Posted on 03/23/2020 5:44:30 AM PDT by Its All Over Except ...
The mortality rate for the coronavirus in the US continues to fall as more and more Americans are able to be tested.
12 days ago the US coronavirus mortality rate was 4.06 Today the mortality rate is down to 1.25%!
4.06% March 8 (22 deaths of 541 cases) 3.69% March 9 (26 of 704) 3.01% March 10 (30 of 994) 2.95% March 11 (38 of 1,295) 2.52% March 12 (42 of 1,695) 2.27% March 13 (49 of 2,247) 1.93% March 14 (57 of 2,954) 1.84% March 15 (68 of 3,680) 1.6% March 17 (116 of 7,301) 1.4% March 19 (161 of 11,329) 1.25% March 20 (237 of 18,845)
Yossi Getetner posted a list earlier in the week. Thanks to the fraudulent numbers by the WHO the global economies are in a meltdown.
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(Excerpt) Read more at domigood.com ...
If you aren't sickly with something else, BUCK UP!!
And never forget we will ALL be dead in 10 years because of Globull Warming!! /s
1. mortality rate = #deaths / (#recovered + #dead)
2. case fatality rate = #deaths / (#cases + #dead)
3. have those purportedly ‘recovered’, really reacovered?
What is underreported is we need a strong economy if the sky does fall and stopping the stimulus bill caused the markets to drop even more.
Seattle is a month into this and it started in the worst possible way (in a nursing home) and while busy the apocalypse hasnt happened there yet......the room sayers keep saying just wait..... I havent seen it
This virus so far is the typical flu level symptoms and treatment. Nothing to be taken lightly, but nothing to go and shut down the country for either.
This is nothing but a left-wing attempt to get Trump...and he’s letting them win this. His election is no longer a slam dunk with this economy now in tatters.
As more get tested yes..the percentage will drop. It’s the flu Jim. No matter how you slice the data honestly, this thing no more deadly than the seasonal flu. Sorry doomers, can’t win over the math with hysterical dooming. Italy is an outlier and the perfect storm of unhealthy smokers in a concentrated area of one country. Could be genetic components in place that cause more a cytokinetic response to this and cause much more severe pneumonia. One great questions is where are the millions of bodybags and mass graves in China. That news would get out. It did/will not happen. It’s the flu. A nasty spreadable one, but it’s the fluy. Some of you are such pathetic sheeple who look for any bit of news to cower, quit and curl up in a ball. You want to try and convince us to join in you pathetic cowardice and despair. I prefer to be positive, deliver meals to older folks, work, provide work for others and be optimistic. God has got this.
Hysteria much?
You should care because the cure may be much worse than the disease. If and when the economy collapses, no one will get health care (think Cuba or Venezuela) so instead of saving a few hundred thousand lives, millions will die....
I am open to new ways to clarify stats as that is also better than sayng we are doomed as some have been doing which only makes things worse.
Stop posting BS. Everyone is in danger.
The government and fake news don’t care. They’ve tasted unbridled control and won’t let that go easily.
“Good Afternoon, everyone. First of all, I want to send my sincere gratitude and support to all the healthcare workers in Illinois and around the world. Despite doing our best to prepare for a respiratory virus pandemic, we now find ourselves facing a brand-new virus with too little information, not enough personal protective equipment, changing protocols every single day and no second chances. University of Chicago Medicine and every other hospital in the state has been and is working very closely with our public health departments. Without these partnerships with each other and with public health and the CDC. We could not have made it this far and we will not get much further and so I express my gratitude to everyone working in public health. All of us in the field of infectious diseases and public health community are united in our efforts and agree with this course of action. I’ve spoken with many of my colleagues across the city and the state and we all acknowledge that this is the only way forward.
This virus is unforgiving. It spreads before you even know youve caught it and it tricks you into believing that its nothing more than a little influenza. For many of us, it may be just a little flu so it can be very confusing when schools are closed, restaurants are shuttered and now this virus is taking whats left of our precious liberty. The real problem is not the 80 percent who will get over this in a week. Its the 20 percent of patients, the older, those who are immunocompromised, those that have other medical problems who are going to need a bit more support- some oxygen or even a ventilator and life support. We do amazing things like this to save patients in our American hospitals and across the world every single day but we cant take care of everyone at once. And we cant keep that low mortality promise if we cant provide the support patients need. You May Like
Our healthcare system doesnt have any slack. There are no empty wards waiting for patients or nurses waiting in the wings. We barely even have enough masks for the nurses that we have. Looking back to the last time we were left with limited tools and a dangerous infection spreading quickly was the beginning of the 1918 pandemic. Two cities in America made different choices about how to proceed when only a few patients were affected. St. Louis shut itself down and sheltered in place. But Philadelphia went ahead with a huge parade to celebrate soldiers heading off to war. A week later, Philadelphia hospitals were overrun and thousands were dead. Many more than St. Louis. This is a cautionary tale for our time.
Things are already tough at Illinois hospitals, including mine. There is no vaccine or readily available antiviral to help stem the tide. All we have to slow the spread is distance. Social distance. If we let every patient with this infection infect three more people and then each of them infect two or three people, there wont be a hospital bed when my mother cant breathe very well or when yours is coughing too much.
So, in my house, weve made a lot of sacrifices. We dont go out anymore. This is the first time I’ve left my house in days because I’m leading our efforts in emergency planning from home. My son has traded in sports, a science conference, and the fifth-grade bake sale for puzzles, video chats, and e-learning. This isnt the life any of us expected and certainly there are other who will make much greater sacrifices and there are more than a few disappointments to come but this isnt forever like the governor said. It will last longer than any of us wants it to but it will still just be a piece of our whole lives and we have to remember that.
How can soccer or book club be so dangerous? Why ask so much of people for just a few hundred cases? Because its the only way to save lives. And now is the time. The numbers you see today in the news are the people are the people who got sick a week ago. And there are so many people who got sick today who haven’t even noticed that they got sick yet. They picked up the virus and it’ll take a week to see that show in our numbers. Waiting for hospitals to be overwhelmed will leave the following weeks patients with nowhere to go. In short, without taking drastic measures, the healthy and optimistic among us will doom the vulnerable.
We need to fight this fire before it grows too high. But these extreme restrictions may seem in the end a little anticlimactic because its really hard to feel like youre saving the world when youre watching Netflix on your couch but, if we do this right, nothing happens. Yes. A successful shelter in place means that you will feel like it was all for nothing. And you would be right. Because nothing means that nothing happened to your family and that’s what we are going for here.
Even starting now we cant stop the cases from coming fast and furious at least in the next couple of weeks and in the short term but with a real commitment to sheltering in place and a whole lot of patience, we can help protect our critical workers who need to use public transportation in order to safely get to where they need to go. We can give our factories time to ramp up their production of all that PPE so that we have enough masks to last.
We can make more medications and learn more about how we can use them to help save more lives. Even a little time makes a huge difference. It will take more than a week to start seeing the rate of increase slow down and that’s a complicated thing to say it will take even longer to see the rate come down and see it slowing and infections going down so please don’t give up.
I’ve lived in Illinois my entire life and I know we will get through this together and find a way back to the life that we used to live. Public health and hospitals have been working hard for a long time and now its your turn to do your part. This is a huge sacrifice to make but a sacrifice that can make thousands of differences, maybe even a difference in your family too.”
1.2% is still really high
What I have continually said is no one knows the future.
The sky might fall, by it also might not.
So what do we do now?
We go with real, concrete things, like the stats that hue and others provided. That and washing our hands alot, eating well, drink lots of liquids, get plenty of sleep, etc.
Listening to people saying Doom, Doom, Doom, doesnt help anything if people are taking real steps like getting tested and washing hands, etc, etc.
If that is your perspective then please understand you are exposed to things far more dangerous that you dont even know. This is the panic response of the individual. There are statistics on the risk of waking across the street. You roll the dice and play monopoly everyday. Why this panic. Why now. This is the vexing question.
Confirmed cases contain the dead
Kind of a crappy blog, wouldnt you say?
I personally believe the final percentage, at least in the U.S., will be below 1%, possibly well below that figure. The problem is that 100,000,000 infections, a strong possibility, yields 1,000,000 deaths.
We need a natural fatality rate of .1% or we need to slow the infection rate way down or the cure rate way up using the malaria drugs.
We need to do both. But we cant throw the baby (The Economy) out with the bath water. So there has to be a limit on the amount of time and energy we expend on trying to slow the spread. It is certainly not maintainable over a long period of time, at least if want to save our baby.
What did you do during H1N1 when 12,000 people died?? Did you stay home?
The egomaniacs, which means all doctors, know best and are determined to text book us into oblivion.
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