prevelance will be heaps lower than 1 % ) Quote:
The US has done a fairly good job on it mainly in places not hit early and fast, no ? (And in those after the first month, same as Spain/Italy). Which for the US comprises a larger % of the country than elsewhere, simply by geography. Lombardy is 20% of Italy, Paris (+ Alsacce) 20 % of france in terms of population, with all other regions much closer than the majority of US is relative to NY et al. Also, this has to be pointed out: 15 mio tests is NOT 15 mio people tested. It is a fraction of that. The vast majority of tests are going to be multiples. Heathcare workers in hospitals get tested routinely a lot (over here also in care homes or outpatient stuff), even everybody released from hospital needs a negative test (2 here) etc etc. Again, i don't know what the numbers would be. Just that it is not cut and dry. The difference between the test numbers now vs 6 weeks ago really is less likely due to testing more suspected cases than ramped up prophylactic testing. Which is great, don't get me wrong. But it is also why it does not neccesarily means more tests = keeping better track of people and being able to disrupt chains of infection.
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The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes "Awww! Last edited by whomario : 05-27-2020 at 08:59 AM. |
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05-27-2020, 07:35 AM | #4852 |
College Prospect
Join Date: Dec 2002
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05-27-2020, 09:46 AM | #4853 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newburgh, NY
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Quote:
The case fatality rate is going to be similar in all countries with similar medical advances. There's no reason to believe our treatments are so much better than France's or the UK's. If a country's medical system lags behind or if the cases get to a point where they overwhelm the medical system, the CFR could go up. If the 1% CFR number proves to be true, there have been at least ten million cases in the US. Basing a stat on a number that undercounts cases by at least 80% doesn't get you anything worthwhile.
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05-27-2020, 01:28 PM | #4854 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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A 1% case fatality rate seems pretty unlikely at this point. I'd be shocked if it was higher than 0.7% and will probably be around 0.5%. As contagious as this thing appears to be, we'd have a much higher death total than 100K (or even 200K) if it was 1%.
Still, the US has arguably been better than most European countries (outside of Germany) and Canada when it comes to protecting the most vulnerable and helping patients who get it. I'm not saying that Trump has done anything right or that we have a great health care system - I know those are hot-button words that cause a riot in here (and I don't believe either are true, FYI). The whole point of my response was because of the comment that the US is a "clown show" when it comes to dealing with the virus. That is just simply not true. |
05-27-2020, 01:40 PM | #4855 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newburgh, NY
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I'm not sure how you can say that we've been better at protecting the vulnerable. Look at the numbers of nursing home cases and deaths. Look at the numbers of prison cases and deaths.
Forbes, yesterday, ran a story that claimed over 40k deaths among nursing home residents.
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05-27-2020, 02:05 PM | #4856 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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Unfortunately most of the deaths will end up being elderly people with compromised health conditions (and many will be in assisted living). But for a country of 330 million, 100K deaths is extremely low. Especially when you compare to places like UK, Spain and Italy.
So either this isn't very deadly in the US for some reason or the US has done a solid job in minimizing situations where covid cases leads to deaths. |
05-27-2020, 02:05 PM | #4857 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Dayton, OH
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My wife works for an insurance company that is contracted to assist those that have Medicare and Medicaid... the most poor and elderly and vulnerable population you can get. They probably serve about 25,000 people. They have had over 80 people die ("that they know about" because they're not allowed in nursing homes right now to do face-to-face visits, so the people they haven't heard from could just be ignoring them, or could be dead). That's 0.3% of a specific population that is not even 100% infected. I'd say that's spectacularly bad, and probably not anyone's specific fault because these are a lot of people with no family, no money, and no way out of the situations they're in.
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05-27-2020, 02:16 PM | #4858 |
Favored Bitch #1
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: homeless in NJ
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Man, the battles on my towns facebook group about mask wearing have reached epic proportion.
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05-27-2020, 02:43 PM | #4859 |
General Manager
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: The Mountains
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There's a lot of news out there about vaccines, and when one may become "deployable", but I haven't found much on what actually happens then.
Let's say a vaccine is "deployable" by December. (Dr. Fauci thinks this is a reasonable possibility). What happens then? How many people will be vaccinated in 2021? How is the vaccine distributed? How do governments obtain it and distribute it? Or does the private sector do that directly? Who decides who gets it first? Does the entity who "wins" the race matter in terms of what their base country is? Does the "host" country of discovery take care of their country first and then distribute globally to the highest bidder for years afterwards? I'm optimistic about a vaccine becoming a reality based on what the experts are saying, but much more guarded about how that actually impacts us. Does a December 2020 vaccine mean that coronavirus ends in 2021, or are we still looking at a 5-10 year period of restrictions, closed schools and businesses, balancing risks, and learning to live with the virus first as the vaccine is gradually produced and deployed on a scale never before attempted? There seems to be an assumption that this is like that virus video game where the second a vaccine is "official" we're all saved immediately. When it seems like that part could be really ugly too. And based on the declining numbers we're seeing in a lot of places, it seems like better treatments + seasonal impacts + partial herd immunity + tracking and tracing and isolating + mutations + mystery factors that ended previous pandemics could beat full global deployment of a vaccine as the way out. Last edited by molson : 05-27-2020 at 02:50 PM. |
05-27-2020, 02:57 PM | #4860 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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My biggest question with that is what if it slightly mutates again in the fall (like most flus do)? The hope would be that even a mutated vaccine would help minimize the symptoms (esp compared to those note vaccinated). But, the scary situation would be one where the eldery/compromised get a vaccine in December and think they are OK to go back out in January - only to find the strain they vaccinated against is different than the one in the world now.
The whole vaccine thing is a big unknown to me. |
05-27-2020, 03:02 PM | #4861 |
General Manager
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: The Mountains
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I'd be pretty impressed if a vaccine was deemed deployable in December and if any significant number of elderly Americans actually obtained it that same month. Is that really in the cards? I guess there will be some production prior to that determination that the vaccine is ready to go. It's just hard to imagine that process will be efficient with all of the countries and interests and obstacles involved, and the problems we've had just distributing masks.
That's why "we have to just wait for a vaccine before we can do X" talk always kind of makes me cringe a little. Though it doesn't seem like experts phrase it in those terms. A vaccine will be at best be one of many tools that move us forward. It's not something we can assume will fix everything immediately, or the basket we put all our eggs in. Last edited by molson : 05-27-2020 at 03:05 PM. |
05-27-2020, 03:05 PM | #4862 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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Yeah, I guess that was more of a hypothetical than an actual situation that would be likely. More likely would be a vaccine starts prepping people for the fall of 2021. But, the question would still remain.
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05-27-2020, 03:11 PM | #4863 |
lolzcat
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Annapolis, Md
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I was on a call today with a variety of federal "leaders" discussing this issue. Trying to set aside politics per se, my most profound takeaway is the very widespread belief (which I sense as being truly held, not there because it's just the party line) that the only thing holding back the economy from roaring right back to where it was pre-pandemic is the relaxation of government rules. Like it's a light switch.
I do not understand what psychological facets underlie this, but it seems to be very universal. I might be flattering myself with my assessment that I'd know if they were just toeing the line for party/leadership reasons. But my sense is that they really believe that this is what is at stake - we maintain the shut-downs and distancing rules and everybody is out of a job, or we relax them and everyone is back to work tomorrow. Fascinating. |
05-27-2020, 03:43 PM | #4864 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Sep 2003
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Once the vaccine comes, what happens with it? Does the company that created it share it with other companies so that it can be mass produced?
Does it get created by a company that Trump has influence over and he can determine who gets the vaccine? I can totally see him only letting his supports get it or at least trying to control it. Will it cost $600 a shot because of demand? I have no faith it will be handled in a humane manner.
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05-27-2020, 03:57 PM | #4865 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Dayton, OH
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Quote:
I think this is the typical issue of people in positions of power (I even see this in business). They are so disconnected as to the way things work that they think that if they clear road blocks things just happen. I think a lot of people need to spend more time fishing and gardening so they can understand that even if you do everything right, some things just take time to come to fruition. |
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05-27-2020, 04:42 PM | #4866 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Bath, ME
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I agree that questions about the vaccine are going to be the next huge problem that will have to be managed and there's no reason to think it will be managed well. Production would have to be ramped up in a historic fashion--who is planning for this now? For the forseeable future, vaccine supplies will be much, much too low. Decisions about how to parcel out limited supplies around the world will have to be made my world governments--what sign of international cooperation do we have in a world where the U.S. has effectively pulled out of and cast aspersions on the WHO, and will most likely pursue an avenue of enriching and protecting friends of the administration? This issue is going to make mask-wearing look like nothing as we start truly depending on our governments to make life or death decisions for billions of people.
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05-27-2020, 04:52 PM | #4867 |
Resident Alien
Join Date: Jun 2001
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Death panels on steroids!
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05-27-2020, 05:34 PM | #4868 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: the yo'
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I think they’re literally producing a ton of vaccines that may or may not work. Read some article about Pfizer and they have 4 different ones.
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05-27-2020, 05:48 PM | #4869 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
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Quote:
100k deaths in 2 months with a country largely locked down is high. The death toll is likely higher due to lack of testing and political reasons. |
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05-27-2020, 06:08 PM | #4870 | |
Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Maassluis, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
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Quote:
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05-27-2020, 06:16 PM | #4871 | |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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The first cases in Europe and the USA were around late January. So, it has been in the US since February and most places didn't lock down completely until late March, early April. So, 100K cases in 3+ months (the last two with shelter in place) is pretty good for a country of 330 million. Spain (27K in 46.7 mil), Italy (33K in 60.4 mil) and the UK (37.4K in 67.8 mil) have done much worse. You can make the same claims on potentially more dead due to lack of testing in those countries (they combine for 7.8 mil tests, while we have done 15.9 mil).
Had the local states, hospitals and population not responded the way we did in the US, we could have easily matched the rates of the UK or Italy and had 180-200K dead. Is it as good as places like South Korea with a culture developed on using masks and protecting against flu viruses over decades? No, but it is an impressive effort by most of our population in regards to social distancing and the health care workers. Quote:
Last edited by Arles : 05-27-2020 at 06:18 PM. |
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05-27-2020, 06:19 PM | #4872 | |
College Prospect
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: New Jersey
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Quote:
I have been keeping tabs on this link: Excess Deaths Associated with COVID-19 It shows weekly excess mortality in the U.S. from 2017 to present for all causes. Regardless of how deaths are being counted I felt like this illustrated better than anything else how the pandemic has impacted mortality in the U.S. When you start looking at the data by specific locations that have been heavily impacted (i.e. New York, New Jersey) it gives you a sense of just how messed up this has been for certain regions. I would love to see the exact same dataset but with splits for age and gender, but alas. Last edited by Ironhead : 05-27-2020 at 06:20 PM. |
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05-27-2020, 06:35 PM | #4873 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
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Italy and Spain had less lead time than us. UK fucked up because they are run by a buffoon too.
Sad that the wealthiest nation in the world has to resort to "hey we aren't as bad as a few other countries". Have some higher standards. |
05-27-2020, 06:47 PM | #4874 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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You understand that if a combination of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, FDR and Obama were all president, we still would have close to 100K dead - right? The president does virtually nothing to impact this. He doesn't run states, hospitals or control how every person behaves. The reason we only have 100K dead is because of the medical infrastructure we have (and have had) that does a heck of a good job of managing patients compared to the world. We also have a somewhat responsible population that did a fantastic job of social distancing for those two months.
I know this will upset everyone who loves blaming the president or certain political parties for what is wrong with their lives, but Trump and congress did next to nothing to impact how well everyone did (as individuals and communities) to minimize this. Unless we went full South Korea and locked everything done, did massive curfews and mandated masks to leave the house, etc - what happened now was going to be the result. I know that makes everyone who spends hours a day complaining about Trump, liberals or each political party angry - but it is reality. |
05-27-2020, 06:57 PM | #4875 | ||
Pro Starter
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Quote:
But it is not an Influenza virus. They truly are not behaving in the same pattern as a coronavirus. They also all have been around a lot longer. It is possible it will substantially mutate (never say never), but it is not understood to be nearly as likely, especially a major genetic shift. This also does not happen with the flu all that often. (When it does,we get pandemics like 09, 68, 57 and 1918 of course) What does happen is genetic drift where some viruses change slowly over time. The main issue with the flu with regards to vaccine is not merely mutation but that there is a multitude of Influenza Virus subtypes in circulation and the ones that are most widespread in any given country are different every year with a few that are "mainstays" while others pop up less regularly. And these are the problem. So especially problematic is the fact you need to pick the likely candidates to spread in your country way before winter, because unlike the current situation the flu actually does almost go extinct locally and spreads across the globe anew every year from one hemisphere to the other. So often there is a virus that makes it to a country that the vaccine does not cover. Or you don't get it done in time. To give an example: the worst flu season in Germany in forever was 17/18 where very atypically an Influenza B strain was widespread and it was not Part of the Vaccine. The years before Influenza B made up like a few % of lab confirmed cases and the year after there was not a single Influenza B case registered all season in all the Surveilance data from doctors offices. Also, vaccine coverage is simply abysmal, which is at least partly because people need to be vaccinated every year. So you need to convince people again every year. And have health providers pay for it every year. This need for yearly vaccination is not anticipated for Vaccine(s) covering SarsCov2 best anybody can tell, which will help selling people on it a lot, if not immediately then still adding more every year. I understand skepticism, but if a vaccine works (and the outlook is really good) then it is very, very likely to work significantly better than the ones against Influenza. The CDC explains the issues with the flu vaccine fairly well: Selecting Viruses for the Seasonal Influenza Vaccine | CDC How the Flu Virus Can Change: €œDrift€ and €œShift€ | CDC Quote:
Again it needs to be said that the US has natural protection due to to the geographic Makeup of the country. Add in reduced air travel and how exactly was the virus ever going to spread in numbers to many places before measures, change in behaviour and the weather/outdoors effect helped a lot ? All countries have a couple bad hotspots that were hit early and were conducive to the spread with big events and lots of socialising in large numbers. Except those in the US make up a smaller part of the country and are farther away from the rest on pure distance. That matters and helped. (And makes countrywide numbers look better). Geographic remoteness on a country-scale is also part of the reason why Island nations or SK, which might as well be one with the only boarder being NK, stomped it out as they had far fewer imported cases in the same period of time (And no, the UK does not have the same buffer as Iceland or New Zealand ) It is possible to mainly get lucky. Which is a good thing, unless there comes the next pandemic in the hopefully far future and people go "oh look, no early Tests, no PPP, sending sick people into nursing homes, high death rates early on ventilators, the president setting a bad example and spouting nonsense. And still we did ok, so maybe those things are not really important ?" This is really the main thing why i hope all countries that had that luck (Germany did, too on other fronts with less cases from china and catching the first few) take that into account and not just go from the good or 'good' results and judge by that exclusively how they have done with what they had to work with. I don't think anybody making that argument does it out of malice.
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The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes "Awww! Last edited by whomario : 05-27-2020 at 07:13 PM. |
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05-27-2020, 07:23 PM | #4876 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Jul 2007
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Quote:
If you are interested, there is a pan-european project designed specifically for tracking excess mortality for influenza and pandemics l, doing the same thing with at least some rudimentary age brackets, starting in 2015. https://www.euromomo.eu/ Age Group 15-64 (yes, very rudimentary) is actually also very noticeably increased here, also compared to flu spikes. (% wise of course, naturally total numbers get larger with higher age as is the nature of death in general ...) You can select countries individually as well which gives a more nuanced picture. Italy and Spain are now at normal levels, UK still significantly higher than the worst flu season in the time frame at its peak. Also, comparing Sweden to Norway and Denmark is illuminating as they all have much more in common as far as circumstances are concerned (than say Sweden and Italy.) Edit: this is not 'covid-adjusted' like the CDCs overview, just the total excess mortality.
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The only people for me are the mad ones, the ones who are mad to live, mad to talk, mad to be saved, desirous of everything at the same time, the ones who never yawn or say a commonplace thing, but burn, burn, burn, like fabulous yellow roman candles exploding like spiders across the stars and in the middle you see the blue centerlight pop and everybody goes "Awww! Last edited by whomario : 05-27-2020 at 07:41 PM. |
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05-27-2020, 07:59 PM | #4877 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newburgh, NY
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Quote:
This just makes no sense to me. The leader, whether Trump or someone else, matters. The decisions made by the administration matter. The idea that everything would have been the same no matter who was in charge is simply not rational. It's just a way to defend Trump without specifically saying that you're defending Trump. There was a pandemic plan eft by Obama's ebola team. Trump ignored it. There were pandemic simulations. Trump ignored them. There were warnings in January. Trump ignored them. There was a group on the NSC dedicated to pandemics. Trump disbanded them. There were monitors in China. Trump fired some of them. There was no effort to build up PPE in February, after Trump's own staff was making very pessimistic predictions. There was no national testing plan and still isn't. Supplies were confiscated and given to private vendors. Trump kept sending the message that the virus was a hoax and now mocks things like wearing masks. The admin repeatedly made false promises like having testing in Wal-Mart parking lots. And that's just what I can remember quickly. These things matter and any other president would have handled it better. I'm absolutely certain thousands of people died needlessly because of the inept response of Trump.
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To love someone is to strive to accept that person exactly the way he or she is, right here and now.. - Mr. Rogers |
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05-27-2020, 08:50 PM | #4878 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: ...down the gravity well
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Quote:
Yeah, that quote is just completely poor. Maybe he couldn't have averted all the deaths, but we seem to be one of the few countries still reeling. Plus the mocking of wearing masks, he has a disdain for it, so his goobers follow...some of them will die I'm sure Trump will keep chugging along. He takes no responsibility for it. His lackeys want people to die so the economy (his only positive recovers in time for elections). Most conservatives seem to lack the understanding on conserving life right now to prop that orange stooge up.
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"General Woundwort's body was never found. It could be that he still lives his fierce life somewhere else, but from that day on, mother rabbits would tell their kittens that if they did not do as they were told, the General would get them. Such was Woundwort's monument, and perhaps it would not have displeased him." Watership Down, Richard Adams |
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05-27-2020, 09:09 PM | #4879 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: PDX
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Last edited by thesloppy : Today at 05:35 PM. |
05-27-2020, 09:17 PM | #4880 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Nov 2013
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Well if you can't trust a twitter acount named "Le Chat Proud Democrat" then who can you trust?
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"I am God's prophet, and I need an attorney" |
05-27-2020, 09:41 PM | #4881 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: PDX
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See, I thought that was suspect too, but the cat avatar convinced me.
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Last edited by thesloppy : Today at 05:35 PM. Last edited by thesloppy : 05-27-2020 at 09:59 PM. |
05-27-2020, 10:15 PM | #4882 |
College Prospect
Join Date: Dec 2002
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I think this came from a reddit post. The current data is here:
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/index.htm And the historical info here: https://wonder.cdc.gov/ucd-icd10.html Could be a categorization issue but that's how it was pulled. |
05-27-2020, 10:38 PM | #4883 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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It’s just wild to me that smart people feel that if we had a different president, the death toll would be much lower. Clearly I’m once again in the minority on this, so I won’t piss into the wind too long. I just can’t wait until we get Biden in as president and we never have to worry about something like this again. It’s not the choices of people to not social distance and be careless with masks that infected some of the elderly and Heath compromised, it’s because we didn’t have a federal task force, Chinese monitors or enough PPE in February. Solve those and we are at 50K dead, not 100K....
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05-27-2020, 10:45 PM | #4884 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newburgh, NY
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Your argument is that no nation had any control over what happened with COVID, or if they did it was impossible for the US to do anything similar. You're saying that the federal's government's response could not have been any better if better is defined as saving more lives. That's nonsense.
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To love someone is to strive to accept that person exactly the way he or she is, right here and now.. - Mr. Rogers |
05-27-2020, 10:47 PM | #4885 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: PDX
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Quote:
In that first link Pneumonia deaths are remarkably consistent for the first seven weeks, until they start doubling and tripling for 6-7 weeks...I have no idea how remarkable that is, cuz I didn't want to get the degree that would be necessary to squeeze something out of that second site. I was able to find a few places that referenced an average of 50,000 pneumonia deaths per year in the US, in which case a few weeks of over 10,000 certainly seems significant....there's more than 50,000 pneumonia deaths on that first chart just between 4/4 and 5/9, and a total of 91,000 deaths from 2/1 to 5/23.
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Last edited by thesloppy : Today at 05:35 PM. Last edited by thesloppy : 05-27-2020 at 11:05 PM. |
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05-27-2020, 10:48 PM | #4886 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Chicago, IL
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05-27-2020, 11:02 PM | #4887 | |
Coordinator
Join Date: Sep 2003
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Quote:
I know you are a smart guy Arlie and I can't believe that you believe the opposite. If anyone else was President, they would have taken this thing more seriously and acted sooner. That alone would have prevented deaths. Hilary would have listened to the pandemic briefings when Obama folks gave them to her. Hell, she may have even kept a lot of those same people. She wouldn't have killed the pandemic response team either. You don't think those 2 things would have made a difference?
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Why choose failure when success is an option? |
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05-27-2020, 11:51 PM | #4888 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Puyallup, WA
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The US approach to Covid could probably be looked at as the Replacement level response. If we had a faster, more coherent response we'd be measuring the Lives Saved Above Replacement (LSAR) in the tens of thousands.
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05-28-2020, 12:14 AM | #4889 | |
Head Coach
Join Date: Oct 2005
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Quote:
I break it into 3 segments (1) before early Feb (2) from early Feb to mid-March (3) after mid-March. I don't blame Trump for much before early Feb. However, WP and NYT both reported it was likely to be a pandemic in early Feb. It wasn't until mid-March in his "I can't read speech" to the nation that he started taking it seriously albeit reluctantly. So there was a period from early Feb to mid-March where I think he could have organized to "fight the war" better. I do believe Hillary/Biden would have done a better job during this period. So yeah, I think the death toll would have been lower. Some would want us to believe it would have 50-80% less, I'm more in the 20% camp. |
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05-28-2020, 12:26 AM | #4890 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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Trump did not do a good job and was slow in taking it seriously. I agree there. However, we had 23K deaths on April 15. At that point, nearly every state had shelter in place, most hospitals had plenty of PPE/ventilators and social distancing/masks were encouraged by all states/feds. Since that point, we’ve lost over 80,000 lives. These aren’t happening because of a slow federal government.
Would having a different president help on the margins? Potentially, but that’s hard to prove. But if the answer is that a different president like Hillary or Biden would have minimized the deaths, I just think that is incorrect. We would be close to this number no matter what - but that’s not an endorsement of Trump. That’s a statement that thinking if we switch presidents, everything would be better is incorrect. We would still have a ton of deaths in NY, NJ, Chicago and other international hubs or highly dense places. It hides the flaws we do have to just put it all on Trump. That’s my point. |
05-28-2020, 12:30 AM | #4891 | |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Feb 2003
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Quote:
Even regardless of the (very relevant) issue of timing, the President's initial response was to have his son-in-law practically interfere with states efforts to get medical equipment, for a significant amount of time.
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Last edited by thesloppy : Today at 05:35 PM. Last edited by thesloppy : 05-28-2020 at 12:32 AM. |
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05-28-2020, 12:32 AM | #4892 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Oct 2005
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FWIW, we are definitely on the margins of a political discussion right now.
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05-28-2020, 12:41 AM | #4893 |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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Agreed, I’ll get back to the virus itself and save that for the other thread
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05-28-2020, 09:46 AM | #4894 |
Pro Starter
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Winnipeg, MB
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One of the benefits of no one wanting to travel to your city is that it's basically almost gone where I live. We have 14 active cases remaining, with only 3 new ones in the past 14 days.
Coronavirus Dashboard (Live) It will certainly come back with another wave, but I'm hopeful that we can at least get outside and enjoy the summer a little, which is something I was worried wouldn't happen a month ago.
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05-28-2020, 10:32 AM | #4895 |
Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: St. Louis
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My St. Louis perspective that likely is true in most cities...
In these internet debates people always want to avoid human nature and the combination of low education, selfishness, and just pure apathy for others. Locally in Saint Louis the city was on lockdown for all of April and most of May. I have a friend that works for the St. Louis police department that has told me most nights in North St. Louis look like the infamous Lake of the Ozarks picture. Guess where most of the St Louis and St Louis county deaths are happening? (outside of the nursing homes obviously) Want to guess why the press isn't all over this one? City of St. Louis COVID-19 Data St. Louis County map shows coronavirus cases by zip code | FOX2now.com The Lake of the Ozarks was likely a large group of rednecks ("red staters") but I know the Lake of the Ozarks well and am quite certain 50% of the partiers were your garden variety "woke" liberal college/young 20's kids. So what's my point? It just seems like everyone wants to make this red state/blue state, liberal/conservative, but isn't it pretty clear this is a combination of the uneducated along with young that just don't give a fuck? I live in a smaller suburb of St. Louis in what one would describe as a woodtick city and the nicer hardware store and grocery store have almost 100% mask wearing, the Walmart and Feed/grocery store practically zero. (Though Walmart now has a mask policy that is possibly national and not local) Trump's response has been pathetic, his leadership super divisive, but he isn't the cause just one of the symptoms of a selfish society. The United States isn't higher than the rest of the world because of Donald Trump, it's higher because it's the United States. You may say Biden or Obama would have been different? North St Louis is still not listening to Obama or Biden the Lake of the Ozarks I guarantee is still happening under them or even a Democratic governor. Politicians just aren't as influential as some like to give them credit for. Last edited by panerd : 05-28-2020 at 10:39 AM. |
05-28-2020, 11:41 AM | #4896 | |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Back in Houston!
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I think this is very true, to a point. There are absolutely huge clusters of people across the entire political spectrum who have some measures of ignorance, willful ignorance, and/or DGAF. No party or belief system has a monopoly on "stupids" or "smarts". However, there's a lot of polling out there which links mask usage to political identity and there's a TON of evidence to show that helps blunt the spread of the virus. I think there's a real debate to be had, however, about whether that's a chicken or egg thing. Is this about following a particular leader/belonging to a particular group and their beliefs or do people gravitate towards that leader/group because his/her/their beliefs are similar to the constituents' own. Either way, yes, the bully pulpit has a lot of limitations. That said, I have argued in other threads (possibly this one) that there are structural things we could have done better as a country (PPE availability early on, testing capacity even now) and I do think those things rest at the feet of our leaders. And, messaging /does/ matter some, even if it's not 100% effective. Even changing the minds of or not giving political cover to 5% of the populace means 15-20 million people here. SI
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Houston Hippopotami, III.3: 20th Anniversary Thread - All former HT players are encouraged to check it out! Janos: "Only America could produce an imbecile of your caliber!" Freakazoid: "That's because we make lots of things better than other people!" Last edited by sterlingice : 05-28-2020 at 11:42 AM. |
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05-28-2020, 11:54 AM | #4897 |
Coordinator
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Maassluis, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
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But I'm not one of those people. Or hope/try not to be.
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05-28-2020, 12:37 PM | #4898 |
Head Coach
Join Date: Oct 2005
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Updated CNN graph on how individual states are doing in flattening the curve. I know there is good discussion on how valid the statistics are but its the best we have right now (I think).
GA seems to be doing okay. GA has been re-opening up for the past 3 weeks or so the people are doing something right. Is there a graphic somewhere that compares the metro areas? Tracking Covid-19 cases in the US |
05-28-2020, 12:39 PM | #4899 | |
Grey Dog Software
Join Date: Nov 2000
Location: Phoenix, AZ by way of Belleville, IL
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Quote:
There are people that just don't give a F*ck and that's why we will always have some propagation of the virus. There are 20-year old kids that went to Mardi Gras and then, without a mask, stood by a 75-year old woman in walgreens. There are people who rushed to beaches in Florida without masks and then visited their parents. Here in AZ, I have a friend who works in the Casino (with a mask) and he said he saw over 100 60+ year old people enter just yesterday without a mask. You can have all the plans you want - but these situations are what take it down. So, the focus needs to be on really educating people on using masks (if not mandating it in certain places) and be able to ramp up test production quickly moving forward. People are going to not listen and be idiots, but if we can test them on a bigger scale - the kids that get Covid at Mardi Gras can know and atleast avoid their grandparents for 14 days.Those are the lessons I hope we learn from this. Last edited by Arles : 05-28-2020 at 12:41 PM. |
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05-28-2020, 12:50 PM | #4900 |
Hall Of Famer
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Newburgh, NY
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I can't accept the idea that no plan and poor response is just as effective as a good plan and good response. Any of the past four Presidents would have done a much better job with planning and response and, yes, that would have saved lives.
It's also important to look at us right now. We're still confirming 15 thousand cases a day. Spain has been under 1 thousand for 9 of the past 10 days. Italy has been below 1 thousand for 15 days.
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