The data is in — stop the panic and end the total isolation.
https://thehill.com/opinion/healthca...otal-isolation
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What’s all the fuss about eh? It will be gone soon anyway......
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/202...ims-professor/
The data is in — stop the panic and end the total isolation.
https://thehill.com/opinion/healthca...otal-isolation
Of course we should be asking who has told them this, but don't forget that "The Fidesz government has been accused of "silencing media" and controlling all major media outlets in Hungary, thus creating an echo chamber that has excluded alternative political voices."Toby Helm is the Observer's Political Editor:
Downing Street trying to get us to say trust in government not declining and to rewrite this story with new headline. Request refused. We are not edited by Downing Street.
I am told Downing Street also barred Sunday Times from asking questions at its briefing because they dared to criticise govt's response to Coronavirus. Surely not so in an advanced democracy.
I am also told that if any other newspaper helped the Sunday Times they would be barred from asking questions at the briefing too. Surely none of this can be true.
This jumps out at me from that article. Thats terrifying still isnt it?The recent Stanford University antibody study now estimates that the fatality rate if infected is likely 0.1 to 0.2 percent,
In New York City, an epicenter of the pandemic with more than one-third of all U.S. deaths, the rate of death for people 18 to 45 years old is 0.01 percent
You wouldnt do anything else that gave you a 1 in 10,000 chance of death.
All this while social distancing is going on too.
Then this:
So if we let the whole country get it and the hospitals could cope wed end up, on best estimate, with 65,000 dead. And that rate is based on social distancing too.The recent Stanford University antibody study now estimates that the fatality rate if infected is likely 0.1 to 0.2 percent
Then this bit
Why not give the rate for 45-75? Is it because it wouldnt fit the its not that bad narrative?In New York City, an epicenter of the pandemic with more than one-third of all U.S. deaths, the rate of death for people 18 to 45 years old is 0.01 percent, or 10 per 100,000 in the population. On the other hand, people aged 75 and over have a death rate 80 times that. For people under 18 years old, the rate of death is zero per 100,000.
It would have been better to have had a better response earlier but since we can surely 2 or 3 months pain to get this under control is better than letting a lot of people die?
The New York Times puts the death rate for flu at typically around 0.1% in the U.S.
An article I read yesterday on the Observer website talked about concerns in the scientific community that the new cases per day figure is stubbornly refusing to drop by the expected amounts as the "levelling off" period enters another week. The Government's scientists, reasonably, make the point that the increase in number of tests per day of around 50 to 70 per cent seen in the last week to ten days has to mean that the daily number of new cases would rise, the fact that these figures have tended to remain at the levels of a fortnight ago is, effectively, proof that the number of new cases per day is declining.
However, isn't that defence really just an admission of the inadequacies of the earlier approach? Much fuss was made of the 20,000 deaths figure being passed on Saturday, but, again, that figure is recognised as being a false one now because it is for hospital deaths only - the real truth is that the 20,000 figure had been reached days earlier. About three weeks ago, a projection showing as many as 66,000 deaths in the UK (more than three times as many as any other European country). Due to them constantly over estimating the daily death figure by hundreds, that 66,000 has been revised downwards now to 32,000 which would still make us the worst affected European country, but I'd say now that the very slight possibility exists for the first time that their figure may be an under estimate now - even if we only use the hospital deaths figure, more than a thousand people have been dying every two days for a few weeks now and, with any downturn in new cases only tending to be reflected in the deaths figures about a fortnight later, that trend could go on for a while yet.
One of many flaws.
I'd have thought given the increasing number of idiots gathering there Thursday evenings, closing the bridge then would prevent social distancing being flouted.
Then again, Khan was the guy who felt it appropriate to cut the number of tube carriages meaning even though less people were on the trains, social distancing was ****ed as people jammed in...
Closing Westminster bridge![]()
The factual data during the lockdown is still really bad though. The economy would have been best protected if something was done earlier, so now we have 2 or 3 months of this to stop loads of people dying and hope that the governments manage the economy as best they can by allowing relaxing of the restrictions when possible.
The arguments haven't changed. There have been 20,000 deaths in a month despite the lockdown, that would have been worse without it.
Cant believe this thread has been going since the 10th of March and no one has thought of the economy until now!
100s of millions?
Bit of Welsh news.Mark Drakeford says there has been an "overwhelming response" from Welsh companies offering to make personal protective equipment (PPE).
"We have had almost 1,000 enquiries and offers to date, half of these have been about PPE or medtech," the first minister said.
"We can’t simply rely on supplies from overseas – we have to have a homegrown supply of essential equipment.
"As part of our ongoing efforts to build up local businesses to make more of the everyday goods we use in Wales, we’ll be looking at how we can make more of the PPE we need closer to home".
"For the first time, we are self-sufficient in scrubs in Wales – we’re making 5,000 a week, bringing back overseas jobs and anchoring them in our Welsh economy."
"We have been very fortunate that we’ve had enough PPE in Wales but two items – masks and fluid-resistant gowns – are under the most pressure."