For those of you who don’t know me well, I am a preventive medicine physician and infectious disease epidemiologist. I graduated from the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service and have over 17 years of experience in the field, most of that with CDC.
It sounds increasingly likely that the fatality rate is less than 1%, potentially a lot less, as were now hearing that 80% of people don’t even get sick enough to seek medical attention, and many have no signs of illness at all — which means the denominator in the death rate is likely much higher than is accounted for in the common 2% metric from the first data.
> Expect people you know to die.
Aside from this likely being inaccurate, is this language even remotely helpful?
What puts it in more relatable terms for me is if the death rate for elderly is 1 in 10, and the virus spreads into "basically everyone will get it" territory, statistically that will be several funerals for elderly family and friends I will attend this year. And while that isn't society-ending apocalypse, it's still impactful on a personal level.
That statistic still only takes into account known and confirmed infections. Most reported deaths are from people who have other major health issues.
With reports of people being infected in nursing homes, there's a possibility that even the elderly are being silently infected and symptoms aren't severe enough for them to seek treatment. It seems like there's some unknown factor that makes some people extremely sensitive to it, while others feel nothing at all.
> Most reported deaths are from people who have other major health issues.
The percentage of people 70+ who have "other major health issues" is higher than you seem to think. People who are themselves in their 40s or 50s are likely to know several. Maybe that's not as true for people in their 20s, especially those who live within a closed social circle of mostly their FAANG/startup coworkers, but it's a bit insensitive (at best) to act as though that's true for everyone.
Thanks for the completely inaccurate personal attack. :)
News articles regarding this have been very explicit about saying the victims have notable health problems and not simply age. e.g., A long history of lung problems, cancer, etc. Plenty of old people are recovering fine, and I'm sure the reason health issues are mentioned is because those people have exceptionally bad health in some way.
I don't think anyone really doesn't know that old people are less healthy overall. It's bizarre that some people think they need to explain that fact in a condescending manner.
"My son displays a general garment and you claim it's cut to your fit. What a fascinating revelation."
It wasn't a personal attack. It's not my problem if you chose to apply it to yourself. But enough of your meta-discussion. You displayed an all too common misunderstanding about how (un)healthy older people are, so I challenged it. Here are some figures on co-morbidity factors for Covid-19.
Given those numbers, what percentage of older people do you suppose have escaped all of those ills? Clearly less than half. So of course most of the elderly who have died from Covid-19 already had some other condition, because most of the elderly period have some other condition. Assuming the existence of vast numbers of elderly without such conditions for the sake of your argument is just not helpful.
Your turn. Bring some facts to the table instead of wild supposition and complaints.
I really have no clue why you're angry or what you're arguing.
There are people who are 40 years old who are dying, and those people also have major health issues.
I'm not trying to say old people and 5 year olds are equally healthy and running around. I don't know why you're so frustrated and thinking I am and continuing to be needlessly condescending and thinking being called out makes those claims accurate (it doesn't).
What I'll repeat is plenty of people seem to be getting out of the disease just fine and many with no symptoms. Some people--regardless of age--seem to be hit especially hard. Many of those people seem to have major health issues. Since older people tend to have more health issues, it's obvious that they're generally hit harder, but many are still getting infected without it turning severe.
Again, I have zero clue what your point is or why you attacked me as some clueless FAANG employee or what relevance that even has. I'm not sure if it's some odd projection or what.
Huge difference to Spanish Flu is that at that time we did not have antibiotics and most people did not die from the flu, but from pneumonia caused by a bacterial superinfection. Thanks to Alexander Fleming and other great researchers we can treat bacterial infections quite well now, so the corona virus would have to be a lot more lethal than the Spanish Flu to cause the same number of deaths.
That number will vary greatly by region and the quality of healthcare, as well as the functioning ability of governments to handle it. The infection rate is such that it’s exponentially growing, which means it’s showing no signs of slowing down. If 1% of the world dies from it, that’s hundreds of millions of people dying from something in addition to everything else already killing people. This is really bad.
I can't see anything at your link - first it asks for a login, then I login with Google and get an error. Here [1] it looks like for a while around mid february the daily increase was getting less, but it's picking up again.
But that's most likely limited by testing resources. Many of the countries that haven't reported cases are developing nations that don't have the resources to do thousands of daily tests. Similarly, countries like the US have been lagging in their testing. Similarly, France has stopped doing tests except for people who are critically-ill.
So, it would stand to reason that you would see a decrease in the number of confirmed cases if there's an artificial limit in the number of cases reported.
The death rate seems so low, that I could imagine many of the elderly people dieing from it, would also have been killed from many other viruses that would have possibly come along shortly after.
> If 1% of the world dies from it, that’s hundreds of millions of people dying from something in addition to everything else already killing people.
You seem to have a very unconventional estimate of the world population. 1% of 8 billion is not hundreds of millions.
Anyway, overall current (non-COVID) mortality rate is around 1% annually as well, mostly elderly people as well, so even if in an extremely unlikely and tragic case this will kill 1% of the world population, expect twice as many people you know to die compared to a regular year.
The crude case fatality rate is somewhat a hard to interpret number, since it not only depends on the number of fatalities but also on the number of diagnosed people. Differences in how many people are diagnosed mostly explains the regional differences we see in CFR for covid-19. This also makes it hard to compare to the Spanish flu since we don’t know how many infected were diagnosed back then.
This NEJM article you referenced (https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2002387) is a poor estimate of the Case Fatality Ratio. I'm perplexed it passed peer-review (I'm not even an expert, so why am I finding such glaring flaws?)
It's citing two references (ref. 4 and ref. 5) that estimate CFR at respectively 2% and 1.4%, however both use the naïve CFR formula (deaths/cases) that's known to underestimate the CFR due to deaths lagging cases in a rapidly growing outbreak. I wrote about this bias and provided 5 peer-reviewed epidemiological papers that also document it, see: https://blog.zorinaq.com/case-fatality-ratio-ncov/
Then it remarks that many mild cases are probably not detected (ie. high underascertainment) but strangely makes no effort at quantifying it, or referencing other papers that do quantify it.
The 4 best published studies that correct for these two aspects (naïve CFR bias + underascertainment) are:
Thank you for sharing this. I keep seeing people try to claim "but we don't know the true number of unreported cases therefore the true CFR is lower than reported" as if epidemiologists are somehow unaware of this factor.
Genomic estimates suggest that there may be several thousand infected individuals, maybe many thousand, in Washington state. But we are only aware of a small handful of them. One explanation for this would be that many people are completely asymptomatic, or can't distinguish COVID-19 from a very mild cold. That would be in line with the NEJM article you shared, and explain why there haven't been any cases in children. If they don't have a strong enough reaction to require treatment or testing then it would seem they don't even get infected under the metrics that are established.
The major problem is systemic risk from many people requiring intensive care all at once.
The author of the linked blog post didn't mention an important and unsettling feature of the Spanish flu. It came in three waves. The first looked very similar to a bad seasonal flu or the current SARS outbreak. The second was the one that killed, by inducing a cytokine storm and immune overreaction in otherwise healthy, younger people. Deaths sometimes occurred in a matter of hours after the first appearance symptoms. Having an incredibly infectious virus cause a pandemic is one thing. Let's hope that we can monitor it's evolution to ensure that strains that it develops aren't significantly more dangerous. Its infectivity means that it will have a massive environment in which to evolve. Evolution rate is largely determined by population size.
In addition to this piece, there is this interview with Harvard Epidemiologist Marc Lipsitch [1]:
> Whatever the number is, it's gonna take a toll. If it really does spread as widely as that projection says, and that's what I think is likely to happen, then there are gonna be millions of people dying. And I don't think there's any way to get around that. And so I think there's real reason for people to be concerned. I also think that we can turn that concern into actions that will make the situation better.
I think pieces like this and the linked interview with Marc Lipsitch, which are clear-eyed reads on the situation from experts, should break through to the general public so they can take some action.
Dr. Fauci's iceberg theory, that the cfr will decline as we identify more mild cases, is disputed by some in the WHO and some Chinese scientists, who argue the CFR is well supported from comprehensive testing of quarantined populations, which identify and account for mild and asymptomatic cases. One such study:
While the specific r0 and cfr are still under debate, there's no doubt this has rapidly absorbed hospital resources in hotspots in ways other coronaviruses haven't.
I don't think panic is the right answer, but people should prepare for the possibility this impacts their lives, judging from regions with cases and the continued spread to new regions. Quarantines, social distancing, fewer public activities, and extended hospitalizations of some older family members are all realistic scenarios.
> It sounds increasingly likely that the fatality rate is less than 1%
If enough people get it badly enough to require significant medical care, that will quickly overwhelm hospitals, and the fatality rate among those turned away will be much higher. We're more likely to follow the Iran pattern (CFR = 5.5%) than that from Japan or South Korea or even China.
Would it be worse for you if your 80 year old mother were to die or your 4 year old daughter?
Which would surprise and shock you more? Which would be the thing you are more prepared for, because you already had the thought in your head that this would happen at some time? Which would possibly be so devastating it could also end your relationship to your partner, redefine you as a person and totally change your life?
If we have to choose between having a 75 year old and a 5 year old die, most people would choose the 75 year old. They would be dying relatively soon anyways.
I love both. The "if you had to choose" argument is a horribly utilitaristic one and I'm happy I'm neither related nor acquainted with anybody seriously bringing it up.
It's based on the egalitarian notion that every human deserves a long and healthy life.
If an older person's life ends a bit earlier than it should have, it's sad. But a child's life ending premature, before they've had much of a life at all, is worse, by most peoples' calculus.
This is not a hypothetical. Doctors are literally making these decisions everyday when they practice medice, and the CDC is also making these decisions right now in the context of the coronavirus.
A child does not possess the experience required to appreciate life and death in all its complex meanings, or to have experienced a life which amounts to meaning or legacy.
The completion of life for someone who has truly lived can be as beautiful as it is tragic. Many cultures, including Christianity, celebrate death in some capacity.
Of course death is never desirable, but it is certainly possible for it to be not undesirable in the right context. People who have had near death experiences and lived recount a sublime experience of understanding as if every part of their life and history, every part of reality is exactly in the place it belongs.
I don't imagine this experience is typical for a small child being prodded by strange people in tyvek suits speaking in metaphors about sleeping and telling them white lies about feeling better... So all that is possibly left is the tragic experience of death.
>> It’s possible that COVID-19 will be similar to a bad flu year but there are a number of indications that it will be very much like the 1918 Flu Pandemic.
This, right here, is horseshit. There is no way whatsoever it will be like the 1918 Flu Pandemic, unless we've utterly failed as a society and did not invent anything in the last 102 years. In 1918 we didn't yet have _penicillin_, let alone antiviral drugs.
More accurate prediction: this will be only slightly worse than the seasonal flu we endure every year. In fact, it's quite possible that this year in the US more people will die of the complications of the flu, than of COVID19.
Nobody knows if it's 5-10x more deadly because nobody knows the denominator - the _total_ number of cases, including the cases which are mild (which most of them are), and for which people are unlikely to seek treatment. Also, even allowing hypothetically that it's 5x as deadly in China, that doesn't mean its CFR is the same in the developed world.
Do you have grandparents? Or elderly parents? Or know anyone over the age of 60-70 that you care about? Or anyone with a compromised immunological system?
If yes to any of these questions you should at least empathise that maybe they might suffer from a new and unknown disease that is potentially deadly to them.
Not everyone is going to die but a lot of people will feel the effects of this uncontained epidemic in their personal lives, don't you care about that?
Yes, western countries should not deceive themselves about the standard of care. Bruce Aylward of WHO says that they rapidly scaled up to world-leading capability [1]:
> they find cases fast, get them isolated, in treatment, and supported early. Second thing they do is ventilate dozens in the average hospital; they use extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [removing blood from a person’s body and oxygenating their red blood cells] when ventilation doesn’t work. This is sophisticated health care. They have a survival rate for this disease I would not extrapolate to the rest of the world. What you’ve seen in Italy and Iran is that a lot of people are dying.
The more that comes out about China's response, the more I fear that it will be hard for anyone else to follow, and not just or primarily due to the severe quarantine. China snapped its fingers and went to a wartime footing.
"The U.S. is doing very little to prevent this. A lot of people, especially elderly people, will likely die."
At this point, what realistically could the US do to prevent this? It will continue to spread in other countries, and there's nothing the US can do about that. We can implement more severe travel restrictions, but that has its own issues and it's not recommended by the WHO. That will only be effective for a period of time in the beginning of the virus spread, and they are basically doing that afaik
Im no expert, but besides providing financial or medical aid to to the countries fighting the virus, and helping developing a vaccine/cure, I'm not sure what the US should be doing prevention wise
Exactly #1. From what I've seen, in a best case scenario we have 30k extra ventilators. Reportedly, 6% of cases require ventilation. Some quick math shows that only .16% of the population needs to be infected at the same time for our ventilator supply to runs out.
> For those of you who don’t know me well, I am a preventive medicine physician and infectious disease epidemiologist. I graduated from the CDC’s Epidemic Intelligence Service and have over 17 years of experience in the field, most of that with CDC.
For those here expressing skepticism of the author's (admittedly dire) predictions, what set of credentials should someone have before you take what they say seriously? Not trying to be snarky. Perhaps I simply wish to understand more of what people find convincing in situations like this and why.
Really? That doesn't seem rational. If a doctor diagnosed you with pancreatic cancer and told you that you had 6 months to live - you would not trust his prediction?
I would get a second and third opinion, and then decide. I guess my point was that I am not going to trust any one individual based off of their credentials.
I think a lot of the comments in this discussion risk understating the potential impact of the virus. Yes, there are many unknowns, and we might not encounter the worst-case scenario. But many experts have basis for being worried, e.g. listen to these interviews [1,2]. It will take a while before the virus really spreads in the US/Europe but it seems pretty clear that it's not contained anymore. Remarks about the fatality rate cut both ways: if it's lower than reported it means that the virus is spreading faster than we think (more mild cases), if it's higher than reported there are going to be many more fatalities still. There are arguments to be made for both (lower: many mild cases go undetected, higher: reported fatality rates often seem to be calculated from active cases, not complete cases). Either way it's clear that in China the rate of infection was well beyond what hospitals could handle which seems to indicate that we might encounter similar issues.
Let's just be careful and be prepared, there really seems to be too little info to get comfortable with this at this point.
>Either way it's clear that in China the rate of infection was well beyond what hospitals could handle which seems to indicate that we might encounter similar issues.
What's more concerning about what happened in China is that it overwhelmed their healthcare infrastructure even after they implemented what would otherwise be called martial law throughout the country for a period of time.
What is wrong with this god-damned site? Seriously, this post was #25 on the front page, I check again and it's buried 4 pages deep literally 10 minutes later.
Some people in this community are in really deep denial and do not understand the concept of asymmetric risk.
This is a clearly written piece that can be shared widely with your network, especially for people who may not be clued in to the situation. Please share this.
I don't get this either - the front page has many posts with fewer points over a longer period. Maybe downvotes are treated differently from upvotes in the sorting algorithm?
Honest question: how one can ditinguish coronavirus from other "pandemics" of recent years like svine flu or bird flu or whatnot? Those happened primarily on TV news, and the informational background was about the same: apocalyptic pictures of empty airport, packed hospitals, etc. Why should an average Joe care more this time?
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[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 122 ms ] thread> COVID-19 seems to be most severe in older adults.
The median age of deaths is 75. I guess that’s technically “older adults” but I think “elderly” would be a better description.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/01/23/world/asia/coronavirus-vi...
> there are a number of indications that it will be very much like the 1918 Flu Pandemic
The New England Journal of Medicine has a different take:
https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2002387
It sounds increasingly likely that the fatality rate is less than 1%, potentially a lot less, as were now hearing that 80% of people don’t even get sick enough to seek medical attention, and many have no signs of illness at all — which means the denominator in the death rate is likely much higher than is accounted for in the common 2% metric from the first data.
> Expect people you know to die.
Aside from this likely being inaccurate, is this language even remotely helpful?
With reports of people being infected in nursing homes, there's a possibility that even the elderly are being silently infected and symptoms aren't severe enough for them to seek treatment. It seems like there's some unknown factor that makes some people extremely sensitive to it, while others feel nothing at all.
The percentage of people 70+ who have "other major health issues" is higher than you seem to think. People who are themselves in their 40s or 50s are likely to know several. Maybe that's not as true for people in their 20s, especially those who live within a closed social circle of mostly their FAANG/startup coworkers, but it's a bit insensitive (at best) to act as though that's true for everyone.
News articles regarding this have been very explicit about saying the victims have notable health problems and not simply age. e.g., A long history of lung problems, cancer, etc. Plenty of old people are recovering fine, and I'm sure the reason health issues are mentioned is because those people have exceptionally bad health in some way.
I don't think anyone really doesn't know that old people are less healthy overall. It's bizarre that some people think they need to explain that fact in a condescending manner.
"My son displays a general garment and you claim it's cut to your fit. What a fascinating revelation."
It wasn't a personal attack. It's not my problem if you chose to apply it to yourself. But enough of your meta-discussion. You displayed an all too common misunderstanding about how (un)healthy older people are, so I challenged it. Here are some figures on co-morbidity factors for Covid-19.
* Cardiovascular disease 13.2%
* Diabetes 9.2%
* Chronic respiratory disease 8.0%
* Hypertension 8.4%
* Cancer 7.6%
(all from https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/coronavirus-age-se...)
So, how common are these issues in the 70+ crowd?
* 25-35% of US adults 65 or over have cardiovascular disease (range due to gender difference)
* 19-23% have diabetes
* 8-9% have asthma, 21-26% have bronchitis or emphysema (oddly the numbers don't cover COPD which I believe is around 15%)
* 55-57% have hypertension
* 21-26% have cancer at some point
(all from https://agingstats.gov/docs/LatestReport/Older-Americans-201...)
Given those numbers, what percentage of older people do you suppose have escaped all of those ills? Clearly less than half. So of course most of the elderly who have died from Covid-19 already had some other condition, because most of the elderly period have some other condition. Assuming the existence of vast numbers of elderly without such conditions for the sake of your argument is just not helpful.
Your turn. Bring some facts to the table instead of wild supposition and complaints.
There are people who are 40 years old who are dying, and those people also have major health issues.
I'm not trying to say old people and 5 year olds are equally healthy and running around. I don't know why you're so frustrated and thinking I am and continuing to be needlessly condescending and thinking being called out makes those claims accurate (it doesn't).
What I'll repeat is plenty of people seem to be getting out of the disease just fine and many with no symptoms. Some people--regardless of age--seem to be hit especially hard. Many of those people seem to have major health issues. Since older people tend to have more health issues, it's obvious that they're generally hit harder, but many are still getting infected without it turning severe.
Again, I have zero clue what your point is or why you attacked me as some clueless FAANG employee or what relevance that even has. I'm not sure if it's some odd projection or what.
I have 4 living grandparents - which means that odds of my attending a funeral in the next year or so is at least 35%.
That's horrifying.
A̶n̶t̶i̶b̶i̶o̶t̶i̶c̶s̶ ̶w̶o̶n̶'̶t̶ ̶h̶e̶l̶p̶ ̶w̶i̶t̶h̶ ̶C̶O̶V̶I̶D̶-̶1̶9̶,̶ ̶b̶u̶t̶ ̶w̶e̶ ̶h̶a̶v̶e̶ ̶a̶ ̶l̶o̶t̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶a̶n̶t̶i̶v̶i̶r̶a̶l̶s̶ ̶n̶o̶w̶ ̶t̶h̶a̶t̶ ̶m̶a̶y̶ ̶h̶e̶l̶p̶,̶ ̶a̶n̶d̶ ̶m̶u̶c̶h̶ ̶h̶i̶g̶h̶e̶r̶ ̶s̶t̶a̶n̶d̶a̶r̶d̶s̶ ̶o̶f̶ ̶c̶a̶r̶e̶.̶
Edit: Thanks for the correction below, I misunderstood why antibiotics could be of help.
Globally speaking, that's not the case. The number of new cases was highest in early to mid-February and has been lower in the past two weeks.
What? That doesn't matter at all.
The number of new cases globally is growing at an increasing rate- the number will eclipse that from early-mid february shortly.
That's just not true. The daily increase in total cases globally has been going down since mid February.
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594... (Link fixed, thanks)
[1] https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
So, it would stand to reason that you would see a decrease in the number of confirmed cases if there's an artificial limit in the number of cases reported.
You seem to have a very unconventional estimate of the world population. 1% of 8 billion is not hundreds of millions.
Anyway, overall current (non-COVID) mortality rate is around 1% annually as well, mostly elderly people as well, so even if in an extremely unlikely and tragic case this will kill 1% of the world population, expect twice as many people you know to die compared to a regular year.
Having twice the normal population die in a given year is an extreme event. The way you’re describing it sounds like it’s no biggie.
It's citing two references (ref. 4 and ref. 5) that estimate CFR at respectively 2% and 1.4%, however both use the naïve CFR formula (deaths/cases) that's known to underestimate the CFR due to deaths lagging cases in a rapidly growing outbreak. I wrote about this bias and provided 5 peer-reviewed epidemiological papers that also document it, see: https://blog.zorinaq.com/case-fatality-ratio-ncov/
Then it remarks that many mild cases are probably not detected (ie. high underascertainment) but strangely makes no effort at quantifying it, or referencing other papers that do quantify it.
The 4 best published studies that correct for these two aspects (naïve CFR bias + underascertainment) are:
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0383/9/2/523
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/medicine/s...
https://institutefordiseasemodeling.github.io/nCoV-public/an...
https://github.com/calthaus/ncov-cfr/blob/d30f02e1c20e06103a...
(3 of the 4 above studies are even referenced by the WHO in their Coronavirus disease situation report 30 (references 10, 11 and 12) and in situation report 31: https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situati... and https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situati... )
And they all estimate the CFR to be between 0.5% and 1.6%, or about 5x to 16x deadlier than the flu (0.1%)
> Aside from this likely being inaccurate, is this language even remotely helpful?
If it is accurate I appreciate someone informing me in brief and plain terms.
> There will be significant economic disruption
> Daily life will be impacted in important ways
> The acute pandemic will probably last at least for several months and quite possibly for a year or two.
Agreed, this seems very sensationalist.
Any or all of the above could be true, but at best, she is guessing right now.
As I have said before, if you are going to make a bet, you need to know the odds. We don't know the odds yet.
This also means that we can't be sure of any of these numbers.
Maybe the correct way to think of this isn't "people you know will die" but rather "people you know may die, so we need to be paranoid and prepare."
The major problem is systemic risk from many people requiring intensive care all at once.
The author of the linked blog post didn't mention an important and unsettling feature of the Spanish flu. It came in three waves. The first looked very similar to a bad seasonal flu or the current SARS outbreak. The second was the one that killed, by inducing a cytokine storm and immune overreaction in otherwise healthy, younger people. Deaths sometimes occurred in a matter of hours after the first appearance symptoms. Having an incredibly infectious virus cause a pandemic is one thing. Let's hope that we can monitor it's evolution to ensure that strains that it develops aren't significantly more dangerous. Its infectivity means that it will have a massive environment in which to evolve. Evolution rate is largely determined by population size.
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/jbloom/CoV_vs_flu_CFR/mast...
Some context:
https://twitter.com/petrakle/status/1234587264904318978
This is based on data published so far.
> Whatever the number is, it's gonna take a toll. If it really does spread as widely as that projection says, and that's what I think is likely to happen, then there are gonna be millions of people dying. And I don't think there's any way to get around that. And so I think there's real reason for people to be concerned. I also think that we can turn that concern into actions that will make the situation better.
I think pieces like this and the linked interview with Marc Lipsitch, which are clear-eyed reads on the situation from experts, should break through to the general public so they can take some action.
[1] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/coronavirus-infection-outbreak-...
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-720...
While the specific r0 and cfr are still under debate, there's no doubt this has rapidly absorbed hospital resources in hotspots in ways other coronaviruses haven't.
I don't think panic is the right answer, but people should prepare for the possibility this impacts their lives, judging from regions with cases and the continued spread to new regions. Quarantines, social distancing, fewer public activities, and extended hospitalizations of some older family members are all realistic scenarios.
If enough people get it badly enough to require significant medical care, that will quickly overwhelm hospitals, and the fatality rate among those turned away will be much higher. We're more likely to follow the Iran pattern (CFR = 5.5%) than that from Japan or South Korea or even China.
I'm sorry to ask this .. why are we grateful for this?
Which would surprise and shock you more? Which would be the thing you are more prepared for, because you already had the thought in your head that this would happen at some time? Which would possibly be so devastating it could also end your relationship to your partner, redefine you as a person and totally change your life?
If an older person's life ends a bit earlier than it should have, it's sad. But a child's life ending premature, before they've had much of a life at all, is worse, by most peoples' calculus.
If I should have to bury my daughter, I would be devastated.
The completion of life for someone who has truly lived can be as beautiful as it is tragic. Many cultures, including Christianity, celebrate death in some capacity.
Of course death is never desirable, but it is certainly possible for it to be not undesirable in the right context. People who have had near death experiences and lived recount a sublime experience of understanding as if every part of their life and history, every part of reality is exactly in the place it belongs.
I don't imagine this experience is typical for a small child being prodded by strange people in tyvek suits speaking in metaphors about sleeping and telling them white lies about feeling better... So all that is possibly left is the tragic experience of death.
Grateful that healthier individuals (of which there are more) are not as affected
This, right here, is horseshit. There is no way whatsoever it will be like the 1918 Flu Pandemic, unless we've utterly failed as a society and did not invent anything in the last 102 years. In 1918 we didn't yet have _penicillin_, let alone antiviral drugs.
More accurate prediction: this will be only slightly worse than the seasonal flu we endure every year. In fact, it's quite possible that this year in the US more people will die of the complications of the flu, than of COVID19.
So the fatality, at the upper end of the range, would be comparable to the 1918 pandemic flu (estimated at 2.04%: https://institutefordiseasemodeling.github.io/nCoV-public/an...)
If yes to any of these questions you should at least empathise that maybe they might suffer from a new and unknown disease that is potentially deadly to them.
Not everyone is going to die but a lot of people will feel the effects of this uncontained epidemic in their personal lives, don't you care about that?
Feel free to cite any other scientific study that establishes a lower CFR, by the way.
Yes, western countries should not deceive themselves about the standard of care. Bruce Aylward of WHO says that they rapidly scaled up to world-leading capability [1]:
> they find cases fast, get them isolated, in treatment, and supported early. Second thing they do is ventilate dozens in the average hospital; they use extracorporeal membrane oxygenation [removing blood from a person’s body and oxygenating their red blood cells] when ventilation doesn’t work. This is sophisticated health care. They have a survival rate for this disease I would not extrapolate to the rest of the world. What you’ve seen in Italy and Iran is that a lot of people are dying.
[1] https://www.vox.com/2020/3/2/21161067/coronavirus-covid19-ch...
The more that comes out about China's response, the more I fear that it will be hard for anyone else to follow, and not just or primarily due to the severe quarantine. China snapped its fingers and went to a wartime footing.
The U.S. is doing very little to prevent this. A lot of people, especially elderly people, will likely die.
It will also likely have a severe impact on the market. The sooner we can all accept this and prepare the better.
Not just the market - the real economy.
At this point, what realistically could the US do to prevent this? It will continue to spread in other countries, and there's nothing the US can do about that. We can implement more severe travel restrictions, but that has its own issues and it's not recommended by the WHO. That will only be effective for a period of time in the beginning of the virus spread, and they are basically doing that afaik
Im no expert, but besides providing financial or medical aid to to the countries fighting the virus, and helping developing a vaccine/cure, I'm not sure what the US should be doing prevention wise
1. You smooth out the cases that end up in hospitals and ICUs
2. You give more time for a vaccine to be developed and deployed.
3. You reduce the economic impact.
For those here expressing skepticism of the author's (admittedly dire) predictions, what set of credentials should someone have before you take what they say seriously? Not trying to be snarky. Perhaps I simply wish to understand more of what people find convincing in situations like this and why.
Let's just be careful and be prepared, there really seems to be too little info to get comfortable with this at this point.
[1] https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/deep-background-with-noah-f...
[2] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/27/podcasts/the-daily/corona...
What's more concerning about what happened in China is that it overwhelmed their healthcare infrastructure even after they implemented what would otherwise be called martial law throughout the country for a period of time.
/r/covid19 is an interesting scientific discussion of the topic.
Some people in this community are in really deep denial and do not understand the concept of asymmetric risk.
This is a clearly written piece that can be shared widely with your network, especially for people who may not be clued in to the situation. Please share this.
China had to literally shut down their entire economy just to slow the virus.
Our only hope is warm weather and some way to speed vaccine development.
There are some major differences.