Metaphysicist
Not Actually Brian Hunter
So the fact that China has effectively silenced a WHO official doesnt concern you about WHO agenda or mission?
Sure it does. I think China is undermining the WHO by injecting this political issue.
So the fact that China has effectively silenced a WHO official doesnt concern you about WHO agenda or mission?
1) Didn't ignore the article. I read it and it said this:
2) You actually ignored the fact that the increase in NY flu numbers is based on lab-confirmed cases.
3) I absolutely acknowledge it is highly transmittable. I have literally never denied this. I have said that different people spread at different rates which is obvious. Isolated people/groups spread less; this is also obvious.
4) "Travelers from China had an infection rate" is not saying anything. It is axiomatically true that anyone who left Wuhan with the virus was at risk of spreading the virus to other wherever they went. No one denies that. But that does not automatically mean that wherever they arrived was immediately subject to a widespread pandemic. Initial person to person transmission rates among "seeders" can vary widely. That's why New Rochelle exploded - one dude went literally everywhere in the whole town. But the guy next to him on the plane might have just gone home and slept.
Telling is not showing. Show me a possible curve that begins in October and has the current death totals.
Sure it does. I think China is undermining the WHO by injecting this political issue.
Telling is not showing. Show me a possible curve that begins in October and has the current death totals. I'm not responding to any other of your gobbledygook until you do.
Sure it does. I think China is undermining the WHO by injecting this political issue.
I have tried and I can't visualize any possible curve where there is widespread infection from October, basically nobody dies for 4 months, but then there an exponential explosion in deaths. So I would love to see what you are visualizing.
So why should the US be cooperating with WHO?
Who said widespread infection then? That is your issue. It takes a whole to grow and the fact we are being swarmed indicates it's been growing for months.
Telling is not showing. Show me a possible curve that begins in October and has the current death totals. I'm not responding to any other of your gobbledygook until you do.
To repeat:
something something perfect enemy good
I mean China mobilized treatment centers very quickly. As a result, and with the help of some questionable quarantine methods, COVID-19 cases have to plateaued in China and things are getting back to normal for them. We are 2 months into the first US case and we don't even have mass testing available and cases have seemingly doubled every week after Trump said we'd have "zero cases in a week or two." There absolutely ways in which China has been way better than the West at dealing with this virus.
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Fine - Lets go basic.
Lets say only 1 seed infection came over on 11/1 and that based on pattern of behavior we assume every three days each new infected infects another 1.3 people. I think thats a conservative estimate based on the fact that some stay within very closed social settings while others are spreaders.
By Feb 1st an aggregate amount of infected is 14,755.
Using an assumed hopsitalization rate of 10% (very high) that gives us 1,475 that would have been hospitalized.
Then using what I believe the real death rate to be (.01%) an aggregate amount of 147 deaths would have been causes.
Fast forward these numbers to current day and you have:
1.659M aggregate infections
166K aggreagte hospitalization
16,600 aggregate deaths
So you can see it grows very quickly. My assumptions has only one seed infection (but assumptions to grasp an average spread rate) but it also has uncontrolled measures with no government intervention. Its not at all difficult to understand how this grows.
We can continue if you'd like.
Alright, thank you for posting something that gives some sense of what you are thinking about. It really clears up where you are going wrong, and the error is extremely ironic based on how many times you've used the word "math" in this thread.
A) No subtle way to say it: your math is just wrong, on the most basic level. If you have 1.6M infections and 16K deaths, that's a 1% death rate not 0.01%. At a 0.01% death rate you'd expect 160 deaths. You have unwittingly demonstrated that a 0.01% doesn't get you anywhere close to what we are seeing, even given a very long interval of transmission.
B) Over the past 8 days, Italy has averaged 750 deaths per day. With a 0.01% death rate, that means ~7.5m new infections per day, or 60m infections to get those 8 days of deaths. Italy only has 60m people. The math on why that doesn't work should be clear.
C) Deaths in NYC are up over 500 since March 14. At 0.01% death rate, that's already bumping up against the entire city population.
D) A 0.01% death rate would mean if literally every single American (unlikely) got it, we'd see 33k deaths. A few pages back you were estimating 100k-200k. Just FYI if you were worried about consistency
Other than that, your numbers actually showcase the problem very well, and I don't understand why you would be happy about them? In your scenario we have seen 16,453/16,600 death just since the beginning of February (and the vast majority in March, which seems right. Using your 1.3/3 days numbers, that puts us at 22M infected and 220,000 dead just over the next month. Which seems bad and makes the case very well for why we have taken measures to limit the R0.