Originally posted by LTownZag
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Roth, Zags plan for season of uncertainty
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Agent provocateur
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Originally posted by sonuvazag View PostWashington has been doing well. My point with Markburn is there was a surge in testing around June 1st when contact tracing began in earnest which would explain the rise in cases at that point. The more recent escalation in the last week is more difficult to explain away and I wouldn't expect anyone knows yet for certain if we're heading back toward more hospitalizations and deaths in the next few weeks.
Large surge in testing beginning Monday June8th (and then tracking the weekdays for the past 2 weeks) but no increase (or only a tiny%) increase in positive cases from the week of Jun 8-14 to the week of June 15-21.
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Originally posted by LTownZag View PostI haven't been following WA-only stats recently, but I don't see the phenomenon you're describing.
Large surge in testing beginning Monday June8th (and then tracking the weekdays for the past 2 weeks) but no increase (or only a tiny%) increase in positive cases from the week of Jun 8-14 to the week of June 15-21.
There are two fairly distinctive surges in overall testing in WA, one on May 18 and one on June 9th. These two surges taken together, and considering the implementation of contact tracing started in mid-May, may explain a bit of the surge in recorded cases starting in late May, but I don't see how it could be any justification for the surge in cases continuing and getting worse over the last week. It is this most recent surge that concerns me the most and it remains to be seen if there will also be a reversal of what has been a decent trend for hospitalizations and deaths.
MDAbe and Markburn are saying this virus has already reached and killed the majority of people that are vulnerable and there's no concern if cases rise because hospitalizations and deaths are going down and will continue to do so. I'm not sure they're right, but I hope they are.Agent provocateur
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MDAbe and Markburn are saying this virus has already reached and killed the majority of people that are vulnerable and there's no concern if cases rise because hospitalizations and deaths are going down and will continue to do so. I'm not sure they're right, but I hope they are.
The first is that long-term care facilities, nursing homes and senior living joints are really locked down. Many, if not most, are essentially in quarantine isolation with heavy restrictions on entry, more robust precautions inside, and much more testing of staff and residents (state mandated a while back).
The second reason is what BurgessEra, Esq. expressed in this thread and is smartly practicing himself -- staying home. More older and vulnerable people are sheltering, masking, etc., and they've bettered their routines over time to stay COVID free.
I do expect there are other factors. There's a reason some of these bugs are seasonal, and we know it's not just because of human behavior differences between summer and winter. Sadly, we don't know all the reasons but some are surely environmental. Multiple improvements in healthcare protocols are helping, along with keeping our providers from getting sick and spreading it around hospitals and their homes. More available PPE has contributed to that.
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Originally posted by caduceus View PostI suspect that is a minor contributor, but I very, very much doubt that all the really vulnerable people have been culled from Washington to affect the statistics appreciably. From what I've seen, I suspect there are two larger reasons.
The first is that long-term care facilities, nursing homes and senior living joints are really locked down. Many, if not most, are essentially in quarantine isolation with heavy restrictions on entry, more robust precautions inside, and much more testing of staff and residents (state mandated a while back).
The second reason is what BurgessEra, Esq. expressed in this thread and is smartly practicing himself -- staying home. More older and vulnerable people are sheltering, masking, etc., and they've bettered their routines over time to stay COVID free.
I do expect there are other factors. There's a reason some of these bugs are seasonal, and we know it's not just because of human behavior differences between summer and winter. Sadly, we don't know all the reasons but some are surely environmental. Multiple improvements in healthcare protocols are helping, along with keeping our providers from getting sick and spreading it around hospitals and their homes. More available PPE has contributed to that.Agent provocateur
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Originally posted by caduceus View PostI suspect that is a minor contributor, but I very, very much doubt that all the really vulnerable people have been culled from Washington to affect the statistics appreciably. From what I've seen, I suspect there are two larger reasons.
The first is that long-term care facilities, nursing homes and senior living joints are really locked down. Many, if not most, are essentially in quarantine isolation with heavy restrictions on entry, more robust precautions inside, and much more testing of staff and residents (state mandated a while back).
The second reason is what BurgessEra, Esq. expressed in this thread and is smartly practicing himself -- staying home. More older and vulnerable people are sheltering, masking, etc., and they've bettered their routines over time to stay COVID free.
I do expect there are other factors. There's a reason some of these bugs are seasonal, and we know it's not just because of human behavior differences between summer and winter. Sadly, we don't know all the reasons but some are surely environmental. Multiple improvements in healthcare protocols are helping, along with keeping our providers from getting sick and spreading it around hospitals and their homes. More available PPE has contributed to that.
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Originally posted by Markburn1 View PostWouldn't you say this chart is misleading? I see these # of cases charts almost universally. What you don't see on a consistent basis are the charts that show hospitalizations and deaths.
Death numbers are widely available (although recent news accounts seem to suggest that some states are fudging their numbers -- intentionally or unintentionally -- regarding cause of death. I dunno anything about that).
Hospitalizations are a a bit trickier, since every state reports them differently, not to mention that initial diagnoses when someone is admitted is not always specific enough, or may change. For example, one might be admitted with shortness of breath, but discharged with something like "myocardial infarction."
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Originally posted by Markburn1 View PostWhich has been my contention from day one. If we had focused on the most vulnerable in the beginning the numbers of deaths and hospitalizations would have been reduced to a degree. I suspect it would have been a huge mitigating factor. Instead we shut down the entire country and we will pay for it in lives and a diminishing quality of life for years to come.Agent provocateur
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Originally posted by sonuvazag View PostFocusing on the most vulnerable began when a bunch of people died at that facility in Bellevue. It doesn't get much earlier than that.
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Originally posted by caduceus View PostNo, not misleading. I was talking about cases in response to it being mentioned that they were falling. The graph is accurate for its intended purpose. That's all.
Death numbers are widely available (although recent news accounts seem to suggest that some states are fudging their numbers -- intentionally or unintentionally -- regarding cause of death. I dunno anything about that).
Hospitalizations are a a bit trickier, since every state reports them differently, not to mention that initial diagnoses when someone is admitted is not always specific enough, or may change. For example, one might be admitted with shortness of breath, but discharged with something like "myocardial infarction."
I think the comparisons of total deaths or total confirmed cases per country are examples of this. They are accurate and not misleading, but the same comparison graphs adjusted for population size are generally more of what I (and I think most people) want measured when comparing the severity of the outbreak. The USA, for example, has almost as many people as the entire EU. If one wants to look at the scale of tragedy of the deaths from "X", look at deaths per-capita, or at least compare places with similar populations (California vs Spain, or the USA vs the EU).
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Originally posted by JPtheBeasta View PostIt seems to me that this was not really the case because in New York, and I believe elsewhere, persons recovering from Covid were placed in nursing homes after hospital discharge. Is this a contended data point or one that is universally agreed upon?
Mar 10 https://www.king5.com/article/news/h...b-0a1e476f83d6
Mar 10 https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/10/u...n-seattle.html
Mar 10 https://www.twincities.com/2020/03/1...r-coronavirus/
Mar 10 https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/03/...amily-members/
Mar 11 https://time.com/5799096/coronavirus...homes-elderly/
If the contention is that people didn't recognize the risk to the elderly and infirm right away and implement restrictions on nursing homes right away, that is simply not the case.Agent provocateur
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Originally posted by MDABE80 View PostMarkburn says..."isn't it probable that the virus has claimed the most vulnerable and though cases are climbing for various reasons the folks that are being infected are nowhere near the danger of death and hospitalization we saw at peak?
Exactly what's happening Mark. Good call.
Let's say another 10x that number were infected and survived.
That totals .77million people.
Let's then just then double that total, for the sake of argument, in case either death or infection has been massively higher than is known.
That extremely high estimate would be ~1.7 million Americans over 70 already killed or infected.
Such a total would represent just 5% of the 36million americans over 70.
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Originally posted by sonuvazag View PostMar 2 https://www.npr.org/sections/health-...-nursing-homes
Mar 10 https://www.king5.com/article/news/h...b-0a1e476f83d6
Mar 10 https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/10/u...n-seattle.html
Mar 10 https://www.twincities.com/2020/03/1...r-coronavirus/
Mar 10 https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/03/...amily-members/
Mar 11 https://time.com/5799096/coronavirus...homes-elderly/
If the contention is that people didn't recognize the risk to the elderly and infirm right away and implement restrictions on nursing homes right away, that is simply not the case.
My mother is in an assisted living home. There was a decided lack of concern there and they didn't even have a plan until well after the spread of the virus was significant. They were lucky. Everything is locked down now and no visitors are allowed. They have zero infections. Once again, lucky.
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Originally posted by Markburn1 View PostWhich has been my contention from day one. If we had focused on the most vulnerable in the beginning the numbers of deaths and hospitalizations would have been reduced to a degree. I suspect it would have been a huge mitigating factor. Instead we shut down the entire country and we will pay for it in lives and a diminishing quality of life for years to come.
If the public had been told, as soon as we knew the size and scope of things, that everybody over 60 had to self-isolate for the foreseeable future, how do you think that would have gone over? Then you have elder care facilities (which are always, always underfunded -- even the good ones) needing PPE and isolation equipment, more sanitizer, etc. These things take weeks to implement (and longer when every other facility is competing for the same stuff -- just like the toilet paper run). By the time you get your act together, it's already spreading like wildfire.
There are many other reasons, but my fingers are tiring. But, probably the greatest reason this is difficult to implement is that it's near impossible to lock down this age group like that while you let it spread rampantly through the rest of the population. I constantly hear this argument, but never, ever from epidemiologists (except that one idiot from Sweden, who has since apologized and admitted it was a huge miscalculation that cost thousands of lives). Yes, they recommend the vulnerable take added precautions. But, you cannot seal away only the elderly/vulnerable from society and have any success whatsoever.
I'm sorry, but that's just the way it is. The press and others should drop this argument as they are making the problem worse in doing so. The shut down would have been effective had we not opened up early without enough testing and tracing in place. Now we're in the second verse, but worse than the first.
You don't take off your parachute mid-air just because it's slowed your fall.
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