nsacpi
Expects Yuge Games
Nearly 50% of US deaths are from nursing homes
Does that change any opinions on the severity and the proposed mitigation?
Do you have a proposed discount factor for those deaths?
Nearly 50% of US deaths are from nursing homes
Does that change any opinions on the severity and the proposed mitigation?
Nearly 50% of US deaths are from nursing homes
Does that change any opinions on the severity and the proposed mitigation?
It should if they are being honest.
Do you have a proposed discount factor for those deaths?
I'm not suggesting their lives are worth less... but that our policies were not the correct approach to protect the most vulnerable.
And yet, many (D) states continue to double down.
Why?
I think we do need to take these things into account. It is not a fun topic.
I've run through the numbers in various posts. $500 billion per month in economic losses. The value of lives saved likely in the trillions, with and without a discount factor for the old and sick. The numbers are unfathomable. That's why I think we should be looking very hard for policies/solutions that allow us to get out of having to make those choices.
What do you think the discount factor should be.
CDC now saying death rate is 0.29%.
Wonder if Americans would have accepted this if not having been scared to.death with 3.4% claims early on.
Hell, I'd wager 0.29% is still higher than it actually is.
They will eventually revise down for the last time.
You're assuming the policies actually reduced deaths and there is zero evidence to support that.
It will take a while to be able to have some precision on lives saved due to various policies. It is a difficult thing to do because in many cases official policies and spontaneous changes in behavior happened at about the same time. But I wouldn't say there is zero evidence. Consider the evidence summarized in the tweet below.
[tw]1264481222312390656[/tw]
There is not enough evidence to suggest this is causation or correlation.
No situation was like NY.
It is not the strongest evidence. Because it attempts to reduce what is a very complicated situation to one variable differing in two places. My point, however, is it is not accurate to assert there is no evidence that lockdowns/closing non-essential businesses have not saved lives. They have, but we do not yet have a precise answer of how many. Certainly the comparison of Sweden with its Scandinavian neighbors hints that the number of lives saved might be significant.
We saw before states started reopening that R naught was falling. Since then they have largely stabilized.
So "combination of official policies" plus "spontaneous action"=falling R naught.
"Spontaneous action" = stabilized R naught.
The last graph on the AJC's COVID-19 dashboard illustrates the point for Georgia. Take a look:
https://www.ajc.com/news/coronavirus-georgia-covid-dashboard/jvoLBozRtBSVSNQDDAuZxH/
The area where me and my extended family lives (Chattanooga, TN and Dalton, GA) are currently both Top 10 in the country in positive rates.
THe only way it saves lives is the assumption a treatment or vaccine will be available.
It is a truism that we all die. So it is literally the case that all policy choices will result in the same number of deaths.
But that's not a very helpful way of looking at the situation. Even if a vaccine is not found before herd immunity is developed, delaying death has value. Of course if a vaccine is developed sometime over the next year, delaying death will have turned out to be a very good gamble.
The area where me and my extended family lives (Chattanooga, TN and Dalton, GA) are currently both Top 10 in the country in positive rates.
Yikes. I had noticed that Chattanooga had made the list of new hotspots. If people take it seriously it can be brought under control. I live in Westchester County, one of the first hotspots in NY. I hope you will take some inspiration from what Westchester County has done (see below).
https://covid19-projections.com/us-ny-westchester
In a county with a population of almost a million, number of infections is now estimated at less than 400 from a peak of almost 5,000 on March 20. Si se puede!