Yeah they’re strengthening their hold on the Silver medal, Spain’s currently in bronze but Germany made some big gains today, . Though I’m more worried about the USA I fear they will again top the medal table in 2020.Italy was also the most affected country when the Black Death thrived.
https://academic.mu.edu/meissnerd/plague.htm
:| Why did he have to go and curse it, I was pinning my hopes on it“It may work, it may not work,” he said on Friday. “I feel good about it. It’s just a feeling.
I'm a smart guy … We have nothing to lose. You know the expression, ‘What the hell do you have to lose?’”
I can imagine many of the paramilitary guys bursting into tears at the newsConsidering the way a lot of the US works and the way large quantities of its residents think, I would be very worried about how it will pan out. I would probably put the military in charge together with the national disaster management team and take some serious action.
The fallout from the trying to resist the disease could end up far worse than the disease itself. If people get panicked and start fighting (sales of weapons in US have spiked, and even after this is all over, those weapons will be in homes), the nation could be thrown into turmoil. If that results in disruption for supplies (let's say some gangs raiding deliveries is the starting point and it snowballs) then you've got a real problem. And all to stop a lot of old people from dying five years earlier than they would anyway. If we have economic collapse and then the suicide rate spikes as happens, that's a lot of younger, active, possible-parents killing themselves so that an 83 with a heart condition can live out their days (to 86?).Many European countries already have been too soft. The US should act more aggressively in terms of social distancing and enforcing this.
I point to the death rate only to illustrate the skew in the severity. 30% of cases are severe or critical, but these are weighted very much towards the elderly and infirm it seems. Sadly I haven't found any data on actual age and symptoms - all we get is broad overview numbers that we have to piece together. If you've a report that shows severity by age, that'd be very enlightening.You are confusing numbers of people dying who do receive proper treatment with numbers of people who end up on the IC and would have died without proper IC treatment.
I point to the data above that states 25% are 50 and under, and the South Korea data the testing was far more widespread and where 30% of those tested positive were 20-30 but not showing symptoms, hence the lack of testing and identification in Italy who were only testing those with notable symptoms:In the Netherlands the initial 20 OC patients 10 were under 45 or something like that. Haven’t seen figures since but the US definitely isn’t the only data. Similar warnings have come out of Italy.
"He said: "Our aim is to try and reduce the peak, broaden the peak, not suppress it completely." There was never a plan to let the virus run amok and just let it take the elderly - no-one is trying that strategy.EDIT: this was my source for the UK policy shift
or find a vaccine.The fallout from the trying to resist the disease could end up far worse than the disease itself. If people get panicked and start fighting (sales of weapons in US have spiked, and even after this is all over, those weapons will be in homes), the nation could be thrown into turmoil. If that results in disruption for supplies (let's say some gangs raiding deliveries is the starting point and it snowballs) then you've got a real problem. And all to stop a lot of old people from dying five years earlier than they would anyway. If we have economic collapse and then the suicide rate spikes as happens, that's a lot of younger, active, possible-parents killing themselves so that an 83 with a heart condition can live out their days (to 86?).
If there was one Western nation that said, "sod it, survival of the fittest," and didn't change their medical services at all, loads of people would die in their homes over a period of two months, but the economy would be the strongest of any in the Western world because everyone else, the active population of the nation, would have kept going. The young aren't massively at risk. You'd then get a little thinning of the population and some freeing up of homes so more young folk can afford to move out. Economically, doing nothing is probably the best thing a nation can do (once containment has failed) in the long run.
Latest numbers Italy, from 3047 deathsI point to the death rate only to illustrate the skew in the severity. 30% of cases are severe or critical, but these are weighted very much towards the elderly and infirm it seems. Sadly I haven't found any data on actual age and symptoms - all we get is broad overview numbers that we have to piece together. If you've a report that shows severity by age, that'd be very enlightening.
No-one does! However, there's actually a fairly brutal option that might in reality be the best, although you won't get anyone admitting to it! If we look at the possibilities of Covid becoming a yearly thing, and loads of people fighting for their lives, reality might be that nature is looking to reset the gene pool to only those who can happily resist the virus. Maybe 20% of all people have to die to leave a strong species? As human beings, we struggle to see Life in terms of the universal forces that shape and balance it. Like the forest fires that were resisted, until it was discovered that the fires were necessary to clear the growth and heat caused the next iteration of seeds to germinate. Life was actually structured around massive fires. Human health is perhaps structured around populations being shaped by disease resistance, and maybe there's not much that can (or should?) be done about it.or find a vaccine.
I don't know what the right answer i
Yes, indeed. That and the symptoms versus age. I don't think anyone has this data publicly available.Again for this discussion, the ONLY relevant numbers are the ages of people admitted to intensive care.