Posted on 03/23/2020 3:55:11 PM PDT by dangus
Good news!
I take it upon myself to identify good news in crises, since the mainstream media almost always overlooks good news. Like when Ebola went away, they simply quit reporting. I haven't had much good news to report since South Korea largely conquered the Coronavirus, COVID-19.
Around a week ago, it looked like we were starting to see some flattening of the curve in the U.S., but then the number of positive tests exploded, probably simply because the number of tests exploded. We may be starting to see some real flattening, but a local explosion in the New York City metro area has be undecided how to avoid cherry-picking data.
The real explosive news comes out of Italy. Now, about 10 days ago, I reported the decline in Korea and a possible decline in Italy. The headline I used proved to be misleading; the two nations combined had a declining number of new cases, and in the immediately preceding two days both nations had a decline in the number of new cases. But the decline in Italy was a product of inconsistent reporting, a glitch in the data. And while the "infection curve" did continue to flatten, the happiness seems a little misplaced, given the truly astounding death rate among the modest number of Italians who did get sick. The glitch in the data fooled me because the curve really was flattening!!!
Perhaps that's why I've been shy to report the excellent news that's been coming out of Italy since. You see, the virus has continued to spread, but at a declining rate which reveals the claims of from idiots like Angela Merkl, and various left-wing American politicians that most of us will get sick are nothing but a lot of hysteria designed to destroy markets and sow political destruction.
The truth is There were fewer new infections in Italy than there have been in a week. This is not a data hiccup; there have been fewer new infections each day for four days now.
So for all the people who warn of the horrors to come, saying that what happens in Italy will soon happen here, I can only say, THANK GOD! because it looks like Italy is following the same type of curve that South Korea and, reportedly, China have followed, a curve that, for America, points to hundreds of thousands, but not hundreds of millions, of infections.
>> No such thing with covid-19. It is more analogous to a cold in that regard. People get it over and over.<<
Nonsense. The reason people get colds over and over again is that there are more than 200 kinds of cold viruses, all of them different. In fact, you could say that a cold isn’t a virus; it’s the way your body reacts to many types of viruses. Some colds are rhinoviruses, some are coronaviruses.
Did you ever notice that kids seem to get colds a lot more often than middle-aged people? That’s because eventually, you’ve gotten most of the common colds.
I will note that the 3/16 figures are also lower than the previous 2. And 3/10 is completely out of whack.
Let’s be hopeful, but it’ll take a few more days for it to be clearly more than an accounting thing.
Politicians and media people predicting 50-80% infection rates seem to have a hard time explaining the lack of 750,000,000 to 1,200,000,000 infected Chinese
Despite how the politicians and media people described (Does anyone expect them to get details or math right? :) ), the models were 1) if NO action were taken on this, and 2) over the course of years, not next month.
Also. They were models. Lots of assumptions.
Also, at least as far as the numbers I am familiar with, you’ve overstated the population of China by at least 100 million or so.
Functionally, herd immunity works like picking individuals out of the transmission path here and there. As a result various strands die off as they are not replicated, which in turn causes it to act as a much less virulent disease.
It is being overused in the discussions of how to deal with this coronavirus outbreak, but as you note, it is certainly a thing.
The cases seem to follow the same bell shaped curve in every country over 8-10 weeks so I doubt lockdown tells the whole story
And only 330,000 positive tests and 111 deaths in Korea, among a population of over 51 million.
It helps when you have a limited ingress path, and you segregate and sort them - even half-assed.
South Korea,
Confirmed: 9,037
Deaths: 120
Recovered: 3,507
Still sick: 5,410
Newsome predicted as many as 25 million Californians will soon get corona virus.
This is simply irresponsible insanity
The number I used for the Chinese population is 1.45 billion people - a generally accepted number
from my fuzzy math I figure that normally about 600000 people die each year in Italy....that would be about 12000 people each week and I would love to know what the number for all deaths is the past 4 weeks, so we could actually see how many MORE or how many LESS deaths there were.....my bet is that the normal death rate for Italy stands....
The head of health for Ohio extrapolated 100,000 cases from an apparent 5, based on a 2017 CDC document that said that if 2 people walk in to a hospital with community-spread cases, then assume 1% of the population has it. She apparently didn’t understand what “population” meant in context and assumed it meant population of the state, rather than population of say, the Italian Village area of Columbus.
That said, it is clear that this thing has become quite scattered and loose in a lot of communities now.
But yeah, not tens of millions yet or imminently.
Hard to tell given that we are working on very partial info but we shall have a good read towards end of next week
Fact is, for such an infectious disease, it has made very little headway in some of the highest population density countries with populations most at risk genetically to the infection
China especially.
Claims that by the end of June or July 50% of the American population will have become ill simply does not comport with what have seen play out on the ground in hardest hit countries.
Not so much in a big way, but in a seeded-scattered way.
https://gisanddata.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6
JHU has changed their mapping in the US. Now it shows by county. Some of the nearby dots are really adjacent, but it does show that this is here and there over a very wide spread.
Still big areas with nothing reported yet.
Yeah, I screwed up in my haste; I corrected my original post in #52.
There are a few problems with the data table you posted.
First, early testing is likely to have higher day over day percentage increases as testing becomes more widely available.
Second, while the percentage from prior days is going down, 8% is still a healthy exponential growth rate, with a doubling time frame of 9 days.
Third, the rate today actually edged up slightly, and death counts were the second highest single day total. (The latter point isn’t necessarily a problem from a growth perspective. That is, you can be on the downward trajectory as but have number of fatalities due to prior infections resolving.)
Lastly, as a cumulative total, bear in mind that there were still 5,249 new cases today. To me, that is surprisingly large given that the lockdown for Italy began almost 4 weeks ago.
I’d say they aren’t out of the thick of it yet.
>> First, early testing is likely to have higher day over day percentage increases as testing becomes more widely available. <<
All the more reason a decline is noteworthy.
>> Second, while the percentage from prior days is going down, 8% is still a healthy exponential growth rate, with a doubling time frame of 9 days. <<
No, that is NOT an exponential growth rate. It’s sub-arithmetic. If the growth rate were STEADY what you are saying would be true.
>> Third, the rate today actually edged up slightly, and death counts were the second highest single day total. (The latter point isnt necessarily a problem from a growth perspective. That is, you can be on the downward trajectory as but have number of fatalities due to prior infections resolving.) <<
Data will bounce. 8.2% is still WAY, WAY, WAY, WAY below the recent levels of 13-20%.
>> Lastly, as a cumulative total, bear in mind that there were still 5,249 new cases today. To me, that is surprisingly large given that the lockdown for Italy began almost 4 weeks ago. <<
The lockdowns began March 8-10. That is TWO weeks ago.
My guess is that the rate of NEW infections was never really 20%-27% in the first part of March, and that the absolute drop in new cases my have been from a somewhat inflated number. But given the scale of the drop in the rate (20-27% down to 8%), the curve has unquestionably flattened.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.