We really do need to address what constitutes a proper Covid death. So long as there are people who die from unrelated causes, while happening to have Covid, being marked as a Covid death, there will be a lot of people skeptical of the statistics.
What do you mean by this? What unrelated causes are people dying from that aren't exacerbated by COVID?
I've heard this argument before but it's never made sense to me. If you have AIDS, it's not the AIDS that kills you, it's the fact that AIDS weakened your immune system to the point that something else can kill you. But to say that AIDS wasn't paramount to killing the victim is just wrong. Seems to me like COVID is a similar situation...
Not OP, but in the first half of this year (not sure if this is still the case, I have heard they have attempted to fix this): Anyone in Sweden who had been either diagnosed with Covid 19 and died of any cause, e.g. a traffic incident would be counted as a Covid death. Or if they died of any cause and the autopsy revealed Covid 19 it would also be counted as a Covid death.
That's the example everyone always brings up, and even if it's true, do you think there are a huge portion of people with COVID who are dying in car accidents? That seems very unlikely to make a significant difference in the figures, and for a new virus that is spreading very quickly and isn't yet well-understood, it's probably worth using a definition that errs slightly (but probably not significantly) on the inclusive side.
> "Of these, 90 percent (5,514 out of 6,128) have laboratory-confirmed covid-19 according to the Swedish Public Health Agency's database of infected people."
That is 90% of:
> The statistics show the deceased where the underlying cause of death was covid-19, according to the cause of death certificates received by the National Board of Health and Welfare.
So in 10% of cases, the doctors were sure enough that the cause of death was Covid19 to write a legal document certifying it, even though they didn't order laboratory work to confirm with 100% certainty. This could mean many things, from medical malpractice (doctor lied on a legal document) to simple common sense (patient is husband of person with confirmed case, died of clear Covid19 symptoms).
But there is no way to read that 10% number as meaning what you claimed. In fact, if a person were hit by a car, confirmed Covid19 positive, died of their wounds on their way to hospital, and got a death certificate claiming they died of Covid19, they would be part of 90% number, NOT part of the 10% number.
Car accidents in specific are probably small, but they're representative of similar catastrophic events that will lead to death anyway, that would still be marked as covid.
The most common of which is simply old age. Certainly covid causes death in some people, that's indisputable. But If you catch it in your last 2 weeks while you're on your death bed anyway, it's not really clear that covid even accelerated it.
The death die with covid more often not only because it probably accelerates some old peoples' deaths, but because this very population is undergoing its end-of-life process anyway, and are going to die whether or not they have it.
Sure, but if police found out, the investigation and legal process would be roughly the same as if you had successfully murdered them. The legal penalty would likely be less, but both cases are still treated with roughly the same level of seriousness by the legal system.
> Okay, but what's unique about COVID where we're supposed to discount that? Surely we care about a murderer who kills an elderly person.
I'm not sure what you're saying here. If a murder kills someone, the murder was the direct cause of death and we count it as murder. If you die of old age while having covid, it is not necessarily covid that is the killer, so it's not clear that it should necessarily be counted as the killer in all old-age cases.
> and are going to die whether or not they have it
Yes but... you understand I'm talking about the specific case of actually being on your deathbed, right?
Is that relevant? How many people happen to have some other acute terminal illness/accident AND Covid at the same time?
Also, do you imagine this is different for Influenza deaths or TB deaths? If anything, Covid-19 deaths are much more accurately counted than deaths from any other major disease, which are often just estimates.
I think the point is that the comorbidities aren't mentioned when talking about COVID deaths. The statistics are being presented as though it's random chance who dies from it, instead of it being reported as something that primarily kills people who already have other health issues, like obesity. It would probably make people less anxious if we were told that people without existing issues have a lower chance of dying or hospitilization.
For anyone who is skeptical of the statistics, the response is to ask them to explain excess deaths. In America there are over 200k excess deaths; if not COVID, then why did so many more people die?
Preface: I believe the pandemic is real and covid is deadly.
People argue that increases in death could also be attributed to suicide, deteriorating health from mental hardship of stress and quarantine, and people not seeking medical treatment they need because they are scared of covid or because they cannot afford it with so much unemployment.
I think the last one holds some water. I know of one person in my hometown who chose not to go to the hospital because he was scared of covid and ended up dying of a heart attack.
A lot of clinics are doing "video only" visits. These are not nearly sufficient to accurately diagnose a patient. A good deal of clinical visits is assessing the overall manner and appearance of a patient. This can't be done remotely. Nor can BP, EKG, O2 or any other basic diagnostic tools be done remotely. Minor things that could be detected in a normal office visit are missed and turn into things which can kill.
I think they could also go to the hospital right now. But I think that needs to be communicated; some sort of message telling people “Covid is serious but so are a lot of other health issues if you think you need medical help get it!”
The response to COVID. Delayed treatment for heart conditions being a major source of death. Alzheimer's deaths are up a lot this year as well, and isolation exacerbates Alzheimer's. Suicides are up, as are overdoses and murders.
Yes, COVID has killed a _lot_ of people, but so has the response to COVID. We focused all resources on one enemy while other allies of Death stalked in the back door.
If you don't respond to the epidemic, the healthcare system gets overloaded, and other care suffers. The best way to make sure everyone can get regular medical care is to get control of the epidemic. China, South Korea, Vietnam, New Zealand and other countries have done so.
China has done so with restrictions that would never fly in the West, in that they are illegal or unconstitutional. New Zealand did so by virtue of being an island and thus having tight border control. South Korea and Vietnam are interesting cases, we should learn more from them. In the case of Vietnam, I do wonder how many cases are undetected.
Also, in the case of Vietnam, only 14% of their population is over 55 years old, whereas 29% of the USA is over 55 (and 31% of Belgium, another hard hit country). Seeing as this disease hits people over 55 the hardest (and is barely noticed in those under 30), it is no wonder Vietnam is seeing less of an issue here.
It seems age demographics _could_ have more correlation with outcomes than any government intervention. That of course doesn't explain Vietnam entirely. Also keep in mind, Vietnam has only administered 12,000 test per 1 million people, whereas the USA has administered 492,000 per 1 million.
Like China, Vietnam nearly eliminated the virus within their borders. Demographics affect the mortality rate, but in order to eradicate the virus, you need much more than just favorable demographics.
Yes! If the virus were running rampant through the young population in Vietnam it would be kill huge swathes of their older population regardless of their exact proportion of the population!
The bank shot demographic explanations are just more distracting BS, the obvious lesson is suppress the virus!
No. Vietnam is the _exception_. We don't know why yet. Countries who locked down as strict are seeing more cases right now. You can't ignore all of the other examples of countries that locked down and saw additional waves and deaths.
We need to understand better why Vietnam is seeing such positive results but saying you know why for certain is disingenuous
I didn't say I knew exactly how they suppressed the virus, but I did say that we /do/ know that they have suppressed the virus.
People want to raise doubts about the effectiveness of their suppression by implying that they have not achieved suppression but rather their younger population means they are not suffering deaths as a result. This we can say with a lot of confidence is not the case because their demographic advantages are not that great and other nations with similar demographics have not been as successful.
We do in fact need to understand their success, that is why it is so important to avoid dismissing their success with demographic excuses!
Had a quick look at your comment history on this topic, at this point if you are still in denial about the basic nature of COVID-19 and how wrong you have been then I guess I have a pretty good idea how worried to be about accusations of being disingenuous!
My opinions have changed. I think that the t-cell immunity buzz we had in the Summer is not as impactful as I first thought, though it still has an impact. I have always thought that COVID-19 is a dangerous infection, especially to the elderly.
Actually let me list what I think, since you seem interested enough in my opinion to spelunk my comment history:
- COVID-19 is a dangerous infection. The degree of risk and severity is directly correlated to age.
- For those below ~30 years old, the infection is between as to much less dangerous than some strains of influenza.
- Between 30-60, the infection is appreciably more dangerous than the flu, but not severely so
- Over 60 the infection is far more dangerous than the flu, and extreme precautions are warranted
- The projections of disease modelers were incredibly off the mark early on, by orders of magnitude. The models are better today.
- The fatality rate was grossly overestimated. Early in the pandemic, we had numbers around 1-3% IFR (not CFR). This was also off by an order of magnitude. Real IFR will end up around .3-.5%. Deadly than the flu, but again with the burden on older people
- Most public health measures we are deploying were created for pandemic influenza. They do not necessarily apply in the same ways to pandemic coronaviruses.
- Masks clearly work to reduce the spread of infections. Not mandating masks is a terrible idea, and governments who have avoided it thus far will be judged harshly
- Influenza has around a 15-20% asymptomatic rate. Coronavirus has twice that. This causes huge problems for contact tracing though it is clearly not impossible
- We over-focused on surface spread and panicked people into disinfecting everything, while ignoring aerosol spread
- We over-focused on spread between strangers and in public, and downplayed the real risk, which is spread within families and those who live in close quarters
- This alone caused imbalanced risk assessments for people. Eating at a restaurant with proper distancing and ventilation IS safer than having an indoor neighborhood block party without masks.
- Lockdowns require an exit strategy that is something beyond "more lockdowns".
- Lockdowns are a great public health strategy if they are incredibly short lived and adhered to
- It was clear in March that the only way out of the pandemic was immunity, be it natural or vaccine enhanced. Lockdowns should have been thrown out the window at that time
- The goal posts were constantly moved from curve flattening to deaths to raw case counts
- Metrics for reopening should have been clear from the start and based entirely upon hospital capacity
- Ignoring the impacts of the lockdown is close-minded thinking that has and will continue to cost lives
- Essentially, we knew by April at the latest that eradication was no longer a possibility, and that we should have switched from eradication to mitigation
- Mitigation would include targeted restrictions based upon age risk
- Mitigation also requires acceptance that cases will increase and deaths will occur, but the goal is to reduce those, we can't aim for elimination. The cost is too great and the odds are too low
- Public health officials shot themselves in the foot several times throughout the pandemic
- While I understand why masks were downplayed originally, that was a terrible mistake. Saying "masks work, but we need them for our medical heroes" or some shit would have been better
- Maybe that would have made masks "cool" instead of a political signaling tool (again, I 100% support mask mandates)
- Outside spread was confused by the support of the civil rights protests in the Spring. We knew then and continue to know that outside spread is very unlikely and that the protests were safe. But at the same time we were shaming people at the beach. Both were safe, and to declare one safer than the other based upon the ontology of the events was a terrible mistake
- The media spread fear and panic before it was warranted. Constan...
I appreciate the detailed response, my reaction to this is: you are much like a climate-change denier that has moved from the position "climate change isn't real" to "ok, it is real but we can't do anything about it" to "we can do something but it is just too hard and too expensive" .. deep down in their heart I think such folks just never accepted that it is real.
The fact of the matter is that we have plenty of evidence from around the world that suppression is possible and practical and doesn't cost nearly as much as the economic costs of letting the virus run rampant. Pretending that demographics is important in the success of Vietnam when Japan has the worst demographics in the world next to maybe Italy is.. well.. you know the word I would be reaching for!
The arguments about "blowing goodwill" are mostly overturned by the evidence that we actually have of high compliance in very restrictive regimes. "We can't impose China-style lockdowns" is immediately undermined by the Australian lockdowns that were both politically bold (in the face of domestic political resistance from federal politicians!) and extreme but very effective and enjoyed popular support.. in the home country of the owner of the leading anti-lockdown propagandist of the world! (Not to mention Italy & France imposing lockdowns for extended periods that were never approached in scale anywhere in the US and were not a problem.)
Both-sides-ism is silly. If at this point you can't concede that the "left" (if you accept that framing) was mostly right you are not paying attention to the results. In the "blue" jurisdictions that are struggling the issues arise from popular "business-friendly" Democrats undermining health advice. One side of the US political spectrum is wildly irresponsible and the other is not, don't pretend otherwise.
> "Metrics for reopening should have been clear from the start and based entirely upon hospital capacity"
I mean, sure, but that is a condemnation of your earlier positions as expressed then in real time, right?
This sort of ties into your assessment of the media, it doesn't really have anything to do with your opinions about the virus or appropriate responses.
If you think the situation in "Europe" right at this moment is the same as "the US" it seems like you might be misinformed. Finland and Norway are in a much different position than France and Belgium, who are in a different position than the Czech Republic. But all of them are in a better position than Iowa, South Dakota, and North Dakota. The idea that starting a 2nd or 3rd wave from a lower base is a bad idea seems kind of deranged.
I think you think of yourself as a realist but there is lots of evidence that you have underestimated what is possible as well as the capacity of human nature to do what's right. The information is out there, just look at it.
ETA: "- Mitigation would include targeted restrictions based upon age risk"
We've got mountains of evidence that letting the virus run in younger populations endangers older people, that just doesn't work.
I want to be very clear from the outset, I do not deny the risks of COVID. I've never done so, not in my comment history or in my own mind. It is very dangerous, and it needs to be treated as such. People who claim it is as dangerous as the flu are misinformed or deliberately trying to minimize the danger. My base position has always been that COVID-19 is dangerous, but danger exists in contexts not vacuums. Those are my strong beliefs which are strongly held. Now the rest of your points address my strong beliefs, weakly held. So, we will dive into those.
I didn't pretend that demographics is important. Demographics _is_ important. I didn't mean to say it was the _only_ factor. My main point was to demonstrate that nobody has convincingly rejected the null hypothesis in any of these response models. My point was that I can posit a reasonable theory that there is correlation between age demographics and COVID deaths/known cases. You (rightly) pointed out a country that has terrible demographics for my theory did fine. The key here is that _both can be true_. Everyone seems to be looking for a panacea when, thus far, one simply does not exist. The lockdown approach has contradictions as well, so if you profusely reject my demographic argument, you can't strongly hold on to lockdowns. We are talking about a disease, that while a relatively "normal" coronavirus, is still novel. And we are comparing responses across nations with wildly different cultures, densities, demographics, health care systems, travel levels, living situations and access to testing. My point is that maybe it was _just_ lockdowns that helped Vietnam. And may it wasn't just the lack of lockdowns that hurt the United States. We need to consider all explanations. And for the record, I do consider lockdowns a valuable tool at times!
Regarding the good will argument. Again you pointed at one location with one culture to imply that it would be widely supported elsewhere. While culturally Australia is probably closer to the United States than any other nation, there are still very key differences. The Australia lookdowns are really interesting for that reason though, that it is culturally similar to the United States. But, and I may be wrong, the lockdowns were limited to Victoria, and were not applied blanketly across their nation. This is not in contradiction to my beliefs. I have posted in the past about the idea that my state locked down _too soon_ before there was community spread. Essentially, we locked down when things were bad in New York. A lot of the opposition to lockdowns in the United States is the blanket approach in which they are applied. Counties with zero of few cases are locked down with the same vigor as metropolitan areas where cases are exploding. People rightly wonder why they can't go to work when the outbreak is across the state. I have always thought very targeted lockdowns would be a reasonable approach.
Furthermore, your points regarding Italy and France supporting lockdowns is rather interesting as well. First, both are far more collectivist than the United States in general. This isn't good or bad, it is a different culture that approaches problems in a different way. It just so happens that viewing the whole as or more important than the individual lends itself to restrictions in the benefit of the whole. The United States traditionally indexes on the individual above the whole (argument being that each individual adds to the whole, so the effect is the same). I am not here to argue individualism vs. collectivism but I will say that the issue is more complex than "Americans don't believe in science" (this may be a straw man, I don't think you've made that argument, but I tangented myself). The other point is that as lockdowns eased, cases rose. So what does that tell us? Two things...
First, it tells us that lockdowns do suppress spread (no shit). You keep people from interacting, and diseases spread through interaction are reduced. Abstinence is...
I am not familiar enough with the data of hospital availability in Iowa to make a determination.
A quick search seems to indicate that the authorities in Iowa are keeping exact data private. Whether to hide reality or avoid causing a panic, I can strongly say I am against keeping that data private.
And to be consistent, perhaps Des Moines should be locked down but Ottumwa not. But without the data I've not the slightest clue.
If I may, what is mad about my response? I declined to give an opinion due to a lack of data. I am not a decision maker in Iowa, or anywhere.
Whereas in the past I made more reckless proclamations about lockdowns and responses, I am trying to retrain my instincts for bluster and provide only what I have strong evidence or data to support.
Not for nothing, but new cases seem to have peaked in Iowa and are now trending downwards, so that is good news!
Exactly the proper metric is excess death. Comparing cases and "covid" death between countries who use different methodologies is bad. The EU publishes up to date data here: https://www.euromomo.eu/graphs-and-maps#excess-mortality
It’s not that simple either though. I’ve heard that many people are postponing operations and treatments for existing conditions because of lockdowns, or fear of getting COVID should they go in for treatment, thereby making their existing condition more fatal. Many in my own family have chosen to skip regular checkups during COVID. Strictly speaking, excess deaths here are not due directly to COVID, but due to our response to COVID. And maybe the trade off is worth it, but we can’t tell just by looking at the excess deaths under one type of response.
Comparing excess deaths between US and Sweden is maybe a bit more bulletproof. If — at the end of this — Sweden has fewer excess deaths than the US, then their response was in some measures more effective than ours. But there’s so much going on, we still won’t know for certain for quite a while.
But the death certificate covid deaths match up pretty closely to excess deaths. I'm sure there are a number of those excess deaths that are from postponing care, but surely you don't think that there have been that many excess suicides and untreated emergencies. Surely people are not suggesting that all of the coroners in the country are in cahoots on a conspiracy to inflate covid numbers.
>It’s not that simple either though. I’ve heard that many people are postponing operations and treatments for existing conditions because of lockdowns, or fear of getting COVID should they go in for treatment, thereby making their existing condition more fatal.
The problem with arguments like these, is for America at least, why does the number of people who have a fear of medical care trend so closely with number of cases?
It's fine to be skeptical, but there are so many layers of expertise here: statisticians, epidemiologists, medical personnel. This multilayered denial of expertise is, well, troubling.
You don't die from these co-morbidities suddenly in the 2 weeks you have covid - but for the covid.
This amounts to a baseless conspiracy theory against doctors that accurately understand and record the cause of death. Blunt trauma in a car accident is not being recorded as covid.
That's different from country to country. In Denmark hospitalizations are counted as covid hospitalizations for example, even if you arrive due to e.g. a broken leg, but you have covid.
Not sure about deaths though.
Of course they are counted as Covid hospitalizations, because they requires the same special care as all other Covid cases - you can't just put a Covid-infected patient in the regular orthopedics ward, you need to quarantine them and all the staff that comes into contact with them.
Also, I doubt the amount of people suffering from broken legs are really skewing those Covid numbers. Most people sick enough to require hospitalization while also infected with Covid will have much higher risks of Covid-related symptoms as well.
Certainly it makes sense when talking about hospital capacity - but it does give a bit of a skewed impression when you're looking at the hospitalizations re: cases.
You'd be surprised. Around 1/7th of the covid hospitalizations in Denmark[0] are hospitalized for "other reasons" - where covid is not the primary factor - I'd say that is significant.
""If you were in hospice and had already been given a few weeks to live, and then you also were found to have COVID, that would be counted as a COVID death. It means technically even if you died of a clear alternate cause, but you had COVID at the same time, it's still listed as a COVID death. So, everyone who's listed as a COVID death doesn't mean that that was the cause of the death, but they had COVID at the time of the death." Dr. Ezike outlined." -- Dr. Ngozi Ezike, Director of Illinois Department of Public Health
The point is that until it's well-defined, we don't actually know, so people will wiggle in doubt if they want to.
Poor definitions enable people to present the data differently depending on their biases and agendas. We should want to prevent that not by grounds of "you're crazy," but by making the definitions non-interpretable.
Does that come up a lot? How many people are currently in hospice in the state of Illinois with a few weeks to live?
There have been a lot of excess deaths in 2020. It seems reasonable to guess those people died of either COVID-19 or our response to COVID-19 (eg reluctance to seek medical treatment). None of these mortality statistics are perfect, but given the fairly short window of a mild COVID-19 infection, it seems pretty reasonable as a first approximation to assume that if they had it when they died, they died from it. There might be some cases where this is wrong (died of severe trauma during a car wreck in which they were a passenger rather than a driver) or questionable (the hospice case) but how much do those really affect the overall numbers?
Meh. The excess deaths are a lot more than 3%–5%. In a super quick search: "From Feb. 2 through July 25, Illinois had officially recorded 10,252 more deaths than typically would be expected" [1] => 59 per day. If 300 people died per day (your stat) and 5% of those were misattributed to COVID-19 because they were tested and happened to have a harmless COVID-19 infection (this is a silly upper bound), that's only 15 misattributed out of the 59, so at least 75% are correct. That's already good enough to use for setting policy IMHO. In reality, I doubt everyone who died was even tested, so I think more error lies in the other direction.
It's pretty hard for to decide how to interpret that, because it sounds like the guy is arguing that the statistics about Covid deaths are really bad and their way of registering a Covid death is completely stupid and therefore it is silly to think there is as bad a situation around the pandemic as you might otherwise suppose - on the other hand the guy who is telling me this is the "Director of Illinois Department of Public Health " and as such most likely responsible for the completely stupid way of registering the Covid deaths.
The average time people live in care homes for elderly with extra care needs ("särskilt boende") is between six and nine months[0]. That's where most of the deaths happened at least in the spring. So most of the people in those homes would be dead now anyway, and if they died from covid or from something else while they had covid is up for debate.
Edit: Maybe hospice is the best translation for särskilt boende.
According to one investigation [1] among people who died outside of hospitals 15% died directly from covid, 70% had other comorbidities, and 15% died from something else while they had covid.
So, your not arguing that people didn't die from Covid19, just that you think those people weren't expected to live for much longer? The implication being we shouldn't care so much because someone died only a year earlier?
It seems reasonable to create a statistical analysis based on years of expected life lost -- but that still doesn't mean people aren't dying from Covid19.
Aside, slightly tangential: Back in Feb/March BMJ had some controversy about UK government hiding excess Winter deaths in flu statistics. The implication being that the gov were taking more deaths over Winter and saying it was flu when in fact the deaths were more related to poverty (no heating, little food). Next thing we know people are saying Covid19 want a problem because it wasn't even as bad as flu (though at the time is was killing far more people as a proportion of those infected). Lies and statistics, and all that.
> So, your not arguing that people didn't die from Covid19, just that you think those people weren't expected to live for much longer? The implication being we shouldn't care so much because someone died only a year earlier?
I don't think this is what they're saying. I think the point is that those people's actual times of death weren't far enough from their expected times of death given their preexisting conditions to be able to confidently say that they died of Covid, rather than just having died with it. In other words, that there's a good chance they would have died at the exact same time even without Covid.
That's not how "cause of death" works. Doctors/Coroners don't just pick a cause randomly they look at how you died and actually investigate it if it can't be readily determined.
Presumably you think doctors have always been lying about cause of death? What do you think their motivation for that is?
I'm arguing that the comparison with AIDS that someone else made is an inaccurate one, since AIDS can shorten the life of someone that was healthy before they got it. Nobody in a hospice is healthy, and a large part of the ones that died with or by covid would have died within 30 days anyway.
If that were all there is to Covid, the excess mortality in Q2 should have been compensated by a reduction in Q3. While we do see such a reduction for Q3 in the numbers for Stockholm (which I cited in a sibling comment), it's too small to balance the tally.
It's not all there is to covid, but I think it's still worth observing. I mentioned in another comment that the total number of deaths in Sweden in 2020 up to November 1 is 3000 more than average the same period during 2015-2019. That's about half of the total number of official covid deaths.
In Stockholm County in Q2, there were approx. 2209 more deaths compared to the years 2015-2019. In Q3, there were approx. 310 fewer deaths compared to that timeframe. [1]
If I were a betting man, based on these numbers, I'd put my money on excess mortality once everything's been tallied, at least in that county.
They still died of CoVID-19. A lot of people have heart disease, or diabetes, or are overweight, or have any number of other conditions. If they get CoVID-19 and die, you can't just write that off because they were overweight.
It wasn't just diabetes or being overweight, the article mentions heart disease, lung disease, and dementia. Half of them were 88 years or older. They died either in their homes or in hospice.
If you look at the official statistics for the whole country right now, 26% of all dead where 90 years or older, and 41% 80-89 years old. Most of them weren't just a bit out of shape, they were already sick.
I mentioned heart disease. Heart disease is very common, and nowadays, a lot of people live productive lives despite it. If someone is managing their heart disease and living their life, and CoVID-19 comes along and kills them, that's still a tragedy.
And yet they're still at elevated risk of death if they get CoVID-19, which they probably will if a "herd immunity" strategy is followed. The frustrating thing is that many people will then downplay their death by saying they had a comorbidity.
Many many people die every day. If Covid is widespread, some are bound to have been infected with Covid.
Are you sure car accidents are not recorded as Covid, because I've read claims to the otherwise several times. It may not matter what the doctors think, if there are policies in place, or financial incentives (extra money for treatment of Covid patients).
"Man who died in motorcycle crash counted as COVID-19 death in Florida: Report." I recall one similar in the UK. Meanwhile, in that area ... "Nearly one in 10 'virus deaths' was from other causes" according to the Telegraph.
We have multiple standards for each country (if not smaller governmental units) and the standards have changed, the testing has changed, etc. Statisticians will be decades puzzling it all out.
It's really only excess mortality we can count on right now.
The case you cite was from July 2020 and has been fixed [1]:
> It does appear to the case, however, that a motorcyclist who was killed in a traffic accident also tested positive for COVID-19, and was initially listed among Florida’s COVID-19-related deaths. But officials from the Florida Department of Health said that person has since been removed from the count.
I can't read the paywall'd Telegraph article but I think this [2] is the same:
> The ONS looked at nearly 4,000 deaths during March in England and Wales where coronavirus was mentioned on the death certificate. In 91% of cases the individuals had other health problems. The most common was heart disease, followed by dementia and respiratory illness. On average, people dying also had roughly three other health conditions.
So basically -- people's other health problems cause them to be more severely affected by a respiratory disease that has also been shown to affect the heart and brain [3]. That seems like an intuitive result, and the study backs it up.
> It's really only excess mortality we can count on right now.
The excess mortality will certainly show the bigger impact in the long term, but to imply COVID-19 death numbers are being artificially inflated or so grossly inaccurate that they're useless is irrational.
It's a good thing that I didn't imply they were being artificially inflated, then.
Someone stated that vehicular accidents are not being reported as COVID-19; I found a counterpoint. And I do not doubt that it is one of many. That is all.
It's science. Questioning the easy numbers is what you're supposed to do. You tear and kick at something that is "known" until you get sick of it and move on to something else. Similarly, we have just oodles of confounding factors for our statistics here and we should be acutely aware of it at every step. This is not a thing that rests.
Let's make it clear: if your relative has some illness and is expected to live with that illness for years, but gets Covid and dies right now, do you consider that a Covid death? If not, why?
Also, if you get Covid and you end up with permanently damaged health, as it is documented time and again, would you keep your skepticism?
What will you say if somebody tells you that you anyway had some precondition, even if you weren't aware?
And are you aware how big percentage of the U.S. population has one or more risk factors?
Would a person with diabetes or asthma have _died_ from those conditions if they were not infected? I believe you are making an incredibly disingenuous argument here.
My argument is not disingenuous at all. Rather, I think you're being assumptive.
I'm not talking about the case where a person's prospects are that they'll live for quite some time. I'm talking about the case where somebody is already essentially on their death bed for cancer, for heart problems, for fatal car injuries or shootings, or even other viruses, who are going to die imminently anyway.
> I'm talking about the case where somebody is already essentially on their death bed for cancer,
Are you additionally claiming that this makes up some significant percentage of total covid deaths? Like, if 2% of the deaths due to covid are indeed people who were going to die anyway, but may or may not have died a week earlier due to covid, well
1. They may have died a week earlier due to covid. Whose place is it to judge that? (there are measures that try to take into account loss of livable years, but they agree that Covid is pretty terrible)
2. Who cares if the estimate is off by a few percent?
So concern about this overcounting is predicated on an assumption that some significant number of people are on death's door already, and that basically only those people are dying of covid.
Most covid-deaths are of people under 85 years old, and even an 85 year old has a life expectancy of 6 years though, so that seems unlikely.
40% of COVID-19 related deaths are from people in LTC facilities [1] where the median life expectancy is 21 months (average is 29 months).
Now that doesn't mean we should entirely downplay the risk here, but there are alternative solutions that can allow us to take care of the vast majority of people who are seriously at risk from COVID-19 without absolutely ruining the economy and harming the majority of people's way of life in a manner that may very well be irreparable for a decade, if not longer.
I think there's a few ways of looking at this, and none of them are particularly compelling for your broader point.
First, you're (I believe) misquoting the length-of-stay in non-hospice LTC facilities as life expectancy. There's a few reasons that's wrong and a significant underestimate. Most LTC patients leave and live a few years beyond the end of their stay in other facilities (hospice, or more intense care facilities). Additionally, some patients leave because they're healthy (I assume you go to a care facility because you have a broken hip, or something, but leave once you're healed). These patients have, as a group, significantly shorter stays, so the median stay length among terminal inhabitants is actually longer.
But let's assume you're correct. In fact let's go further and say that those people's lives are irrelevant, or unavoidable losses, because they were going to die soon anyway. In fact, let's assume the same for everyone over the age of 75 (who I presume make up the vast majority of the LTC deaths as well). They were close to death anyway, and Covid just got them there a little faster.
We're still left with more than 93000 deaths and counting. Deaths that can't be blamed on long term care facilities, or even age. Deaths in people who might have lived for 30+ more years in many cases.
Certainly nursing homes and the very elderly may deserve special and additional protections, but claiming that because old, frail, and colocated people are highly impacted that we could relax is a disservice to all of the not-old, not-frail, and not-colocated people who still may need protection.
And I think you're vastly exaggerating the impact, both on the economy, and on the way of life, that a well managed set of guidelines have. Mask mandates + closure of certain non-essential businesses + restrictions on others means that relatively few things shut down. Certainly some do, your mall and movie theater may have trouble, but grocery stores and restaraunts can and are surviving and adapting (and imo the changes to enable urban outdoor dining that are happening in SF, Chicago, and other cities aren't a change that should be repaired, they should be embraced).
all of the replies to this comment misunderstand the point. if you get hit by a bus and have covid, you are still counted as a "covid death" in the statistics, at least in my province, because there isnt a simple means to separate the two
You might be misunderstanding the point. Many people have chosen to promote the lie that the vast majority of COVID deaths can be dismissed using this reasoning, rather than a tiny, tiny, tiny fraction.
They ignore the overwhelming "excess deaths" number and pretend that unless a person had COVID and COVID alone listed, with no co-morbidity, it doesn't count, and therefore 99+% of COVID deaths aren't COVID at all.
This is, of course, not true, as the excess deaths numbers clearly demonstrate. If anything, we're under-counting COVID.
> Many people have chosen to promote the lie that the vast majority of COVID deaths can be dismissed using this reasoning, rather than a tiny, tiny, tiny fraction.
This is comically illustrated by the examples being used... Hit by a bus? Hospice patients with weeks to live?
The truth is that the typical comorbidities, that have a noticeable effect on the actual total number of deaths, are things like obesity, hyptertension, and diabetes... Things that literally will not kill an otherwise healthy adult in the same time period as COVID-19.
oh, well no that is certainly not the point i was making, actually ive never heard this narrative. maybe a cultural difference if this is being purpoted in the usa? nevertheless it doesn't change the point that accurate data > inaccurate data..
Do we not consider this a solved problem? The idea of dying of an illness is not a new one. I don't see why we need to reinvent the wheel. Presumably the folks who tabulate deaths already know how to do this; I don't see why we've suddenly decided to take a microscope to the stats.
You're looking at it the other way around: the stats are huge DESPITE the unprecedented lockdowns. If we didn't have lockdowns, the numbers would have been astronomical.
We know this because we have seen how things have unfolded in places like Northern Italy and Iran - the hospital system is quickly overwhelmed, and then people start dying by the dozens in each hospital, because they simply can't get any kind of care anymore.
They were hit very early, and the lockdowns came far later.
Famously, the Iranian health minister was on TV announcing that the country doesn't need to take special Covid19 measure while visibly sweating because of the fever caused by his Covid19 infection.
If you want positive proof that lockdowns work, the absolute best example is Vietnam: a tiny country of 100 million people which has experienced 1123 total infections so far, with 37 deaths.
But their original argument, that anyone with COVID gets marked as a COVID death and therefore you can't trust that statistics, feels pretty weak - there's no way that we're having a sudden surge in all those causes of death to lead to the excess mortality we're seeing. It's a big leap to assume there have been enough COVID adjacent bus accidents that we can use to in any way explain away COVID's effect on mortality.
Can you point me to a death certificate where someone was hit by a bus and had the ultimate cause of death be covid?
Are they even testing dead people for covid?
Or, are you saying someone was hit by a bus, gets/has covid and ultimately dies? If that's the case, I would assume the doctors know what they are doing and would list the ultimate cause of death properly, which covid may have aggravated. What if they would have survived their bus injuries if it was not for covid?
Regardless, this hair splitting doesn't matter because it's a very small portion of all cases that end up in an odd case like the above.
Isn't this exactly how all death statistics of all diseases and conditions work? People with other conditions are presumably more likely to die from some given condition. And, of course, every cause of death is really just causing the person to die earlier than they would have otherwise died.
At this point it's becoming pretty clear that the world will not see such a definition. It is in the interest of governments to exercise control over people by calling anything and anything a Covid "case" and a Covid "fatality." The numbers go up and down and up again at the convenience of government policymakers. LIBERATE MICHIGAN!
I think we can make our own decisions on that provided we can get US data on deaths in a simple csv file with age, gender, race, state and comorbidities.
Does anyone know where to find a dataset like this?
Literally any other explanation would suffice! For example, the lockdowns put stress on Americans, exacerbate depression and anxiety, worsen health conditions associated with sedentary lifestyles, and keep people out of healthful bars and restaurants where they could consume a more diverse diet and nourish their psychological need for social interaction.
It would. But than you have the official COVID deaths which match the excess deaths quite neatly. So why not just accept what numbers are clearly telling us?
You're missing the point. The point is that some of the excess deaths were caused by Covid, and the rest were caused by the lockdown, and the numbers are intentionally being skewed to make all of the lockdown deaths look like Covid deaths. This obviously leaves the total of excess deaths the same.
The Covid-19 paradox, "lockdowns were instituted in most places before recorded deaths got really high". I'd assume that those deaths couldn't have been lockdown deaths since, you know, no lockdown yet.
But after lockdowns were instituted, deaths levels became stable or decreased, despite your claim that the lockdown deaths were the actual cause of the catastrophe.
I haven't seen anyone here, and certainly not josephcbible, make absurdly absolute claims that Covid hasn't killed _anyone_. I'm sure Covid has been a factor in the deaths of many people.
Deaths, as reported, peaked in the spring. Epidemiologists have a name for an entirely mainstream explanation of what happened. They call it a "harvesting effect." I agree that the name is unsavory. It refers to a disease quickly culling the weak in a population.
The majority of the excess mortality has accumulated since spring, _after_ the country went into forced lockdown. There is no reason to default to the belief, as you seem to be doing, that Covid has continued killing masses and masses of people. Certainly not compared to the much more salient explanatory force of the massive, nationwide lockdowns.
These comments deserve snide condescension. They're utterly detached from reality, or even better, they're purely cynical ("I'm not going to die, so the hell with people that will die").
Your comment is not backed by anything, there are statistics for types of deaths and there is almost 0 (ZERO!) support for lockdowns causing this many deaths.
How do you think you're smarter than all the world's governments, combined? Are you a qualified scientist or just Random Joe on the internet? If you're the latter, you might want to re-think your viewpoint.
PPS: I'm not going to reply to these threads anymore, as people who are replying to them are either cynical or emotional or both. You just don't have the numbers to back up your claims.
Socializing is healthful to humans. Consuming alcohol is hurting.
Now if we'd go so far as to assume that people consume the same amount of alcohol at home, then staying home is a net negative for health. I don't actually know how alcohol consumption developed during lockdown, so I don't know whether there is any merit to that line of argument. But I see how it can be made.
> keep people out of healthful bars and restaurants where they could consume a more diverse diet
The portion sizes [0] and food served in bars and restaurants in the US are not healthy. Generally, home cooking is associated with consuming fewer calories and improve certain health outcomes [1].
> keep people out of healthful bars and restaurants
If it turns out that what people cook at home is even less healthy than food in restaurants, that is a horrible thing, and we should definitely start teaching cooking at schools, regardless of Covid.
I mean, restaurants have all the incentives to cook food that is tastier or cheaper at the expense of health. Simply using less sugar and salt at home, and adding some fresh vegetables to each meal, should already result in healthier diet even if you are a beginner at cooking. But yeah, I can imagine that many people are below the level of beginner.
It differs from country to country, so any concerns should take that into account. For instance, in Sweden the total number of people that have died from 1 januari to 1 november this year is around 3000 more than the average during the same period in 2015-2019, which is lower than the 6000 official covid deaths. So it seems unlikely that there are a large number of unreported covid deaths hiding as something else.
In the city i live in in Germany they do differentiate between "death by covid" and "ill with covid but other cause of death". Ask your city to do the same.
(FYI the total numbers so far are 25 deaths by Covid-19 and 14 deaths by other additional causes)
There are people who die from Covid and are not counted, there are people who die of something else and are counted as Covid deaths. And there are cases it is ambiguous, for example they may have recovered from Covid (negative PCR) but died later from complications.
You will never have precise statistics, however, excess mortality for all causes more or less matches Covid deaths, so the numbers are roughly correct.
Worth noting that there are indirect effects. For instance because of the overworked health system, some completely unrelated diseases may not be treated as well, causing extra deaths. On the other hand, lockdowns may lower the risk of accident, transmission of other diseases, and even the nasty effect of pollution.
But the general idea is that these deaths are real.
> excess mortality for all causes more or less matches Covid deaths, so the numbers are roughly correct.
This doesn't follow. It just means that the number of falsely-claimed Covid deaths is roughly equal to the number of deaths caused by the lockdowns, not that either of those numbers are small.
I’d like to see reporting on healthy years of life lost.
During the worst of the HIV epidemic, we saw people in their 30s dying left and right. Malaria kills mostly young children.
All lives are valuable and worth fighting for, but it does seem that these losses are fundamentally worse than COVID. If we would count healthy years of life lost, rather than raw number of deaths, I think that would be more apparent.
Because we have grown accustomed to the flu, it spreads much less, and it kills far fewer people. People can even get vaccinated, and we try to vaccinate as many as we can every year - not an option we have with Covid19.
A new disease with unpredictable long-term effects, that kills at least twice as many people as the flu despite unprecedented preventive measures is bound to cause more alarm.
Remember that regions hit early and unprepared were carting dead people by the truck load, most notably in Northern Italy. If we didn't have lockdowns and other measures, that would have continued and escalated all over the world - we would have probably easily had 10 million or more dead just this year if we had treated this just like a flu.
> it spreads much less, and it kills far fewer people.
Over what timeframe? Novel viruses come but once per century, flu kills consistently year after year after year, always mutating to escape eradication... and the flu deaths pile up to astronomical heights over the decades
CoVID-19 has already killed as many Americans as flu typically does in 10 years.
Only a relatively small percentage of Americans have gotten infected with SARS-CoV-2 yet. Without vaccination, in the space of a few years at most, CoVID-19 will kill as many people as flu does in many decades.
Ok, so Covid 19 killed 60% as many people in one year as the flu in 10, and this only after huge efforts have been made to slow it down. Without the lockdowns and masks, it would have easily topped flu deaths for the decade. Much worse, if the Healthcare system gets overrun.
Yeah only because it's a novel virus and there is little to no herd immunity. I'm sure flu killed even more its first year when it was novel (since we didn't know about how viruses spread). Once it is no longer novel it will be a seasonal virus likely that kills at similar rates to flu. The real question is, can we stop wearing masks once we've achieve herd immunity? Or is it worth wearing them cradle to grave to reduce seasonal deaths as well?
Herd immunity is something that happens when you have the majority of the population vaccinated. There's no such thing as natural herd immunity. Hopefully, the Covid19 vaccines will be able to destroy a broader variety of the SARS-CoV2 strains than the flu vaccines can.
Masks are something we will hopefully have learned to wear forever during the cold season, as they will have a measurable impact on deaths not just from seasonal Covid, but from seasonal flu as well. I believe that the majority of the population will internalize this simple hygienic practice from now on, which would be one silver lining for this pandemic. People in East Asia have learned this habit some time ago, and it has served them well.
I disagree. I just think the humans most severely vulnerable to the flu died off during the first few waves. Consider small pox. It was a novel virus for the Native Americans, who had no "natural herd immunity" and they got eviscerated by small pox. Colonists, despite not having vaccines, and despite still being able to get small pox, were not eviscerated since the virus wasn't able to spread and/or kill as well due to their natural immune systems.
What do you call this if not "natural herd immunity"? If you kill off all the weak and vulnerable, leaving only survivors and survivors' offspring who are virus-resistant... then you now have "natural herd immunity".
Herd immunity has a clear meaning: people who are individually vulnerable to a disease being protected from it by virtue of everyone around them being immune.
What you're describing is simply a disease running its course and killing everyone who is not naturally immune/resistant or not strong enough to survive despite being sick. There is no herd immunity aspect. At best you could call it natural selection.
Covid 19 is likely here to stay forever as a seasonal outbreak, like the flu. Viruses in general don't go away unless extraordinary measures are taken. They also tend to add up - the flu kills this many people each year, Covid19 will kill an extra this many people each year.
When I lost my grandparents in their late 80s, my family reflected mostly on what a long, happy life they had.
When I lost my sister-in-law due to an unknown brain tumor at 28, it was a catastrophic event from which her entirely family has never recovered.
To say that these deaths are equivalent doesn’t seem right to me, even though I agree we should do everything we can to preserve healthy lifespan for everyone, young and old.
You were probably lucky in that your grandparents died a peaceful and expected death.
When I lost my grandmother in her late 70s the day we were visiting for her birthday, to a sudden heart-attack, all my family could feel was the hollowness left behind by her absence, and thoughts of all the life events she would miss, things unsaid and so on.
Do we really do need to address what constitutes a proper Covid death?
We can accurately project case numbers to hospitalizations and then to deaths as a rough approximation. Who frankly cares if the exact number of COVID deaths are being recorded properly when much of the western world is running out of hospital capacity.
Really, who cares? Don't quibble over bullshit, move on to stuff that matters.
Wasn't there a period where there were actually a lot of hospitals closing, because they were too empty, because we had kicked everyone out anticipating a huge covid hospitalization wave that never came? What's the status on that, now?
What's the status with hospitals? That was the question. Are they closing? How many have already closed? Are they at full capacity? Are they projected to get to full capacity? Are people with nonessential surgeries still being pushed out? Who else, if any, is also still being pushed out? Etc. You answered a question that wasn't being asked.
The status with the hospitals is that the ICU's are filling up or full.
Nonessential surgeries were brought back in after the 1st wave didn't develop in the size and strength expected and are now getting pushed back or cancelled because this wave is overwhelming the system.
But you can just read the news and see that this is what is happening so I don't understand why you are asking it in the first place. (The risk of permanent hospital closures & bankruptcies in the USA was about losing revenue from certain type of procedures because of COVID risks, but that's a separate issue that has little to do with this.)
So again, why do you need to quibble over rounding errors in cause of death paperwork when the hospitals are filling up or full? Why? What's the point?
edit: it looks like a follow-up tweet contends that Sweden's back-filling of deaths is skewing their numbers down, though I am not really sure what to make of it.
edit2: Sweden seems to have a fewer COVID mortalities (per million population) than the USA, coming in just after France, which seems to further confuse the situation.
The tweet says the Swedish rate is more than 40% OF the US rate, which the blogger appeared to misinterpret as "more than 40% GREATER than the US rate"
The referenced tweet is not the main point, the main source is the Financial Times article talking about cases rather than deaths, so I think the main points raised by the post are still valid.
I find 91-divoc.com the best site for stats and graphs. It currently shows Sweden's 7-day mortality rate as .118 and rising while the US is at .34 and rising. Both are above the global average of .108. Both countries are below the threshold for the top 25 mortality rates which is ~.5
At the same press conference where they announced that the number of infections per day in Stockholm had been doubling every week for the past few weeks, they also announced that they would start to loosen the restrictions and start allowing visits to nursing homes again.
How did they expect that this was going to turn out?
Maybe they're just not worried about it anymore, much as we never worried at this level about the flu, common cold, or really anything else?
> How did they expect that this was going to turn out?
Maybe exactly like it is, and maybe it's not a real problem? There's no nuance in a graph that simply shows "infections" - there's no discussion of it being relative to the number of tests, no error bars for false positives/negatives, nothing to show how severe it is.
I can't believe that people are still parroting the "common flu, common cold" talking points from 6-8 months ago. Covid has a much higher mortality rate.
Only if you're high-risk. If you're not, its mortality rate is much lower than the flu. The problem that most people have with the lockdowns is that we know who's high-risk and who's not, but we lock everyone down anyway.
Do you have the numbers for the "not high risk" category? Also, what about the high risk people? Do we just throw them under the bus? Also, what about spreading a new virus to billions of hosts and praying for no mutations?
Fear or concern for the unknown can be a good thing, there just isn’t any studies saying conclusively that a large number of people are seriously affected.
What are the long-term effects of not being able to have a normal life due to restrictions ?
> Do you have the numbers for the "not high risk" category?
If I'm looking at https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/coronavirus-age-se... right, out of 15,230 coronavirus deaths in New York, 14,540 of them were people over 65 or confirmed to have underlying conditions, and only 92 of them were people under 65 and confirmed not to have underlying conditions. About 15% of their population is over 65. I'm not sure what the population base rate is for underlying conditions, though.
> Also, what about the high risk people? Do we just throw them under the bus?
No. We quarantine just them to keep them safe, and give them all free grocery delivery, etc. too.
> Also, what about spreading a new virus to billions of hosts and praying for no mutations?
I agree that's bad. I'm just saying that a lockdown that looks like it's going to last over a year is worse.
1. Based on your flu data, those deaths are for 11 million symptomatic flu cases, vs maybe 1 million Covid-19 cases in May. And that doesn't include asymptomatic flu cases (less often but still happen).
2. The numbers you're showing for Covid-19 deaths are just for NY. The flu ones were at US level.
We'll have to wait and see but I don't see why the flu would be deadlier than Covid-19, for any age group.
What if I have made the personal moral choice, after extreme introspection over months, to believe that the risk equation is better served by mostly trying to continue normal economic life, albeit modified for better hygiene, instead of huddling in my basement until the heat death of the universe?
Yes, some people are going to die. Yes, they could be people I know and love. It is what it is - I'll accept that risk before I accept the greater risk of watching a free society decay into totalitarian liberalism.
I'm a swede. From what I understand, they didn't want to have a general rule but local ones instead (which are now in place in certain locations instead). Basically, they thought that they had to loosen it up (and could do so without significant issues - they probably decided right before it went up again) since so many people hadn't been able to see their dearest in so long (a lot of these people are also in the very end of life, so time is even more valuable).
I honestly doubt it has anything to do with what's happening right now. I honestly think this is more a consequence of it going bad in Europe again (many other EU countries started to see a big increase before Sweden this time around).
Some of the reasoning seems to go "if there's enough viruses going around at large in society it will enter our nursing homes anyway", so maybe it actually doesn't really matter that much? I guess nobody really knows. Lots of guessing going around these days...
> they probably decided right before it went up again
They literally announced this in the same press conference where they mentioned that there had been an exponentially growing rate of infection in Stockholm for the past few weeks. If it had already been decided but not yet announced or implemented, that would have been a good time to change the decision.
Anyway, you could argue that they would have failed no matter what so there was no point in trying - but Taiwan, Korea and China have shown that it's actually possible to get things under control if you try.
During late summer a widespread hope bordering on complacency occurred among the Swedish health officials as the number of cases and deaths receded: there was a chance that the (non-mentionable) herd immunity strategy was going to pay off. Various mathematical models were proposed to show that only a fraction of the normal > 60-70% immunity should be enough to suppress the virus. No second wave was probable. That hope spilled over into conviction among various sectors that demanded restrictions be lifted. The need to be right was greater than attention to the numbers coming in.
What is happening right now is that the number of deaths are rising rapidly, the number of people in intensive care have exploded over the last two weeks [0], which means the number of deaths will also explode over the next few weeks.
The Swedish experiment that chose not to aggressively push back the virus but instead to let it wash through the community while protecting the elderly is starting to look like a failure, and the people responsible are starting to look markedly stressed. The economy is healthy though, comparatively (and for the time being).
Daily case are meaningless when vast majority are asymptotic or only have mild symptom. How many that are actually require hospitalization ? How many death (death as in due to covid not with covid) ? Then there is false positive from the test.
The numbers of hospitalizations and deaths unfortunately are quite proportional to the number of positive tests. Depending on the testing regime the exact factor varies a bit, but unfortunately, not very much. By now we really have enough international data to show that.
And the positive tests are leading hospitalisation and deaths by a couple of weeks. So they are a good indicator about what to expect. And obviously, during an epedemic, raising infection numbers mean even higher numbers following until something reduces further infections.
What the graphs would need is normalization to the amount of testing being done. Such graphs would then have hospitalizations and deaths proportional to the number of positive tests.
Perhaps I was a bit short, but the numbers of the badly affected are proportional to the number of positive tests. The proportionality factor does indeed change over time, but very slowly. Unfortunately, we have a plentiful of data internationally, as many countries handled the epedimic differently. But the fundamental data looks very similar between countries.
In Germany, there is about a factor of 4 between positive/death in April and in November. The number of people in intense care has reached April levels. But on shorter time scales the variation is much smaller. And if the number of positive tests doubles within a week and nothing fundmental had happened in testing, then this is extremely relevant. Especially if the trend follows an exponential curve closely.
Going by the above graphs, looking at the day of 4/15/2020, we had 604 people tested positive and 115 who died, with a ratio of 5 positive per death.
If we look at peak for positive tested, we got 11/5/202 with 4744 people tested positive and 12 people who died, with a ratio of 395 positive per death.
If we are going to get a factor of 4 positive per death we would need to see a spike of 1186 deaths within the next month or so for a single day. While anything is possible in this pandemic, I am not that certain of it.
> The number of people in intense care has reached April levels.
Per the graph, we are not there. April had as it peak 49 new person in a single day. November has its current peak at 20. It could get above 49, but again, time will show if that is the case. It is more alarming than the death graph, but less so than the positive graph.
Interpretation of data is naturally up for debate but personally I am bit of a middle line person. I don't think we will see over 1k deaths per day any time soon, but we are going to see an quick increase in the near time. A lot will depend if the government decided again to lock up the elderly, something which worked but was quite controversial last time.
> How many death (death as in due to covid not with covid) ?
Approximately 1.1 Million people in the entire world, approximately 3 times as many as malaria deaths, closing in on as many as TB deaths, and about twice as many as influenza or AIDS.
All the numbers you've ever heard for deaths from any disease have the same artifacts as the Covid-19 deaths, if not much worse (e.g. numbers for the flu are normally only estimates based on number of hospital cases and symptoms).
that number is 1.1 million number is including death with covid not just due to covid.
so using your number its around 0.01% of the world population. I'm not saying its not worth to do something about it but if your answer of 'to do something about it' is by lockdown then I can't support it.
> including death with covid not just due to covid
That's true for any of the other diseases you care to look at, so it's irrelevant when comparing diseases.
> I'm not saying its not worth to do something about it but if your answer of 'to do something about it' is by lockdown then I can't support it.
If we had had proper early lockdowns, we wouldn't even have known how bad this disease is (just look at Vietnam, with 100 million people in a tiny country and a grand total of 37 deaths so far this year). Since no other measures are shown to work, especially with all of the cretins not wearing masks, I'm not sure how else we could prevent this number from doubling or tripling, as hospitals get overwhelmed and fatigued.
You should look at how the lockdowns worked in Vietnam.
They essentially had a very strict lockdown for 3 weeks in March I think, and then they have only had targeted quarantines. The vast majority of the country is working normally, much more so than anywhere in Europe or the Americas.
Similar measures could have been taken everywhere else, and we would have been long over this, and with minimal deaths. Instead, we are where we are. We still have the option of doing a 3 week heavy lockdown that could probably reset the clock on the virus, with direct government payments for every person affected to reduce the economic hardship. There is no better known solution to this problem, until the vaccine proves to be efficient.
Look at Sweeden, they didn't lockdown, life pretty much normal over there. Sure the number of case is "high" but vast of the majority of covid case are asymptomatic or only have mild symptoms.
Taiwan also don't have lockdown.
Peru on the other hand had early and strict lockdown and now they have high death and still in lockdown.
The better solution for the usa is to open up right now.
Sweden is doing worse economically than any other Nordic country, which all had bigger lockdowns. The only reason they're not also doing very bad in terms of deaths is that people have chosen to isolate, but this is exactly why they're doing bad economically.
Taiwan was one of the first countries to react to Covid, so they stopped it extremely early from getting into the country to any great extent. They also have extremely high mask usage, even having to ration ration them because of the rate at which they were getting bought. They even had public outcry when an official said mask use was NOT necessary in certain areas - the exact opposite of mask use in the US and Europe.
In Peru, it seems by the descriptions I see on Wikipedia that the lockdowns weren't very well policed, and they were also not that strict - most of the early lockdowns seem to be of the 'no going out at night' kind, which has dubious effectiveness. I also see little talk of contact tracing in the area.
The USA is by far the worse hit country in the world. How you can even think about opening up, given the hundreds of thousands of people it would likely kill over the next 3 months, is beyond me.
>Sweden is doing worse economically than any other Nordic country, which all had bigger lockdowns
Yes worse than before pandemic thats because other doing countries lockdown but life pretty much still normal there. Business open as usual, kids go to school in person as usual, bar open as usual. I would happily choose to live there if I can choose.
USA is not bad at all, number of case is high but most of it are asymptomatic or only have mild symptom. What bad is the government reaction in some state that put so many covid related restriction. how are u thinking of locking people is beyond me, it makes people suffer, its harmful.
Death from car accident can be reduced by banning car altogether but we did didn't ban car because banning is more harmful.
> USA is not bad at all, number of case is high but most of it are asymptomatic or only have mild symptom. What bad is the government reaction in some state that put so many covid related restriction. how are u thinking of locking people is beyond me, it makes people suffer, its harmful.
The USA has the highest number of deaths from Covid of any country on Earth, by far. One of the worse numbers per capita as well. To put it in perspective, in 2018 435,000 people died of Malaria around the world; the US alone has lost 225,000 people to Covid - more than half of that.
Also, you have to understand that the restrictions are the only things that have kept the numbers so small. Everything we've seen from regions that didn't take measures to curb the spread shows that numbers could easily be 2-5 times the current numbers. How you can look at those numbers and think "yeah, but wearing a mask is, like, annoying" is beyond reason.
And please remember that cars have a huge upside, and that they are heavily regulated exactly to reduce the number of deaths. You need to pass an exam just to get in the driver's seat of a car. You have to pass all sorts of expensive tests to even put a car you built on the road. You're not allowed to drink before driving. You have to wear an uncomfortable harness the whole time you're inside a car etc. - there are many restrictions that we accept to make driving safer.
Similarly for Covid, there were all sorts of annoying restrictions to keep people at least somewhat safe. The equivalent of banning all cars would have been that everyone except doctors, emergency personnel and the military can't leave their house for 2-3 weeks, and the pandemic would have been over. But just like we can't ban cars altogether, it's not realistic to do that, so we had to accept lesser measures that offer lesser protection.
But from there to "any kind of lockdown is, like, really bad" you have quite some way to go.
>The USA has the highest number of deaths from Covid of any country on Earth, by far
The number include people who die with covid not just due to covid. So its inflated.
> How you can look at those numbers and think "yeah, but wearing a mask is, like, annoying" is beyond reason.
Not just mask but also the business capacity restriction, business not allowed to open, kids not going to school in person, unemployment, bankruptcy, delayed treatment for other diseases, some suicides, some domestic violence, some horrible mental health impacts, some livelihoods destroyed, some people dying alone, some relationships ending, some relationships never starting, etc
All those for the risk of covid ? Yeah very very not worth it.
>there are many restrictions that we accept to make driving safer
Right, but even then still many people die, and that number can be reduced by banning car altogether but the damage is not worth it.
Similarly for covid, there are huge downside due to lockdown. The risk due to lockdown compared to the risk of covid ? very very not worth it.
Both option is sucks but the point it to choose the less sucks among it.
If for you, you think the risk is worth it and you want to isolate yourself then its fine I won't force you but the issue is if you trying to force other people to isolate too.
If I can choose I would gladly choose to live in the country like Sweeden, where life pretty much normal and hardly any masks or any other country without any restriction right now.
> The number include people who die with covid not just due to covid. So its inflated.
There is no significant difference between people dying WITH a systemic disease and people dying OF a systemic disease. And there is no over-reporting in the USA compared to most other countries, so the comparison still makes sense. And even if HALF the reported numbers were wrong (the reality is probably closer to 0.01% or something), it would still be a viral disease much worse than any other active in the wealthy world today.
> Similarly for covid, there are huge downside due to lockdown. The risk due to lockdown compared to the risk of covid ? very very not worth it.
You are acting as if the mild restrictions in place today are as extreme as banning cars. I've already pointed out that the extreme response would be state-wide, military enforced, house arrest for everyone except emergency personnel - that would be the 0 deaths alternative.
Instead, in all places that actually care about public health, we have mild restrictions to control the spread of the virus. This includes Sweden by the way, which has a lockdown more or less as much as everywhere else, except it is more self-imposed since their constitution doesn't allow for a legally-enforced one.
> If for you, you think the risk is worth it and you want to isolate yourself then its fine I won't force you but the issue is if you trying to force other people to isolate too.
It's not about what I think. We have people specialized in assessing these risks, and they have ALL said, everywhere in the world, that we must wear masks and isolate. The risks from isolation, which are also understood and absolutely exist, DO NOT outweigh the risks of the disease. And this is not me saying it, it is doctors and policy makers everywhere in the world.
Do you think the UK WANTS to close its economy? Or France or Germany or Norway? Do you think they WANT to keep their schools closed?
Or is it much more believable that they have looked at the risks, they have looked at hospital capacity, and have understood, unlike you, that Covid19 is much worse than the hardships caused by lockdowns?
And while there are some valid concerns about the impact of lockdowns on all sorts of problems, there is absolutely no excuse for not wearing a mask. Not doing is simply irresponsible and unhygienic, and must be strongly punished by legal and social means.
>And even if HALF the reported numbers were wrong (the reality is probably closer to 0.01% or something), it would still be a viral disease much worse than any other active in the wealthy world today.
It is bad but in the grand scheme of thing its not bad, at least compared to the downside of lockdown.
>You are acting as if the mild restrictions in place today are as extreme as banning cars.
Its an analogy, my point is about choosing the less bad option among non ideal option. you can't compare it exactly, maybe not as extreme as banning cars, but I'm comparing :
A. risk of lockdown
B. risk of covid
A < B
> they have ALL said, everywhere in the world, that we must wear masks and isolate
>Do you think the UK WANTS to close its economy? Or France or Germany or Norway? Do you think they WANT to keep their schools closed?
Then Don't
>Or is it much more believable that they have looked at the risks, they have looked at hospital capacity, and have understood, unlike you, that Covid19 is much worse than the hardships caused by lockdowns?
I can't know exactly what is their motivation is or simply failures of policy making. If they really looked at the risk then they wouldn't do lockdown.
from the final paragraph "The evidence base into the effectiveness and harms of these interventions is generally weak. However, the urgency of the situation is such that we cannot wait for better quality evidence before making decisions"
So basically: They don't have any idea but lets just give it a go.
You've found a fringe group sponsored by an American right-wing think tank, the kind who would sell their grandma for parts if they thought it would increase profits. The letter proposes a ludicrous plan, that all serious epidemiologists [who are not sold out] oppose:
> The World Health Organization and numerous academic and public-health bodies have stated that the proposed strategy is dangerous, unethical, and lacks a sound scientific basis. They say that it would be impossible to shield all those who are medically vulnerable, leading to a large number of avoidable deaths among both older people and younger people with underlying health conditions, and they warn that the long-term effects of COVID-19 are still not fully understood. Moreover, they say that the herd immunity component of the proposed strategy is undermined by the limited duration of post-infection immunity. The more likely outcome, they say, would be recurrent epidemics, as was the case with numerous infectious diseases before the advent of vaccination. The American Public Health Association and 13 other public-health groups in the United States warned in a joint open letter that the Great Barrington Declaration "is not a strategy, it is a political statement. It ignores sound public health expertise. It preys on a frustrated populace. Instead of selling false hope that will predictably backfire, we must focus on how to manage this pandemic in a safe, responsible, and equitable way."
You also bizarrely claim:
> I can't know exactly what is their motivation is or simply failures of policy making. If they really looked at the risk then they wouldn't do lockdown.
When in fact, again, all public health experts agree that lockdowns, masks and social distancing are crucial to avoid an even larger tragedy than today.
> So basically: They don't have any idea but lets just give it a go.
No, they recognize the limits of current knowledge and propose ways to improve it and make sure the decisions are also measured and held to account. But there is no option to just wait - they've actually tried that initially, with disastrous consequences (it's one of the reasons why the UK is one of the worse hit countries). The rest of the document does detail exactly the current knowledge and risk estimates and effectiveness estimates that they've based their decision on.
Perhaps the key phrase is actually here:
> Population vs individual-level impactsSome of the interventions here can have a significant impact on the individuals who are affected, but a relatively minor effect at the population level as they are comparativelyrare. Whilst we have tried to maintain a population-level approach (e.g. evidenced through our use of the population indicatorR) the weaker, anecdotal or theoretical arguments on the evidence for harms is often at the individual-level. Adding up these individual potential harms is more difficult. The model provided by ONS does attempt to do this, though as with all models there are limitations to its scope and accuracy.
Please stop advocating against measures that save hundreds of thousands of lives. Neither you nor I are epidemiological or public health experts, so let's stop pretending we know better than the experts. As citizens of democratic countries, our place is NOT to question experts recommendations and risk estimates - it is only to decide whether we care more about saving human lives or economic health, and I think in most countries, for the majority of people, the answer is clear.
>You've found a fringe group sponsored by an American right-wing think tank
So you just dismiss many of epidemiological or public health experts and accused them selling out.
>When in fact, again, all public health experts agree that lockdowns, masks and social distancing are crucial to avoid an even larger tragedy than today.
Not all public health experts agree, as I just show you the site. Currently it has signature from 11976 medical and public health scientist, 34570 medical practitioners.
> Population vs individual-level impactsSome of the interventions here can have a significant impact on the individuals who are affected, but a relatively minor effect at the population level as they are comparativelyrare. Whilst we have tried to maintain a population-level approach (e.g. evidenced through our use of the population indicatorR) the weaker, anecdotal or theoretical arguments on the evidence for harms is often at the individual-level. Adding up these individual potential harms is more difficult. The model provided by ONS does attempt to do this, though as with all models there are limitations to its scope and accuracy.
They says it difficult to measure harm, and they didn't even attempt to do so. They says Weaker evidence for harms as it's on the individual level. This paragraph pretty much sums up the dismal science of infectious disease epidemiology. It is massively focused only on a few metrics, puts them all into unchallengeable, un-falsifiable models and then dismisses negative impacts as not being "population level". So basically, Sure the restrictions we advised resulted in SOME suicides, SOME domestic violence, SOME horrible mental health impacts, SOME livelihoods destroyed, SOME people dying alone, SOME relationships ending, SOME relationships never starting, SOME educations missed, SOME rights violated, SOME protests quashed etc etc. But none of these issues in isolation was ever as significantly significant as our modelled, unfalsifiable, and tightly qualified impact of ALL of these restrictions on R.
Please stop advocating against measures that harm hundreds of thousands of live. Many epidemiological or public health experts oppose the lockdown policy.
>As citizens of democratic countries, our place is NOT to question experts recommendations and risk estimates
So you only agree the experts that fit your view.
Yes, I care more about saving human lives thats why I oppose this lockdown policy. You can't just dismiss economic health. Its closely connected to human lives.
> So you just dismiss many of epidemiological or public health experts and accused them selling out.
Yes, there is no reason to listen to propaganda funded by obviously biased sources, when unbiased sources like the WHO and all major national health agencies say otherwise.
> So you only agree the experts that fit your view.
I agree with unbiased experts, not experts who participate in privately funded propaganda. Show me a national health agency which opposes lockdowns and I'll listen (though there are many more that do).
The only one I know of is Sweden's, and there (1) a lockdown would be unconstitutional anyway, and (2) people have voluntarily locked down just as much if not more than in surrounding countries.
This is an important aspect you're completely missing: the majority of the population understands the huge risks posed by this virus, and will lockdown anyway. The majority of people don't want to go to work in crowded places, they don't want to go to restaurants, they don't want to spread disease among their employees.
Most multinational companies were in fact ahead of government lockdowns, as they also did simple math: lost productivity from employees working from home or in shifts < lost productivity from employees sick or dead or permanently impaired from a disease, at least for employees who are not easily replaceable. So most if not all big companies started observing a lockdown as much as they could in February, regardless of any local regulations.
If you think that is biased then yes it is biased towards the goal of achieving the best less harm outcome.
>the majority of the population understands the huge risks posed by this virus, and will lockdown anyway. The majority of people don't want to go to work in crowded places, they don't want to go to restaurants, they don't want to spread disease among their employees.
If that the case then you don't need lockdown measure. If you need lockdown measure then its shows that majority of people don't want lockdown.
>Most multinational companies were in fact ahead of government lockdowns,
Like I said if you want to lockdown yourself I'm fine with it, similarly if private company want implement lockdown measure themselves its fine, the issue is you are forcing other people to lockdown.
> If you think that is biased then yes it is biased towards the goal of achieving the best less harm outcome.
No, it is biased towards moneyed interests, who want the low level workforce to work, human life be damned. It is obvious that a right-wing institute that also advocates against climate change can't be trusted to produce objective data, especially not in a propaganda lettet. If you want an unbiased opinion you need to look at the WHO, NHS, and similar institutions, which are all in agreement on the actual science and policy recommendations. Opinion pieces like that letter are simple propaganda.
And while the majority of the population will lockdown anyway, especially if they are presented with the actual data, not propaganda about how the disease is not that bad, there are enough fringe groups who refuse that a law and explicit enforcement are necessary.
The goal is to achieve best outcome that have the less harm. Lockdown cause harm that is more than the covid itself. It is because the human life is important that lockdown shouldn't be taken.
The lockdown cause harm is based on science and data.
The data shows that the disease is not that bad compared to lockdown.
If you want lock yourself up then I won't prevent you. Majority of population will oppose to lockdown if they presented with actual data, not fear mongering.
The only data that shows lockdowns being worse than the disease is from a clearly biased source.
The data from non-biased sources is diametrically opposed: the disease is, to the best of our knowledge, much worse than the effects of the lockdown. You have to look at data from the real experts: WHO, NHS, NIH etc (NOT right-wing or left-wing think-tanks, actual public health orgs).
With the unprecedented lockdowns and other mobilization measures, this disease has killed more people worldwide than the flu (~2x as many), malaria (~3x as many), AIDS (~2x as many), and may surpass deaths from TB by the end of the year, with an IFR hovering around 1%. In regions that didn't observe lockdowns (e.g. Italy in the early days, Iran in the early days) the death toll rose to around 5% of the confirmed infected population, because hospitals were completely overwhelmed and simply couldn't treat patients anymore. Even if a good portion of these deaths are not directly caused by the disease, it is still much worse than any other viral disease currently active in the world, and much worse than most infectious diseases, with few exceptions.
Yes its bias becuase it actually trying to measure the harm on lockdown and comparing the harm. It bias towards trying to achieve the better outcome.
Not all experts even try to measure the lockdown harm.
A good portion of the covid death number being reported is not caused by covid itself so you see the inflated number. The death toll maybe 'high' but it worse compared to the harm of lockdown.
We don't normally count each infection for AIDS or malaria - the numbers are often statistical estimates, not absolute counts as we get for Covid19. Even for just this reason alone, it's absurd to then come back and claim they are somehow less accurate than the AIDS or malaria numbers.
Also, if you want to look for the died of/died with difference in AIDS or malaria, Malaria and HIV are huge epidemics in similar areas, so there is a good chance that many people die of malaria and AIDS at the same time - did the malaria kill them, or the AIDS? Most of the people dying of malaria also have problems with malnutrition - does that invalidate the fact that malaria killed them? HIV is often correlated with drug use - I think it's more than likely that a few people counted as AIDS deaths were also overdosing on something. You can find all sorts of correlations.
While this is clearly a second wave, "New cases" are kind of meaningless as it is very much tied to the amount of testing performed.
Here are the stats for number of deaths and also patients in ICU which gives a different picture. Still alarming but not as crazy as this "New cases"-graph might make you believe.
(two links to the same image on separate image hosting services)
New cases are not meaningless. They might just not be 1:1 comparable in numeric values to the numbers a couple of months before. But if you are an an exponential raise, even pretty large factors are caught up with literally within a couple of days.
You are correct. That's why I went with "kind of meaningless". Maybe a bit too harsh by me. What I really meant was "not as meaningful as people make it out to be." (or "seem to want it to be").
The post kind of goes from straight talk about deaths to "and here are stats" which are not at all showing deaths. Comes off a little dishonest to me.
And the stat on deaths being "40% above the U.S. equivalent" just seem plain wrong. See the comments on the post for that.
Both Sweden and New York have seen an upward trend of infections, but without a big increase in deaths as you have in the Czech Republic.
Here is the data for New York:
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/usa/new-york/
Deaths are a lagging indicator, in part because it takes a while to die - Herman Cain didn't die for a month - and in part because it takes a while to report them after death. (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/index.htm: "Death counts are delayed and may differ from other published sources...")
Indeed, and large-scale testing was just getting started during the first peak. IIRC the bump around June in the "new cases" data corresponds to a scale-up of testing capacity.
What do people think of Marginal Revolution? I get quite a lot of value from the link roundups, but find that the original content (the non-roundup posts) are about praising their ability to make predictions and their own opinion pieces (“recommended throughout”), brushing away criticism, regurgitating opinions of other experts on things they have no clue about, taking low-brow jabs at “the left“, etc.
Case in point: MR authors spent the last months arguing for the herd immunity approach, and bringing up Sweden once a week, and now apparently they were just waiting for data.
I just don’t get why they get so much readership and are seen to be similar to Slate Star Codex, Gwern, etc. (which have their own shortcomings, but are on a different level in terms of their reasoning ability).
I certainly agree with you. Part of the core MR game is to flirt with right wing talking points but keep on playing both sides to get attention. This is really unfortunate and distracting when it comes to something like covid that is already so politicized. Their actual analysis of the pandemic has been hopelessly naive and lacking in rigor. If there's one good contribution they've made, it's been pointing out the ways in which certain regulations have hindered the response without adding value. Otherwise, it's only good for the links.
I agree. It feels like a case of someone who've had too much recognition or respect (deserved or not), and now believe they are without fault despite a clear regression in reasoning ability...
Marginal Revolution is a lot more mainstream than Gwern or Slate Star Codex. Tyler Cowen is one of the most influential economists today. His Bloomberg column might have more reach than the MR blog though. So the topics are really different - MR will discuss many issues that are central to the current “national conversation”, with more of a broad-based style of reasoning, whereas Gwern and SSC will go much more into detail on a small set of topics, with more of a “rationalist” style of reasoning. I wouldn’t say they are “seen to be similar”.
Personally, I rate MR quite highly. I just think the reasoning is better-argued and the topics are more often something I’m interested in, compared to basically any other blog. Gwern and SSC are great too though.
The guy behind Marginal Revolution is undeniably a very smart dude and writes a lot of good stuff for various outlets. MR however is often used more as a dumping ground for half thought out ideas floating around in his head and often lacks the rigor and review that his other writing gets. Much of the stuff there is like the first draft for ideas that will either get discarded or turned into a more thoughtful, nuanced and researched piece down the road.
But as I said, he's a smart guy, and on the whole tends to get things more or less right.
It has been pretty interesting (that's a euphemism) to see people say over and over again that Sweden has got it figured out. But countries' fortunes have shifted back and forth over time, those who seemed to be doing worse than everyone reversed course, and vice versa. There are exceptions, Vietnam appears to be one.
My thought on Sweden was not so much "wait until the fall", but to note that even though they didn't shut down, the economic impact was broadly similar to that of neighboring counties who did.
So from my view this all seems very "pick your poison". I suspect the correlations we keep implying between shutdowns and the economy may actually have more to do with the fact of the pandemic itself. I don't care if the movie theaters are shut down or not, I'm not going to one.
Also, Sverige still does not recommend people wear face masks. It recommends people not go to gyms, but does not force the gyms to close. It would be comical if so many people were not suffering. (I am an American living in Stockholm.)
My daughter is working in Sweden as an aupair. She is pretty certain that she has covid (no sense of taste or smell to start with), but they are so backed up that she can't get tested until sometime next week.
It is true they are swamped, but I ordered a test Monday morning, had it delivered Tuesday morning, picked up again (after my doing the test) an hour later, and then I had the results Wednesday afternoon. This is in Stockholm. Where is she? Not all regions are equally organized.
Yeah if she feels symptoms she should probably use the app "Alltid Öppet" to book a test. She probably needs a personal number for this (which I assume she has if she's working as an aupair). I can try to help out if she needs it. My email is twn at thomasnyberg dot com.
Welcome to the pandemlympics, where every country is comparable down to the day and everyone is a combined epidemiologist and statistician.
Yes Sweden has a second wave, although still in an earlier stage than most other places. Hopefully it can be turned around before ICU numbers start rising again. New recommendations went in place two weeks ago and personally I see less people around, and the mobility data is trending down. [0]
Restrictions on serving alcohol in pubs and clubs will start from the 20th, limiting service to before 22:00. I feel that is mostly for show though, since if it truly had a point it would start today and not after people spent one last weekend partying.
The spread is mostly in the age group 20-29 currently, so that is a plus. Although trickles of spread in hospice are coming back, which is worrying. They started to allow some visitors a month or so back because the mental health of elderly were deteriorating quite rapidly due to the forced isolation for their own safety.
We can see from the Swedish public health authority page that new ICU admittances have leveled off. Hopefully. [1] "Nya intensivvårdade fall per dag" (New ICU cases per day)
For those proposing no actions and using Sweden as their argument:
Sweden did things. Not French style military police on the streets with fines though. Here's the mobility data. [0]
For those proposing sweeping lock-downs and using Sweden as their argument:
Sweden did lockdown less than many other places, that is true. The constitution does not allow for restrictions in freedom of movement unless in war so recommendations were used. Here's the mobility data. [0]
Even more fascinating, the way I understand it, the mobility data shows that Sweden was able (and also had to) to keep less mobility for months after the neighboring countries returned to their pre-epidemics levels.
I believe Swedes were doing that right, as the neighboring countries for months had much, much less deaths per million.
I've also added the U.S. to compare. As it can be seen, until some point in Summer, Sweden was obviously worse than the U.S. But the U.S. persevered, and having much more people, it also shows how strong the spreading was there.
And also to put everything in even broader perspective, measuring in daily deaths per million, there are much worse countries in Europe at this very moment, showing how bad it can be in densely populated regions:
I really do think Case Count is the wrong metric. The data overwhelmingly shows that the risks aren't shared by everyone equally.
What I'd like to see is those that are in a vulnerable class their contraction and test rate. I think this would encourage those who are at-risk to stay home or any sort of contact outdoors.
Many people discussing the Swedish approach described it as an experiment. The data here makes it here the experiment failed. This is the inherent problem approaches involving "best guesses" - these might well not be right. The alternative to "best guess" is "most conservative guess". In the case, the most conservative approach is doing everything you can to stop infection. This also may not be the best but it limits the downside.
It’s more complicated than that, there are other downsides to public health and economic well being to consider. We could completely eradicate the virus by welding people into their homes, the question is how to trade off cost and benefit.
230 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 266 ms ] threadI've heard this argument before but it's never made sense to me. If you have AIDS, it's not the AIDS that kills you, it's the fact that AIDS weakened your immune system to the point that something else can kill you. But to say that AIDS wasn't paramount to killing the victim is just wrong. Seems to me like COVID is a similar situation...
Edit, source: https://www.folkhalsomyndigheten.se/smittskydd-beredskap/utb...
In the link "Ingång för Chrome, Edge, Safari, Firefox m.fl." it says:
> Statistiken visar antalet personer med bekräftad covid-19 som avlidit, oavsett dödsorsak.
Translated:
> The stats shows the number of deaths with confirmed Covid-19, regardless of cause of death.
At https://www.socialstyrelsen.se/statistik-och-data/statistik/... they do calculate the difference:
> Av dessa har 90 procent (5 514 av 6 128) laboratoriebekräftad covid-19 enligt Folkhälsomyndighetens databas över smittade.
90% are due to Covid 19. 10% not.
Edit: I misunderstood, tsimionescu has corrected me, thanks!
> "Of these, 90 percent (5,514 out of 6,128) have laboratory-confirmed covid-19 according to the Swedish Public Health Agency's database of infected people."
That is 90% of:
> The statistics show the deceased where the underlying cause of death was covid-19, according to the cause of death certificates received by the National Board of Health and Welfare.
So in 10% of cases, the doctors were sure enough that the cause of death was Covid19 to write a legal document certifying it, even though they didn't order laboratory work to confirm with 100% certainty. This could mean many things, from medical malpractice (doctor lied on a legal document) to simple common sense (patient is husband of person with confirmed case, died of clear Covid19 symptoms).
But there is no way to read that 10% number as meaning what you claimed. In fact, if a person were hit by a car, confirmed Covid19 positive, died of their wounds on their way to hospital, and got a death certificate claiming they died of Covid19, they would be part of 90% number, NOT part of the 10% number.
The most common of which is simply old age. Certainly covid causes death in some people, that's indisputable. But If you catch it in your last 2 weeks while you're on your death bed anyway, it's not really clear that covid even accelerated it.
The death die with covid more often not only because it probably accelerates some old peoples' deaths, but because this very population is undergoing its end-of-life process anyway, and are going to die whether or not they have it.
Okay, but what's unique about COVID where we're supposed to discount that? Surely we care about a murderer who kills an elderly person.
> and are going to die whether or not they have it.
This is true for all people and causes of death.
That's not what it is though. If you put poison in someone's food, and they die before they eat it, you didn't murder them.
I'm not sure what you're saying here. If a murder kills someone, the murder was the direct cause of death and we count it as murder. If you die of old age while having covid, it is not necessarily covid that is the killer, so it's not clear that it should necessarily be counted as the killer in all old-age cases.
> and are going to die whether or not they have it
Yes but... you understand I'm talking about the specific case of actually being on your deathbed, right?
Also, do you imagine this is different for Influenza deaths or TB deaths? If anything, Covid-19 deaths are much more accurately counted than deaths from any other major disease, which are often just estimates.
Which is why I think excess mortality seems like the best high-level number to look at.
People argue that increases in death could also be attributed to suicide, deteriorating health from mental hardship of stress and quarantine, and people not seeking medical treatment they need because they are scared of covid or because they cannot afford it with so much unemployment.
I think the last one holds some water. I know of one person in my hometown who chose not to go to the hospital because he was scared of covid and ended up dying of a heart attack.
Yes, COVID has killed a _lot_ of people, but so has the response to COVID. We focused all resources on one enemy while other allies of Death stalked in the back door.
Also, in the case of Vietnam, only 14% of their population is over 55 years old, whereas 29% of the USA is over 55 (and 31% of Belgium, another hard hit country). Seeing as this disease hits people over 55 the hardest (and is barely noticed in those under 30), it is no wonder Vietnam is seeing less of an issue here.
It seems age demographics _could_ have more correlation with outcomes than any government intervention. That of course doesn't explain Vietnam entirely. Also keep in mind, Vietnam has only administered 12,000 test per 1 million people, whereas the USA has administered 492,000 per 1 million.
The bank shot demographic explanations are just more distracting BS, the obvious lesson is suppress the virus!
We need to understand better why Vietnam is seeing such positive results but saying you know why for certain is disingenuous
People want to raise doubts about the effectiveness of their suppression by implying that they have not achieved suppression but rather their younger population means they are not suffering deaths as a result. This we can say with a lot of confidence is not the case because their demographic advantages are not that great and other nations with similar demographics have not been as successful.
We do in fact need to understand their success, that is why it is so important to avoid dismissing their success with demographic excuses!
Actually let me list what I think, since you seem interested enough in my opinion to spelunk my comment history:
- COVID-19 is a dangerous infection. The degree of risk and severity is directly correlated to age.
- For those below ~30 years old, the infection is between as to much less dangerous than some strains of influenza.
- Between 30-60, the infection is appreciably more dangerous than the flu, but not severely so
- Over 60 the infection is far more dangerous than the flu, and extreme precautions are warranted
- The projections of disease modelers were incredibly off the mark early on, by orders of magnitude. The models are better today.
- The fatality rate was grossly overestimated. Early in the pandemic, we had numbers around 1-3% IFR (not CFR). This was also off by an order of magnitude. Real IFR will end up around .3-.5%. Deadly than the flu, but again with the burden on older people
- Most public health measures we are deploying were created for pandemic influenza. They do not necessarily apply in the same ways to pandemic coronaviruses.
- Masks clearly work to reduce the spread of infections. Not mandating masks is a terrible idea, and governments who have avoided it thus far will be judged harshly
- Influenza has around a 15-20% asymptomatic rate. Coronavirus has twice that. This causes huge problems for contact tracing though it is clearly not impossible
- We over-focused on surface spread and panicked people into disinfecting everything, while ignoring aerosol spread
- We over-focused on spread between strangers and in public, and downplayed the real risk, which is spread within families and those who live in close quarters
- This alone caused imbalanced risk assessments for people. Eating at a restaurant with proper distancing and ventilation IS safer than having an indoor neighborhood block party without masks.
- Lockdowns require an exit strategy that is something beyond "more lockdowns".
- Lockdowns are a great public health strategy if they are incredibly short lived and adhered to
- It was clear in March that the only way out of the pandemic was immunity, be it natural or vaccine enhanced. Lockdowns should have been thrown out the window at that time
- The goal posts were constantly moved from curve flattening to deaths to raw case counts
- Metrics for reopening should have been clear from the start and based entirely upon hospital capacity
- Ignoring the impacts of the lockdown is close-minded thinking that has and will continue to cost lives
- Essentially, we knew by April at the latest that eradication was no longer a possibility, and that we should have switched from eradication to mitigation
- Mitigation would include targeted restrictions based upon age risk
- Mitigation also requires acceptance that cases will increase and deaths will occur, but the goal is to reduce those, we can't aim for elimination. The cost is too great and the odds are too low
- Public health officials shot themselves in the foot several times throughout the pandemic
- While I understand why masks were downplayed originally, that was a terrible mistake. Saying "masks work, but we need them for our medical heroes" or some shit would have been better
- Maybe that would have made masks "cool" instead of a political signaling tool (again, I 100% support mask mandates)
- Outside spread was confused by the support of the civil rights protests in the Spring. We knew then and continue to know that outside spread is very unlikely and that the protests were safe. But at the same time we were shaming people at the beach. Both were safe, and to declare one safer than the other based upon the ontology of the events was a terrible mistake
- The media spread fear and panic before it was warranted. Constan...
The fact of the matter is that we have plenty of evidence from around the world that suppression is possible and practical and doesn't cost nearly as much as the economic costs of letting the virus run rampant. Pretending that demographics is important in the success of Vietnam when Japan has the worst demographics in the world next to maybe Italy is.. well.. you know the word I would be reaching for!
The arguments about "blowing goodwill" are mostly overturned by the evidence that we actually have of high compliance in very restrictive regimes. "We can't impose China-style lockdowns" is immediately undermined by the Australian lockdowns that were both politically bold (in the face of domestic political resistance from federal politicians!) and extreme but very effective and enjoyed popular support.. in the home country of the owner of the leading anti-lockdown propagandist of the world! (Not to mention Italy & France imposing lockdowns for extended periods that were never approached in scale anywhere in the US and were not a problem.)
Both-sides-ism is silly. If at this point you can't concede that the "left" (if you accept that framing) was mostly right you are not paying attention to the results. In the "blue" jurisdictions that are struggling the issues arise from popular "business-friendly" Democrats undermining health advice. One side of the US political spectrum is wildly irresponsible and the other is not, don't pretend otherwise.
> "Metrics for reopening should have been clear from the start and based entirely upon hospital capacity" I mean, sure, but that is a condemnation of your earlier positions as expressed then in real time, right? This sort of ties into your assessment of the media, it doesn't really have anything to do with your opinions about the virus or appropriate responses.
If you think the situation in "Europe" right at this moment is the same as "the US" it seems like you might be misinformed. Finland and Norway are in a much different position than France and Belgium, who are in a different position than the Czech Republic. But all of them are in a better position than Iowa, South Dakota, and North Dakota. The idea that starting a 2nd or 3rd wave from a lower base is a bad idea seems kind of deranged.
I think you think of yourself as a realist but there is lots of evidence that you have underestimated what is possible as well as the capacity of human nature to do what's right. The information is out there, just look at it.
ETA: "- Mitigation would include targeted restrictions based upon age risk" We've got mountains of evidence that letting the virus run in younger populations endangers older people, that just doesn't work.
I didn't pretend that demographics is important. Demographics _is_ important. I didn't mean to say it was the _only_ factor. My main point was to demonstrate that nobody has convincingly rejected the null hypothesis in any of these response models. My point was that I can posit a reasonable theory that there is correlation between age demographics and COVID deaths/known cases. You (rightly) pointed out a country that has terrible demographics for my theory did fine. The key here is that _both can be true_. Everyone seems to be looking for a panacea when, thus far, one simply does not exist. The lockdown approach has contradictions as well, so if you profusely reject my demographic argument, you can't strongly hold on to lockdowns. We are talking about a disease, that while a relatively "normal" coronavirus, is still novel. And we are comparing responses across nations with wildly different cultures, densities, demographics, health care systems, travel levels, living situations and access to testing. My point is that maybe it was _just_ lockdowns that helped Vietnam. And may it wasn't just the lack of lockdowns that hurt the United States. We need to consider all explanations. And for the record, I do consider lockdowns a valuable tool at times!
Regarding the good will argument. Again you pointed at one location with one culture to imply that it would be widely supported elsewhere. While culturally Australia is probably closer to the United States than any other nation, there are still very key differences. The Australia lookdowns are really interesting for that reason though, that it is culturally similar to the United States. But, and I may be wrong, the lockdowns were limited to Victoria, and were not applied blanketly across their nation. This is not in contradiction to my beliefs. I have posted in the past about the idea that my state locked down _too soon_ before there was community spread. Essentially, we locked down when things were bad in New York. A lot of the opposition to lockdowns in the United States is the blanket approach in which they are applied. Counties with zero of few cases are locked down with the same vigor as metropolitan areas where cases are exploding. People rightly wonder why they can't go to work when the outbreak is across the state. I have always thought very targeted lockdowns would be a reasonable approach.
Furthermore, your points regarding Italy and France supporting lockdowns is rather interesting as well. First, both are far more collectivist than the United States in general. This isn't good or bad, it is a different culture that approaches problems in a different way. It just so happens that viewing the whole as or more important than the individual lends itself to restrictions in the benefit of the whole. The United States traditionally indexes on the individual above the whole (argument being that each individual adds to the whole, so the effect is the same). I am not here to argue individualism vs. collectivism but I will say that the issue is more complex than "Americans don't believe in science" (this may be a straw man, I don't think you've made that argument, but I tangented myself). The other point is that as lockdowns eased, cases rose. So what does that tell us? Two things...
First, it tells us that lockdowns do suppress spread (no shit). You keep people from interacting, and diseases spread through interaction are reduced. Abstinence is...
A quick search seems to indicate that the authorities in Iowa are keeping exact data private. Whether to hide reality or avoid causing a panic, I can strongly say I am against keeping that data private.
And to be consistent, perhaps Des Moines should be locked down but Ottumwa not. But without the data I've not the slightest clue.
Whereas in the past I made more reckless proclamations about lockdowns and responses, I am trying to retrain my instincts for bluster and provide only what I have strong evidence or data to support.
Not for nothing, but new cases seem to have peaked in Iowa and are now trending downwards, so that is good news!
Comparing excess deaths between US and Sweden is maybe a bit more bulletproof. If — at the end of this — Sweden has fewer excess deaths than the US, then their response was in some measures more effective than ours. But there’s so much going on, we still won’t know for certain for quite a while.
Here is a chart of excess deaths: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/excess_deaths.htm
The problem with arguments like these, is for America at least, why does the number of people who have a fear of medical care trend so closely with number of cases?
I predict that a few months later, a popular answer will be "they were actually killed by the vaccine".
(Bookmarking this comment so that I can keep linking it when this actually happens.)
This amounts to a baseless conspiracy theory against doctors that accurately understand and record the cause of death. Blunt trauma in a car accident is not being recorded as covid.
Also, I doubt the amount of people suffering from broken legs are really skewing those Covid numbers. Most people sick enough to require hospitalization while also infected with Covid will have much higher risks of Covid-related symptoms as well.
You'd be surprised. Around 1/7th of the covid hospitalizations in Denmark[0] are hospitalized for "other reasons" - where covid is not the primary factor - I'd say that is significant.
[0] - https://www.dr.dk/nyheder/indland/braekket-ben-fylder-i-cent... (link only in danish, sorry)
""If you were in hospice and had already been given a few weeks to live, and then you also were found to have COVID, that would be counted as a COVID death. It means technically even if you died of a clear alternate cause, but you had COVID at the same time, it's still listed as a COVID death. So, everyone who's listed as a COVID death doesn't mean that that was the cause of the death, but they had COVID at the time of the death." Dr. Ezike outlined." -- Dr. Ngozi Ezike, Director of Illinois Department of Public Health
Poor definitions enable people to present the data differently depending on their biases and agendas. We should want to prevent that not by grounds of "you're crazy," but by making the definitions non-interpretable.
There have been a lot of excess deaths in 2020. It seems reasonable to guess those people died of either COVID-19 or our response to COVID-19 (eg reluctance to seek medical treatment). None of these mortality statistics are perfect, but given the fairly short window of a mild COVID-19 infection, it seems pretty reasonable as a first approximation to assume that if they had it when they died, they died from it. There might be some cases where this is wrong (died of severe trauma during a car wreck in which they were a passenger rather than a driver) or questionable (the hospice case) but how much do those really affect the overall numbers?
[1] https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-dataviz-corona...
Edit: Maybe hospice is the best translation for särskilt boende.
According to one investigation [1] among people who died outside of hospitals 15% died directly from covid, 70% had other comorbidities, and 15% died from something else while they had covid.
[0] https://gupea.ub.gu.se/bitstream/2077/40037/1/gupea_2077_400...
[1] https://lakartidningen.se/aktuellt/nyheter/2020/08/covid-19-...
It seems reasonable to create a statistical analysis based on years of expected life lost -- but that still doesn't mean people aren't dying from Covid19.
Aside, slightly tangential: Back in Feb/March BMJ had some controversy about UK government hiding excess Winter deaths in flu statistics. The implication being that the gov were taking more deaths over Winter and saying it was flu when in fact the deaths were more related to poverty (no heating, little food). Next thing we know people are saying Covid19 want a problem because it wasn't even as bad as flu (though at the time is was killing far more people as a proportion of those infected). Lies and statistics, and all that.
I don't think this is what they're saying. I think the point is that those people's actual times of death weren't far enough from their expected times of death given their preexisting conditions to be able to confidently say that they died of Covid, rather than just having died with it. In other words, that there's a good chance they would have died at the exact same time even without Covid.
Presumably you think doctors have always been lying about cause of death? What do you think their motivation for that is?
If I were a betting man, based on these numbers, I'd put my money on excess mortality once everything's been tallied, at least in that county.
[1] https://www.scb.se/en/About-us/news-and-press-releases/exces...
They still died of CoVID-19. A lot of people have heart disease, or diabetes, or are overweight, or have any number of other conditions. If they get CoVID-19 and die, you can't just write that off because they were overweight.
If you look at the official statistics for the whole country right now, 26% of all dead where 90 years or older, and 41% 80-89 years old. Most of them weren't just a bit out of shape, they were already sick.
Are you sure car accidents are not recorded as Covid, because I've read claims to the otherwise several times. It may not matter what the doctors think, if there are policies in place, or financial incentives (extra money for treatment of Covid patients).
We have multiple standards for each country (if not smaller governmental units) and the standards have changed, the testing has changed, etc. Statisticians will be decades puzzling it all out.
It's really only excess mortality we can count on right now.
> It does appear to the case, however, that a motorcyclist who was killed in a traffic accident also tested positive for COVID-19, and was initially listed among Florida’s COVID-19-related deaths. But officials from the Florida Department of Health said that person has since been removed from the count.
I can't read the paywall'd Telegraph article but I think this [2] is the same:
> The ONS looked at nearly 4,000 deaths during March in England and Wales where coronavirus was mentioned on the death certificate. In 91% of cases the individuals had other health problems. The most common was heart disease, followed by dementia and respiratory illness. On average, people dying also had roughly three other health conditions.
So basically -- people's other health problems cause them to be more severely affected by a respiratory disease that has also been shown to affect the heart and brain [3]. That seems like an intuitive result, and the study backs it up.
> It's really only excess mortality we can count on right now.
The excess mortality will certainly show the bigger impact in the long term, but to imply COVID-19 death numbers are being artificially inflated or so grossly inaccurate that they're useless is irrational.
[1] https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/florida-motorcyclist-covid...
[2] https://www.bbc.com/news/health-52308783
[3] https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/i...
Someone stated that vehicular accidents are not being reported as COVID-19; I found a counterpoint. And I do not doubt that it is one of many. That is all.
It's science. Questioning the easy numbers is what you're supposed to do. You tear and kick at something that is "known" until you get sick of it and move on to something else. Similarly, we have just oodles of confounding factors for our statistics here and we should be acutely aware of it at every step. This is not a thing that rests.
Also, if you get Covid and you end up with permanently damaged health, as it is documented time and again, would you keep your skepticism?
What will you say if somebody tells you that you anyway had some precondition, even if you weren't aware?
And are you aware how big percentage of the U.S. population has one or more risk factors?
I'm not talking about the case where a person's prospects are that they'll live for quite some time. I'm talking about the case where somebody is already essentially on their death bed for cancer, for heart problems, for fatal car injuries or shootings, or even other viruses, who are going to die imminently anyway.
Are you additionally claiming that this makes up some significant percentage of total covid deaths? Like, if 2% of the deaths due to covid are indeed people who were going to die anyway, but may or may not have died a week earlier due to covid, well
1. They may have died a week earlier due to covid. Whose place is it to judge that? (there are measures that try to take into account loss of livable years, but they agree that Covid is pretty terrible)
2. Who cares if the estimate is off by a few percent?
So concern about this overcounting is predicated on an assumption that some significant number of people are on death's door already, and that basically only those people are dying of covid.
Most covid-deaths are of people under 85 years old, and even an 85 year old has a life expectancy of 6 years though, so that seems unlikely.
Now that doesn't mean we should entirely downplay the risk here, but there are alternative solutions that can allow us to take care of the vast majority of people who are seriously at risk from COVID-19 without absolutely ruining the economy and harming the majority of people's way of life in a manner that may very well be irreparable for a decade, if not longer.
[1] https://covidtracking.com/data/longtermcare
First, you're (I believe) misquoting the length-of-stay in non-hospice LTC facilities as life expectancy. There's a few reasons that's wrong and a significant underestimate. Most LTC patients leave and live a few years beyond the end of their stay in other facilities (hospice, or more intense care facilities). Additionally, some patients leave because they're healthy (I assume you go to a care facility because you have a broken hip, or something, but leave once you're healed). These patients have, as a group, significantly shorter stays, so the median stay length among terminal inhabitants is actually longer.
But let's assume you're correct. In fact let's go further and say that those people's lives are irrelevant, or unavoidable losses, because they were going to die soon anyway. In fact, let's assume the same for everyone over the age of 75 (who I presume make up the vast majority of the LTC deaths as well). They were close to death anyway, and Covid just got them there a little faster.
We're still left with more than 93000 deaths and counting. Deaths that can't be blamed on long term care facilities, or even age. Deaths in people who might have lived for 30+ more years in many cases.
Certainly nursing homes and the very elderly may deserve special and additional protections, but claiming that because old, frail, and colocated people are highly impacted that we could relax is a disservice to all of the not-old, not-frail, and not-colocated people who still may need protection.
And I think you're vastly exaggerating the impact, both on the economy, and on the way of life, that a well managed set of guidelines have. Mask mandates + closure of certain non-essential businesses + restrictions on others means that relatively few things shut down. Certainly some do, your mall and movie theater may have trouble, but grocery stores and restaraunts can and are surviving and adapting (and imo the changes to enable urban outdoor dining that are happening in SF, Chicago, and other cities aren't a change that should be repaired, they should be embraced).
They ignore the overwhelming "excess deaths" number and pretend that unless a person had COVID and COVID alone listed, with no co-morbidity, it doesn't count, and therefore 99+% of COVID deaths aren't COVID at all.
This is, of course, not true, as the excess deaths numbers clearly demonstrate. If anything, we're under-counting COVID.
This is comically illustrated by the examples being used... Hit by a bus? Hospice patients with weeks to live?
The truth is that the typical comorbidities, that have a noticeable effect on the actual total number of deaths, are things like obesity, hyptertension, and diabetes... Things that literally will not kill an otherwise healthy adult in the same time period as COVID-19.
Because this is the first time that these sorts of stats have been used to curtail everyone's freedom so much.
We know this because we have seen how things have unfolded in places like Northern Italy and Iran - the hospital system is quickly overwhelmed, and then people start dying by the dozens in each hospital, because they simply can't get any kind of care anymore.
Another possible interpretation of this is that lockdowns don't really help much.
> We know this because we have seen how things have unfolded in places like Northern Italy and Iran
I thought those places did have lockdowns.
Famously, the Iranian health minister was on TV announcing that the country doesn't need to take special Covid19 measure while visibly sweating because of the fever caused by his Covid19 infection.
If you want positive proof that lockdowns work, the absolute best example is Vietnam: a tiny country of 100 million people which has experienced 1123 total infections so far, with 37 deaths.
Mortality increase (compared to the average of last n years) seems like the only good measure of Covid impact.
Are they even testing dead people for covid?
Or, are you saying someone was hit by a bus, gets/has covid and ultimately dies? If that's the case, I would assume the doctors know what they are doing and would list the ultimate cause of death properly, which covid may have aggravated. What if they would have survived their bus injuries if it was not for covid?
Regardless, this hair splitting doesn't matter because it's a very small portion of all cases that end up in an odd case like the above.
Does anyone know where to find a dataset like this?
Excess deaths in the United States were at 299K as of October 15. What’s your explanation for this, if it isn’t Covid?
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6942e2.htm?s_cid=mm...
But after lockdowns were instituted, deaths levels became stable or decreased, despite your claim that the lockdown deaths were the actual cause of the catastrophe.
Schroedinger's Covid-19 :-)
I'm confused. Lockdown happened first, and the plateau of deaths happened second.
So how could anyone, in good faith, argue that lockdown death numbers are somehow similar to Covid-19 death numbers?
I haven't seen anyone here, and certainly not josephcbible, make absurdly absolute claims that Covid hasn't killed _anyone_. I'm sure Covid has been a factor in the deaths of many people.
Deaths, as reported, peaked in the spring. Epidemiologists have a name for an entirely mainstream explanation of what happened. They call it a "harvesting effect." I agree that the name is unsavory. It refers to a disease quickly culling the weak in a population.
The majority of the excess mortality has accumulated since spring, _after_ the country went into forced lockdown. There is no reason to default to the belief, as you seem to be doing, that Covid has continued killing masses and masses of people. Certainly not compared to the much more salient explanatory force of the massive, nationwide lockdowns.
Go see these things:
https://www.youtube.com/user/potholer54/videos
For example:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzh6HwN0gbw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzh6HwN0gbw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eAB43K2gtOk
Your comment is not backed by anything, there are statistics for types of deaths and there is almost 0 (ZERO!) support for lockdowns causing this many deaths.
How do you think you're smarter than all the world's governments, combined? Are you a qualified scientist or just Random Joe on the internet? If you're the latter, you might want to re-think your viewpoint.
PS: I'm definitely waiting for one of these moments: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=35079, but it's unlikely :-)
PPS: I'm not going to reply to these threads anymore, as people who are replying to them are either cynical or emotional or both. You just don't have the numbers to back up your claims.
You don't have the data. And these things are already quantified and tracked. And no, it doesn't work like you say.
Anyway, have a great day and believe what you want to believe :-)
???
Now if we'd go so far as to assume that people consume the same amount of alcohol at home, then staying home is a net negative for health. I don't actually know how alcohol consumption developed during lockdown, so I don't know whether there is any merit to that line of argument. But I see how it can be made.
The portion sizes [0] and food served in bars and restaurants in the US are not healthy. Generally, home cooking is associated with consuming fewer calories and improve certain health outcomes [1].
[0] https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2017/03/29/portion-sizes [1] https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/home-cooking-good-for-yo...
If it turns out that what people cook at home is even less healthy than food in restaurants, that is a horrible thing, and we should definitely start teaching cooking at schools, regardless of Covid.
I mean, restaurants have all the incentives to cook food that is tastier or cheaper at the expense of health. Simply using less sugar and salt at home, and adding some fresh vegetables to each meal, should already result in healthier diet even if you are a beginner at cooking. But yeah, I can imagine that many people are below the level of beginner.
Not say it is all those things but some attempt to rule out other factors unique to 2020.
Source: official mortality statistics. https://www.scb.se/om-scb/nyheter-och-pressmeddelanden/overd...
You will never have precise statistics, however, excess mortality for all causes more or less matches Covid deaths, so the numbers are roughly correct.
Worth noting that there are indirect effects. For instance because of the overworked health system, some completely unrelated diseases may not be treated as well, causing extra deaths. On the other hand, lockdowns may lower the risk of accident, transmission of other diseases, and even the nasty effect of pollution.
But the general idea is that these deaths are real.
This doesn't follow. It just means that the number of falsely-claimed Covid deaths is roughly equal to the number of deaths caused by the lockdowns, not that either of those numbers are small.
On the other hand, isolation leads to depression and suicide. Less sport and fresh air, to lower health.
During the worst of the HIV epidemic, we saw people in their 30s dying left and right. Malaria kills mostly young children.
All lives are valuable and worth fighting for, but it does seem that these losses are fundamentally worse than COVID. If we would count healthy years of life lost, rather than raw number of deaths, I think that would be more apparent.
Old people still have a right to a free and healthy life.
A new disease with unpredictable long-term effects, that kills at least twice as many people as the flu despite unprecedented preventive measures is bound to cause more alarm.
Remember that regions hit early and unprepared were carting dead people by the truck load, most notably in Northern Italy. If we didn't have lockdowns and other measures, that would have continued and escalated all over the world - we would have probably easily had 10 million or more dead just this year if we had treated this just like a flu.
Over what timeframe? Novel viruses come but once per century, flu kills consistently year after year after year, always mutating to escape eradication... and the flu deaths pile up to astronomical heights over the decades
Only a relatively small percentage of Americans have gotten infected with SARS-CoV-2 yet. Without vaccination, in the space of a few years at most, CoVID-19 will kill as many people as flu does in many decades.
[0] https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/2018-2019.html
Masks are something we will hopefully have learned to wear forever during the cold season, as they will have a measurable impact on deaths not just from seasonal Covid, but from seasonal flu as well. I believe that the majority of the population will internalize this simple hygienic practice from now on, which would be one silver lining for this pandemic. People in East Asia have learned this habit some time ago, and it has served them well.
I disagree. I just think the humans most severely vulnerable to the flu died off during the first few waves. Consider small pox. It was a novel virus for the Native Americans, who had no "natural herd immunity" and they got eviscerated by small pox. Colonists, despite not having vaccines, and despite still being able to get small pox, were not eviscerated since the virus wasn't able to spread and/or kill as well due to their natural immune systems.
What do you call this if not "natural herd immunity"? If you kill off all the weak and vulnerable, leaving only survivors and survivors' offspring who are virus-resistant... then you now have "natural herd immunity".
What you're describing is simply a disease running its course and killing everyone who is not naturally immune/resistant or not strong enough to survive despite being sick. There is no herd immunity aspect. At best you could call it natural selection.
When I lost my sister-in-law due to an unknown brain tumor at 28, it was a catastrophic event from which her entirely family has never recovered.
To say that these deaths are equivalent doesn’t seem right to me, even though I agree we should do everything we can to preserve healthy lifespan for everyone, young and old.
When I lost my grandmother in her late 70s the day we were visiting for her birthday, to a sudden heart-attack, all my family could feel was the hollowness left behind by her absence, and thoughts of all the life events she would miss, things unsaid and so on.
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid_weekly/index.htm
We can accurately project case numbers to hospitalizations and then to deaths as a rough approximation. Who frankly cares if the exact number of COVID deaths are being recorded properly when much of the western world is running out of hospital capacity.
Really, who cares? Don't quibble over bullshit, move on to stuff that matters.
You clearly have a connection to the Internet so you must know this, I am not sure what you are on about here.
Nonessential surgeries were brought back in after the 1st wave didn't develop in the size and strength expected and are now getting pushed back or cancelled because this wave is overwhelming the system.
But you can just read the news and see that this is what is happening so I don't understand why you are asking it in the first place. (The risk of permanent hospital closures & bankruptcies in the USA was about losing revenue from certain type of procedures because of COVID risks, but that's a separate issue that has little to do with this.)
So again, why do you need to quibble over rounding errors in cause of death paperwork when the hospitals are filling up or full? Why? What's the point?
https://twitter.com/thehowie/status/1326896531765665792
But as mentioned in one of the comments on the post, Sweden seems to have a (weekly) mortality rate of about 1/3 the US'.
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1104709/coronavirus-deat...
edit: it looks like a follow-up tweet contends that Sweden's back-filling of deaths is skewing their numbers down, though I am not really sure what to make of it.
edit2: Sweden seems to have a fewer COVID mortalities (per million population) than the USA, coming in just after France, which seems to further confuse the situation.
Yes, the tweet is saying Sweden is 60% better than the US in terms of daily deaths.
The source for claiming immunity is temporary is also just a link to some random tweet with no data.
I flagged the article as it’s making pretty big claims based on no real data and a misunderstood tweet.
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToS...
http://91-divoc.com/pages/covid-visualization/?chart=countri...
How did they expect that this was going to turn out?
> How did they expect that this was going to turn out?
Maybe exactly like it is, and maybe it's not a real problem? There's no nuance in a graph that simply shows "infections" - there's no discussion of it being relative to the number of tests, no error bars for false positives/negatives, nothing to show how severe it is.
Only if you're high-risk. If you're not, its mortality rate is much lower than the flu. The problem that most people have with the lockdowns is that we know who's high-risk and who's not, but we lock everyone down anyway.
What are the long-term effects of not being able to have a normal life due to restrictions ?
If I'm looking at https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/coronavirus-age-se... right, out of 15,230 coronavirus deaths in New York, 14,540 of them were people over 65 or confirmed to have underlying conditions, and only 92 of them were people under 65 and confirmed not to have underlying conditions. About 15% of their population is over 65. I'm not sure what the population base rate is for underlying conditions, though.
> Also, what about the high risk people? Do we just throw them under the bus?
No. We quarantine just them to keep them safe, and give them all free grocery delivery, etc. too.
> Also, what about spreading a new virus to billions of hosts and praying for no mutations?
I agree that's bad. I'm just saying that a lockdown that looks like it's going to last over a year is worse.
Out of 120.000 deaths in both data sets, in the age group 0-4 years there were 115 deaths to flu vs. 9 to Corona for the age group 0-17.
Flu 2017-18 https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/2017-2018.htm
Corona 2020 (up to May) https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/coronavirus-age-se...
1. Based on your flu data, those deaths are for 11 million symptomatic flu cases, vs maybe 1 million Covid-19 cases in May. And that doesn't include asymptomatic flu cases (less often but still happen).
2. The numbers you're showing for Covid-19 deaths are just for NY. The flu ones were at US level.
We'll have to wait and see but I don't see why the flu would be deadlier than Covid-19, for any age group.
Yes, some people are going to die. Yes, they could be people I know and love. It is what it is - I'll accept that risk before I accept the greater risk of watching a free society decay into totalitarian liberalism.
I honestly doubt it has anything to do with what's happening right now. I honestly think this is more a consequence of it going bad in Europe again (many other EU countries started to see a big increase before Sweden this time around).
Some of the reasoning seems to go "if there's enough viruses going around at large in society it will enter our nursing homes anyway", so maybe it actually doesn't really matter that much? I guess nobody really knows. Lots of guessing going around these days...
They literally announced this in the same press conference where they mentioned that there had been an exponentially growing rate of infection in Stockholm for the past few weeks. If it had already been decided but not yet announced or implemented, that would have been a good time to change the decision.
Anyway, you could argue that they would have failed no matter what so there was no point in trying - but Taiwan, Korea and China have shown that it's actually possible to get things under control if you try.
What is happening right now is that the number of deaths are rising rapidly, the number of people in intensive care have exploded over the last two weeks [0], which means the number of deaths will also explode over the next few weeks.
The Swedish experiment that chose not to aggressively push back the virus but instead to let it wash through the community while protecting the elderly is starting to look like a failure, and the people responsible are starting to look markedly stressed. The economy is healthy though, comparatively (and for the time being).
[0] https://portal.icuregswe.org/siri/report/corona.covid-daglig...
And the positive tests are leading hospitalisation and deaths by a couple of weeks. So they are a good indicator about what to expect. And obviously, during an epedemic, raising infection numbers mean even higher numbers following until something reduces further infections.
As linked elsewhere, https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/09f821667ce64bf7be6..., the numbered of confirmed new positive tests are around 5k compared to April, and the number of deaths are 10-20 compared to April 100-120 per day.
What the graphs would need is normalization to the amount of testing being done. Such graphs would then have hospitalizations and deaths proportional to the number of positive tests.
If we look at peak for positive tested, we got 11/5/202 with 4744 people tested positive and 12 people who died, with a ratio of 395 positive per death.
If we are going to get a factor of 4 positive per death we would need to see a spike of 1186 deaths within the next month or so for a single day. While anything is possible in this pandemic, I am not that certain of it.
> The number of people in intense care has reached April levels.
Per the graph, we are not there. April had as it peak 49 new person in a single day. November has its current peak at 20. It could get above 49, but again, time will show if that is the case. It is more alarming than the death graph, but less so than the positive graph.
For the number of tests, it has been increased from around 160k to 250k per week in the span of 5 weeks. (https://www.folkhalsomyndigheten.se/smittskydd-beredskap/utb...). In comparison, April had around 20k tests per week.
Interpretation of data is naturally up for debate but personally I am bit of a middle line person. I don't think we will see over 1k deaths per day any time soon, but we are going to see an quick increase in the near time. A lot will depend if the government decided again to lock up the elderly, something which worked but was quite controversial last time.
Approximately 1.1 Million people in the entire world, approximately 3 times as many as malaria deaths, closing in on as many as TB deaths, and about twice as many as influenza or AIDS.
All the numbers you've ever heard for deaths from any disease have the same artifacts as the Covid-19 deaths, if not much worse (e.g. numbers for the flu are normally only estimates based on number of hospital cases and symptoms).
That's true for any of the other diseases you care to look at, so it's irrelevant when comparing diseases.
> I'm not saying its not worth to do something about it but if your answer of 'to do something about it' is by lockdown then I can't support it.
If we had had proper early lockdowns, we wouldn't even have known how bad this disease is (just look at Vietnam, with 100 million people in a tiny country and a grand total of 37 deaths so far this year). Since no other measures are shown to work, especially with all of the cretins not wearing masks, I'm not sure how else we could prevent this number from doubling or tripling, as hospitals get overwhelmed and fatigued.
>with 100 million people in a tiny country and a grand total of 37 deaths so far this year)
Sure but what is the damage due to lockdown ?
You too can reduce death from vehicle accident by banning vehicle altogether but then the damage caused by banning vehicle would be greater.
>Since no other measures are shown to work
If there really are no other measure that won't make situation worse then not doing anything is better.
They essentially had a very strict lockdown for 3 weeks in March I think, and then they have only had targeted quarantines. The vast majority of the country is working normally, much more so than anywhere in Europe or the Americas.
Similar measures could have been taken everywhere else, and we would have been long over this, and with minimal deaths. Instead, we are where we are. We still have the option of doing a 3 week heavy lockdown that could probably reset the clock on the virus, with direct government payments for every person affected to reduce the economic hardship. There is no better known solution to this problem, until the vaccine proves to be efficient.
Taiwan also don't have lockdown.
Peru on the other hand had early and strict lockdown and now they have high death and still in lockdown.
The better solution for the usa is to open up right now.
Taiwan was one of the first countries to react to Covid, so they stopped it extremely early from getting into the country to any great extent. They also have extremely high mask usage, even having to ration ration them because of the rate at which they were getting bought. They even had public outcry when an official said mask use was NOT necessary in certain areas - the exact opposite of mask use in the US and Europe.
In Peru, it seems by the descriptions I see on Wikipedia that the lockdowns weren't very well policed, and they were also not that strict - most of the early lockdowns seem to be of the 'no going out at night' kind, which has dubious effectiveness. I also see little talk of contact tracing in the area.
The USA is by far the worse hit country in the world. How you can even think about opening up, given the hundreds of thousands of people it would likely kill over the next 3 months, is beyond me.
Yes worse than before pandemic thats because other doing countries lockdown but life pretty much still normal there. Business open as usual, kids go to school in person as usual, bar open as usual. I would happily choose to live there if I can choose.
USA is not bad at all, number of case is high but most of it are asymptomatic or only have mild symptom. What bad is the government reaction in some state that put so many covid related restriction. how are u thinking of locking people is beyond me, it makes people suffer, its harmful.
Death from car accident can be reduced by banning car altogether but we did didn't ban car because banning is more harmful.
The USA has the highest number of deaths from Covid of any country on Earth, by far. One of the worse numbers per capita as well. To put it in perspective, in 2018 435,000 people died of Malaria around the world; the US alone has lost 225,000 people to Covid - more than half of that.
Also, you have to understand that the restrictions are the only things that have kept the numbers so small. Everything we've seen from regions that didn't take measures to curb the spread shows that numbers could easily be 2-5 times the current numbers. How you can look at those numbers and think "yeah, but wearing a mask is, like, annoying" is beyond reason.
And please remember that cars have a huge upside, and that they are heavily regulated exactly to reduce the number of deaths. You need to pass an exam just to get in the driver's seat of a car. You have to pass all sorts of expensive tests to even put a car you built on the road. You're not allowed to drink before driving. You have to wear an uncomfortable harness the whole time you're inside a car etc. - there are many restrictions that we accept to make driving safer.
Similarly for Covid, there were all sorts of annoying restrictions to keep people at least somewhat safe. The equivalent of banning all cars would have been that everyone except doctors, emergency personnel and the military can't leave their house for 2-3 weeks, and the pandemic would have been over. But just like we can't ban cars altogether, it's not realistic to do that, so we had to accept lesser measures that offer lesser protection.
But from there to "any kind of lockdown is, like, really bad" you have quite some way to go.
The number include people who die with covid not just due to covid. So its inflated.
> How you can look at those numbers and think "yeah, but wearing a mask is, like, annoying" is beyond reason.
Not just mask but also the business capacity restriction, business not allowed to open, kids not going to school in person, unemployment, bankruptcy, delayed treatment for other diseases, some suicides, some domestic violence, some horrible mental health impacts, some livelihoods destroyed, some people dying alone, some relationships ending, some relationships never starting, etc
All those for the risk of covid ? Yeah very very not worth it.
>there are many restrictions that we accept to make driving safer
Right, but even then still many people die, and that number can be reduced by banning car altogether but the damage is not worth it.
Similarly for covid, there are huge downside due to lockdown. The risk due to lockdown compared to the risk of covid ? very very not worth it.
Both option is sucks but the point it to choose the less sucks among it.
If for you, you think the risk is worth it and you want to isolate yourself then its fine I won't force you but the issue is if you trying to force other people to isolate too.
If I can choose I would gladly choose to live in the country like Sweeden, where life pretty much normal and hardly any masks or any other country without any restriction right now.
There is no significant difference between people dying WITH a systemic disease and people dying OF a systemic disease. And there is no over-reporting in the USA compared to most other countries, so the comparison still makes sense. And even if HALF the reported numbers were wrong (the reality is probably closer to 0.01% or something), it would still be a viral disease much worse than any other active in the wealthy world today.
> Similarly for covid, there are huge downside due to lockdown. The risk due to lockdown compared to the risk of covid ? very very not worth it.
You are acting as if the mild restrictions in place today are as extreme as banning cars. I've already pointed out that the extreme response would be state-wide, military enforced, house arrest for everyone except emergency personnel - that would be the 0 deaths alternative.
Instead, in all places that actually care about public health, we have mild restrictions to control the spread of the virus. This includes Sweden by the way, which has a lockdown more or less as much as everywhere else, except it is more self-imposed since their constitution doesn't allow for a legally-enforced one.
> If for you, you think the risk is worth it and you want to isolate yourself then its fine I won't force you but the issue is if you trying to force other people to isolate too.
It's not about what I think. We have people specialized in assessing these risks, and they have ALL said, everywhere in the world, that we must wear masks and isolate. The risks from isolation, which are also understood and absolutely exist, DO NOT outweigh the risks of the disease. And this is not me saying it, it is doctors and policy makers everywhere in the world.
Do you think the UK WANTS to close its economy? Or France or Germany or Norway? Do you think they WANT to keep their schools closed?
Or is it much more believable that they have looked at the risks, they have looked at hospital capacity, and have understood, unlike you, that Covid19 is much worse than the hardships caused by lockdowns?
And while there are some valid concerns about the impact of lockdowns on all sorts of problems, there is absolutely no excuse for not wearing a mask. Not doing is simply irresponsible and unhygienic, and must be strongly punished by legal and social means.
It is bad but in the grand scheme of thing its not bad, at least compared to the downside of lockdown.
>You are acting as if the mild restrictions in place today are as extreme as banning cars.
Its an analogy, my point is about choosing the less bad option among non ideal option. you can't compare it exactly, maybe not as extreme as banning cars, but I'm comparing :
A. risk of lockdown
B. risk of covid
A < B
> they have ALL said, everywhere in the world, that we must wear masks and isolate
Many dr/scientist/epidemiologist have oppose the lockdown policy https://gbdeclaration.org/
>Do you think the UK WANTS to close its economy? Or France or Germany or Norway? Do you think they WANT to keep their schools closed?
Then Don't
>Or is it much more believable that they have looked at the risks, they have looked at hospital capacity, and have understood, unlike you, that Covid19 is much worse than the hardships caused by lockdowns?
I can't know exactly what is their motivation is or simply failures of policy making. If they really looked at the risk then they wouldn't do lockdown.
Here is an example from UK gov regarding lockdown https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/...
from the final paragraph "The evidence base into the effectiveness and harms of these interventions is generally weak. However, the urgency of the situation is such that we cannot wait for better quality evidence before making decisions"
So basically: They don't have any idea but lets just give it a go.
You've found a fringe group sponsored by an American right-wing think tank, the kind who would sell their grandma for parts if they thought it would increase profits. The letter proposes a ludicrous plan, that all serious epidemiologists [who are not sold out] oppose:
> The World Health Organization and numerous academic and public-health bodies have stated that the proposed strategy is dangerous, unethical, and lacks a sound scientific basis. They say that it would be impossible to shield all those who are medically vulnerable, leading to a large number of avoidable deaths among both older people and younger people with underlying health conditions, and they warn that the long-term effects of COVID-19 are still not fully understood. Moreover, they say that the herd immunity component of the proposed strategy is undermined by the limited duration of post-infection immunity. The more likely outcome, they say, would be recurrent epidemics, as was the case with numerous infectious diseases before the advent of vaccination. The American Public Health Association and 13 other public-health groups in the United States warned in a joint open letter that the Great Barrington Declaration "is not a strategy, it is a political statement. It ignores sound public health expertise. It preys on a frustrated populace. Instead of selling false hope that will predictably backfire, we must focus on how to manage this pandemic in a safe, responsible, and equitable way."
You also bizarrely claim:
> I can't know exactly what is their motivation is or simply failures of policy making. If they really looked at the risk then they wouldn't do lockdown.
When in fact, again, all public health experts agree that lockdowns, masks and social distancing are crucial to avoid an even larger tragedy than today.
> So basically: They don't have any idea but lets just give it a go.
No, they recognize the limits of current knowledge and propose ways to improve it and make sure the decisions are also measured and held to account. But there is no option to just wait - they've actually tried that initially, with disastrous consequences (it's one of the reasons why the UK is one of the worse hit countries). The rest of the document does detail exactly the current knowledge and risk estimates and effectiveness estimates that they've based their decision on.
Perhaps the key phrase is actually here:
> Population vs individual-level impactsSome of the interventions here can have a significant impact on the individuals who are affected, but a relatively minor effect at the population level as they are comparativelyrare. Whilst we have tried to maintain a population-level approach (e.g. evidenced through our use of the population indicatorR) the weaker, anecdotal or theoretical arguments on the evidence for harms is often at the individual-level. Adding up these individual potential harms is more difficult. The model provided by ONS does attempt to do this, though as with all models there are limitations to its scope and accuracy.
Please stop advocating against measures that save hundreds of thousands of lives. Neither you nor I are epidemiological or public health experts, so let's stop pretending we know better than the experts. As citizens of democratic countries, our place is NOT to question experts recommendations and risk estimates - it is only to decide whether we care more about saving human lives or economic health, and I think in most countries, for the majority of people, the answer is clear.
So you just dismiss many of epidemiological or public health experts and accused them selling out.
>When in fact, again, all public health experts agree that lockdowns, masks and social distancing are crucial to avoid an even larger tragedy than today.
Not all public health experts agree, as I just show you the site. Currently it has signature from 11976 medical and public health scientist, 34570 medical practitioners.
> Population vs individual-level impactsSome of the interventions here can have a significant impact on the individuals who are affected, but a relatively minor effect at the population level as they are comparativelyrare. Whilst we have tried to maintain a population-level approach (e.g. evidenced through our use of the population indicatorR) the weaker, anecdotal or theoretical arguments on the evidence for harms is often at the individual-level. Adding up these individual potential harms is more difficult. The model provided by ONS does attempt to do this, though as with all models there are limitations to its scope and accuracy.
They says it difficult to measure harm, and they didn't even attempt to do so. They says Weaker evidence for harms as it's on the individual level. This paragraph pretty much sums up the dismal science of infectious disease epidemiology. It is massively focused only on a few metrics, puts them all into unchallengeable, un-falsifiable models and then dismisses negative impacts as not being "population level". So basically, Sure the restrictions we advised resulted in SOME suicides, SOME domestic violence, SOME horrible mental health impacts, SOME livelihoods destroyed, SOME people dying alone, SOME relationships ending, SOME relationships never starting, SOME educations missed, SOME rights violated, SOME protests quashed etc etc. But none of these issues in isolation was ever as significantly significant as our modelled, unfalsifiable, and tightly qualified impact of ALL of these restrictions on R.
Please stop advocating against measures that harm hundreds of thousands of live. Many epidemiological or public health experts oppose the lockdown policy.
>As citizens of democratic countries, our place is NOT to question experts recommendations and risk estimates
So you only agree the experts that fit your view.
Yes, I care more about saving human lives thats why I oppose this lockdown policy. You can't just dismiss economic health. Its closely connected to human lives.
Yes, there is no reason to listen to propaganda funded by obviously biased sources, when unbiased sources like the WHO and all major national health agencies say otherwise.
> So you only agree the experts that fit your view.
I agree with unbiased experts, not experts who participate in privately funded propaganda. Show me a national health agency which opposes lockdowns and I'll listen (though there are many more that do).
The only one I know of is Sweden's, and there (1) a lockdown would be unconstitutional anyway, and (2) people have voluntarily locked down just as much if not more than in surrounding countries.
This is an important aspect you're completely missing: the majority of the population understands the huge risks posed by this virus, and will lockdown anyway. The majority of people don't want to go to work in crowded places, they don't want to go to restaurants, they don't want to spread disease among their employees.
Most multinational companies were in fact ahead of government lockdowns, as they also did simple math: lost productivity from employees working from home or in shifts < lost productivity from employees sick or dead or permanently impaired from a disease, at least for employees who are not easily replaceable. So most if not all big companies started observing a lockdown as much as they could in February, regardless of any local regulations.
>the majority of the population understands the huge risks posed by this virus, and will lockdown anyway. The majority of people don't want to go to work in crowded places, they don't want to go to restaurants, they don't want to spread disease among their employees.
If that the case then you don't need lockdown measure. If you need lockdown measure then its shows that majority of people don't want lockdown.
>Most multinational companies were in fact ahead of government lockdowns,
Like I said if you want to lockdown yourself I'm fine with it, similarly if private company want implement lockdown measure themselves its fine, the issue is you are forcing other people to lockdown.
No, it is biased towards moneyed interests, who want the low level workforce to work, human life be damned. It is obvious that a right-wing institute that also advocates against climate change can't be trusted to produce objective data, especially not in a propaganda lettet. If you want an unbiased opinion you need to look at the WHO, NHS, and similar institutions, which are all in agreement on the actual science and policy recommendations. Opinion pieces like that letter are simple propaganda.
And while the majority of the population will lockdown anyway, especially if they are presented with the actual data, not propaganda about how the disease is not that bad, there are enough fringe groups who refuse that a law and explicit enforcement are necessary.
The lockdown cause harm is based on science and data.
The data shows that the disease is not that bad compared to lockdown.
If you want lock yourself up then I won't prevent you. Majority of population will oppose to lockdown if they presented with actual data, not fear mongering.
The data from non-biased sources is diametrically opposed: the disease is, to the best of our knowledge, much worse than the effects of the lockdown. You have to look at data from the real experts: WHO, NHS, NIH etc (NOT right-wing or left-wing think-tanks, actual public health orgs).
With the unprecedented lockdowns and other mobilization measures, this disease has killed more people worldwide than the flu (~2x as many), malaria (~3x as many), AIDS (~2x as many), and may surpass deaths from TB by the end of the year, with an IFR hovering around 1%. In regions that didn't observe lockdowns (e.g. Italy in the early days, Iran in the early days) the death toll rose to around 5% of the confirmed infected population, because hospitals were completely overwhelmed and simply couldn't treat patients anymore. Even if a good portion of these deaths are not directly caused by the disease, it is still much worse than any other viral disease currently active in the world, and much worse than most infectious diseases, with few exceptions.
Not all experts even try to measure the lockdown harm.
A good portion of the covid death number being reported is not caused by covid itself so you see the inflated number. The death toll maybe 'high' but it worse compared to the harm of lockdown.
This isn’t true. Lots of diseases, including malaria, have high fatality rates among children or healthy people.
Most people that die from malaria are under 5 years old. Most people that die from HIV are under 50. Most people that die from COVID are over 70.
Also, if you want to look for the died of/died with difference in AIDS or malaria, Malaria and HIV are huge epidemics in similar areas, so there is a good chance that many people die of malaria and AIDS at the same time - did the malaria kill them, or the AIDS? Most of the people dying of malaria also have problems with malnutrition - does that invalidate the fact that malaria killed them? HIV is often correlated with drug use - I think it's more than likely that a few people counted as AIDS deaths were also overdosing on something. You can find all sorts of correlations.
Here are the stats for number of deaths and also patients in ICU which gives a different picture. Still alarming but not as crazy as this "New cases"-graph might make you believe.
(two links to the same image on separate image hosting services)
https://postimg.cc/rzyCv57W https://imgbox.com/zI14ri2b
Sources: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/09f821667ce64bf7be6... Public Health Agency of Sweden
The post kind of goes from straight talk about deaths to "and here are stats" which are not at all showing deaths. Comes off a little dishonest to me. And the stat on deaths being "40% above the U.S. equivalent" just seem plain wrong. See the comments on the post for that.
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus/country/sweden?countr...
Case in point: MR authors spent the last months arguing for the herd immunity approach, and bringing up Sweden once a week, and now apparently they were just waiting for data.
I just don’t get why they get so much readership and are seen to be similar to Slate Star Codex, Gwern, etc. (which have their own shortcomings, but are on a different level in terms of their reasoning ability).
Personally, I rate MR quite highly. I just think the reasoning is better-argued and the topics are more often something I’m interested in, compared to basically any other blog. Gwern and SSC are great too though.
But as I said, he's a smart guy, and on the whole tends to get things more or less right.
My thought on Sweden was not so much "wait until the fall", but to note that even though they didn't shut down, the economic impact was broadly similar to that of neighboring counties who did.
So from my view this all seems very "pick your poison". I suspect the correlations we keep implying between shutdowns and the economy may actually have more to do with the fact of the pandemic itself. I don't care if the movie theaters are shut down or not, I'm not going to one.
Yes Sweden has a second wave, although still in an earlier stage than most other places. Hopefully it can be turned around before ICU numbers start rising again. New recommendations went in place two weeks ago and personally I see less people around, and the mobility data is trending down. [0]
Restrictions on serving alcohol in pubs and clubs will start from the 20th, limiting service to before 22:00. I feel that is mostly for show though, since if it truly had a point it would start today and not after people spent one last weekend partying.
The spread is mostly in the age group 20-29 currently, so that is a plus. Although trickles of spread in hospice are coming back, which is worrying. They started to allow some visitors a month or so back because the mental health of elderly were deteriorating quite rapidly due to the forced isolation for their own safety.
We can see from the Swedish public health authority page that new ICU admittances have leveled off. Hopefully. [1] "Nya intensivvårdade fall per dag" (New ICU cases per day)
For those proposing no actions and using Sweden as their argument:
Sweden did things. Not French style military police on the streets with fines though. Here's the mobility data. [0]
For those proposing sweeping lock-downs and using Sweden as their argument:
Sweden did lockdown less than many other places, that is true. The constitution does not allow for restrictions in freedom of movement unless in war so recommendations were used. Here's the mobility data. [0]
[0]: https://www.teliacompany.com/sv/om-foretaget/uppdatering/mob...
[1]: https://experience.arcgis.com/experience/09f821667ce64bf7be6...
This point really needs to be hammered home.
Sweden basically did a lockdown - it just wasn't enforced.
Please, everyone, look at the mobility data in OP's post.
I believe Swedes were doing that right, as the neighboring countries for months had much, much less deaths per million.
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToS...
I've also added the U.S. to compare. As it can be seen, until some point in Summer, Sweden was obviously worse than the U.S. But the U.S. persevered, and having much more people, it also shows how strong the spreading was there.
And also to put everything in even broader perspective, measuring in daily deaths per million, there are much worse countries in Europe at this very moment, showing how bad it can be in densely populated regions:
https://ourworldindata.org/coronavirus-data-explorer?zoomToS...
What I'd like to see is those that are in a vulnerable class their contraction and test rate. I think this would encourage those who are at-risk to stay home or any sort of contact outdoors.
Many people discussing the Swedish approach described it as an experiment. The data here makes it here the experiment failed. This is the inherent problem approaches involving "best guesses" - these might well not be right. The alternative to "best guess" is "most conservative guess". In the case, the most conservative approach is doing everything you can to stop infection. This also may not be the best but it limits the downside.