Coronavirus: How dangerous a threat?

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I noticed that they estimated the infection fatality rate as 0.37% based on their initial numbers. Look forward to hearing their final conclusions. Streeck seems to think transmission was more through parties and festivals with more closer contact and less through surfaces and casual encounters.
yes, in general, many of his/their conclusions and ideas seem to differ quite a bit from what others say. In the press conference today it basically sounded like they think herd immunity is an option. His collegue said that 15% isn't as far away from 60% as it looks like, and that the number of severe diseases could be minimized by having people infected with a lower dose of the virus (which I hadn't heard about before).

Merkel basically countered this immediately by saying that the only way to get rid of the virus would be a vaccine, and she has different people advising her what to do, but Streeck is working closelely with the Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia (the most heavily populated state in Germany), so it's not like he has no influence at all either.
 
yes, in general, many of his/their conclusions and ideas seem to differ quite a bit from what others say. In the press conference today it basically sounded like they think herd immunity is an option. His collegue said that 15% isn't as far away from 60% as it looks like, and that the number of severe diseases could be minimized by having people infected with a lower dose of the virus (which I hadn't heard about before).

Merkel basically countered this immediately by saying that the only way to get rid of the virus would be a vaccine, and she has different people advising her what to do, but Streeck is working closelely with the Minister-President of North Rhine-Westphalia (the most heavily populated state in Germany), so it's not like he has no influence at all either.
Wow. Thank you for the information. I had not heard of that either. It is reminiscent of smallpox variolation before the vaccine was developed.
 
Wow. Thank you for the information. I had not heard of that either. It is reminiscent of smallpox variolation before the vaccine was developed.

I don't think it's available in English, but here is that part of the press conference in German at least, for anyone who is interested:


"Durch Einhalten von stringenten Hygienemaßnahmen ist zu erwarten, dass die Viruskonzentration bei einem Infektionsereignis einer Person so weit reduziert werden kann, dass es zu einem geringeren Schweregrad der Erkrankung kommt, bei gleichzeitiger Ausbildung einer Immunität. Diese günstigen Voraussetzungen sind bei einem außergewöhnlichen Ausbruchsereignis (superspreading event, z.B. KarnevalsSitzung, Apres-Ski-Bar Ischgl) nicht gegeben. Mit Hygienemaßnahmen sind dadurch auch günstige Effekte hinsichtlich der Gesamtmortalität zu erwarten."


or google translated: "By adhering to stringent hygiene measures, it can be expected that the virus concentration in the event of an infection in a person can be reduced to such an extent that the severity of the disease is reduced, while at the same time developing immunity. These favorable prerequisites are not given for extraordinary outbreak events (superspreading event, eg carnival meeting, après-ski bar Ischgl). Therefor hygiene measures are expected to have beneficial effects on total cause mortality. "
 
I noticed that they estimated the infection fatality rate as 0.37% based on their initial numbers.

In Iceland, where they have been conducting widespread testing not limited to people with symptoms, the mortality rate seems to lie between 0.35 - 0.85%. The data there indicate about half of infected people are asymptomatic, whereas in that German town it seems to be much greater. Of the 14% with Abs, 2% (1/7) tested positive for the virus, though some of the negatives might have been people who recovered from symptoms, Conversely, there could have been positives in that group who hadn't developed Abs yet. I don't know if any data on this were furnished.

By the way, Fauci, apparently reversing course, now says Ab testing will begin soon.

Streeck seems to think transmission was more through parties and festivals with more closer contact and less through surfaces and casual encounters.

That makes sense to me. While getting the virus from surfaces is no doubt possible, I think it's probably been exaggerated as a main source of transmission.

the number of severe diseases could be minimized by having people infected with a lower dose of the virus (which I hadn't heard about before).

That could be very risky. We still don't know know how strong the relationship is between size of dose and intensity/duration of symptoms. In one of those articles Aphro posted a while back, there was a description of how that did work with smallpox, but not all viruses are necessarily the same in that regard.

"logically, the larger amount of virus should trigger more severe disease by prompting a brisker inflammatory response. But that is still speculative. The relationship between initial viral dose and severity remains to be seen.”

https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/04/06/how-does-the-coronavirus-behave-inside-a-patient

The American Throracic Society has now given its approval for the use of hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) in treatment of COVID-19. In doing this, they acknowledge that evidence from studies of this drug is “contradictory”, and basically acknowledge or imply that this is a nothing-to-lose situation. The NIH just announced it 's beginning a blinded, randomized trial involveding 500 volunteers, but it seems that the study is expected to take more than year to complete. So we will be depending on doctors's reports for a while. I want to delve into this a little more, using some simple statistics.

Start with the assumption that the mortality rate from COVID-19 is about 1%. This figure could be off by a factor of two or three in either direction, but that doesn’t affect much the argument that I’m going to make. Next, we know that about 20% of COVID-19 cases are hospitalized. Since almost all the people who die from the virus are hospitalized, this means that the mortality rate of people who are hospitalized is about 5%. This neglects the fact that some people may die at home, without ever having been hospitalized, but taking into account this would actually make my argument even stronger, so I won’t even bother with it.

So about 95% of the people who are hospitalized with COVID-19 recover. These are the people that many doctors are currently treating with HCQ. It follows that almost all patients given HCQ are going to recover, anyway. Coupled with the fact that most of these treatments don’t use controls—the emphasis is on possibly saving lives at this point, not getting rigorous data on how effective the drug is—it’s clear that even doctors who report that all of their patients treated with the drug recovered are not providing much evidence for the drug’s effectiveness. I think some doctors are claiming that the recovery is faster. Again, without controls, this is hard to confirm, but even assuming this is the case, it doesn’t mean that the drug is saving lives. Faster recovery could be very important, to be sure, because it would mean patients would get out of hospitals more quickly, making room for new patients. But that’s a separate issue.

Let’s consider critical patients, those who end up in the ICU, and usually need a ventilator. The original data from China indicated that all patients who died were critical cases—again, this ignores the people who may have died at home, without ever going to the hospital—and their figures indicated about a 50% mortality rate. About half of all critical patients died.

First, note that in light of these numbers, anecdotal evidence that HCQ has helped a few critical patients doesn’t mean much. A couple of days ago, there was a report that some woman said the drug saved her life. Maybe it did, but with a 50% chance of recovering, we can’t conclude this with any certainty. Another report, from an ex-NFL player, described how he was on a ventilator, and was sure he was going to die, and how relieved he was that he survived. Had he been treated with HCQ, no doubt he would have attributed his recovery to that, when in fact he would have survived, anyway. Another example is Boris Johnson, who has just been moved out of the ICU. While he remains hospitalized, it seems pretty safe to say he's going to recover.

Suppose, though, many such patients are studied. For example, a doctor treats half a dozen critical patients with HCQ, and all of them survive. The odds of this appear to be about 1.5%, which is fairly significant. The problem though, is that this is just one study. If many such studies are run, the odds are that some study will find all six patients recovering just by chance. E.g., if about 45 such studies of six critical patients were conducted, the odds are about 50% that one such study would result. If a much larger group of critical patients was studied, evidence of an effect could be potentially greater, but I’m not sure how many such patients most doctors see. In the U.S. currently, there are about 10,000 cases classified as serious/critical. There are about 6000 hospitals in the entire country. Even the largest ones, in the areas where the virus has spread the most, will see a limited number of such cases, and they presumably will be divided among several or more doctors.

So unless large studies with many controls are run, we may have difficulty concluding anything with certainty about the effectiveness of HCQ. Another problem with HCQ is that we really don’t know how it would work, even assuming it does. While empirical evidence rules supreme in science, evidence is rarely slam dunk, and when it isn’t, a case can be greatly strengthened when a plausible mechanism for the result can be envisioned.

This is where zinc may come in. There is solid evidence that zinc can inhibit the replicase enzyme that catalyzes the process by which viruses make copies of their RNA. The problem is that it’s very difficult to get zinc into the cells, which the virus has infected. So it’s of great interest that a study showed that chloroquine—which differs from HCQ by a single atom—is a zinc ionophore, i.e., it transports the metal ion into cells. This was reported several years ago, long before the current coronavirus had infected any people, in a study of CQ as a possible anti-cancer agent.

So assuming HCQ does have an effect, it might be through its ability to get zinc into cells. This could also explain why the effects of HCQ on COVID-19 patients so far seem to be inconsistent. Some patients, because of diet, genetics, and other factors, may have more zinc in their bodies, available for uptake into cells, than others. Thus HCQ would potentially help them more than patients with less available zinc. Studies combining HCQ and zinc can help see if there is anything to this hypothesis. If there is, there are other substances, more readily available than HCQ and with fewer potential side effects, that may accomplish the same end.
 
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At the risk of violating the rules (not a discussion or debate about Finance), I have a gripe about insurance (is insurance off limits?). We got a notice that our company health insurance is set to increase by $1.5 MIL+/- due to C19. What the?! The point of insurance is to cover you when you need it, but when you use it your rates go up. I'm not sure what this will mean for me directly yet, and I am grateful to have OK coverage, but man.

EDIT: $1.5 MIL is ~9% increase.

*Mods please kill this post if it violates the off limits items!
 
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Good grief, it's even dangerous to jog or ride a bike:

The typical social distancing rule which many countries apply between 1–2 meters seems effective when you are standing still inside or even outside with low wind. But when you go for a walk, run or bike ride you better be more careful. When someone during a run breathes, sneezes or coughs, those particles stay behind in the air. The person running behind you in the so-called slip-stream goes through this cloud of droplets.

The researchers came to this conclusion by simulating the occurrence of saliva particles of persons during movement (walking and running) and this from different positions (next to each other, diagonally behind each other and directly behind each other). Normally this type of modelling is used to improve the performance level of athletes as staying in each other air-stream is very effective. But when looking at COVID-19 the recommendation is to stay out of the slipstream according to the research.

On the basis of these results the scientist advises that for walking the distance of people moving in the same direction in 1 line should be at least 4–5 meter, for running and slow biking it should be 10 meters and for hard biking at least 20 meters. Also, when passing someone it is advised to already be in different lane at a considerable distance e.g. 20 meters for biking.

https://medium.com/@jurgenthoelen/b...alk-run-bike-close-to-each-other-a5df19c77d08

You can imagine the entire pro peloton getting infected in one race.
 
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About the situation in care homes:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...-globe-in-spotlight-over-covid-19-death-rates

In Belgium, we currently see that more than half of the reported deaths are from care homes. In many countries, these are not included in the total death toll. Regardless, these homes can become death traps. Visiting has been prohibited for about a month here, but there are outbreaks in the homes regardless. Brought in by personnel, often asymptomatic. And once it's in, it can spread very fast - one nurse probably comes into contact with 10-15 patients and several other staff, etc.
 
Fascinating article questioning whether we are using ventilators too much. Seems like a contrarian hot take on its face, but read on and there are legitimate questions about best practices for COVID-19.

View: https://twitter.com/AriSchulman/status/1248372533658710019

In Belgium, we currently see that more than half of the reported deaths are from care homes. In many countries, these are not included in the total death toll. Regardless, these homes can become death traps. Visiting has been prohibited for about a month here, but there are outbreaks in the homes regardless. Brought in by personnel, often asymptomatic. And once it's in, it can spread very fast - one nurse probably comes into contact with 10-15 patients and several other staff, etc.
All the people who think old people can be quarantined away while the rest of humanity goes on with its daily business always seems to miss this point.
 
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At the risk of violating the rules (not a discussion or debate about Finance), I have a gripe about insurance (is insurance off limits?). We got a notice that our company health insurance is set to increase by $1.5 MIL+/- due to C19. What the?! The point of insurance is to cover you when you need it, but when you use it your rates go up. I'm not sure what this will mean for me directly yet, and I am grateful to have OK coverage, but man.

EDIT: $1.5 MIL is ~9% increase.

*Mods please kill this post if it violates the off limits items!
Health insurance in the US is a bit of a special case, but insurance premiums are set to go up worldwide as a result of this. Allow me to explain a bit.

Insurance is one of the only products that people buy - oftentimes are obligated to buy by law in the case of certain classes - with the intent of never using. But because people hold that insurance, insurers are obligated to have access to sufficient funds to cover if that insurance is required. If you have cover for, say, up to €10m for a particular class of cover, the insurers must have access to enough money to provide you with that payment if you claim on it.

Obviously, realistically, an insurance company does not sit on the trillions of dollars/Euros/pounds/rials/rubles/yuan/yen/kroner/whatever that it would require to do this, if they're issuing thousands of policies a year with limits running into the millions. In practice, their money is tied up in various other assets - property, bonds, shares, private equity, and so on. And a large part of this will be reinsurance treaties, where the insurance company themselves buys insurance against catastrophic level losses that prevent them having enough money to pay claims. Usually, the company providing that reinsurance will put restrictions on what the insurer is allowed to insure for that reinsurance to be valid (for example, don't write billions of dollars of property insurance in Tornado Alley, don't insure goods on ships transporting oil through the Strait of Hormuz).

Because Covid-19 is a new disease, however, there will be a lot of legal ramifications towards this, depending on what wordings are used for cover for contagious diseases under various forms of insurance. And a lot of insurers will wind up paying a lot of money in claims on lots of different policies - including several that you might not expect. Business Interruption, for example - where a company is unable to trade or its trade is disrupted through no fault of their own - the claims for this across all countries could run into several billions, maybe trillions by the time this is finished.

Ordinarily, insurance is a very simplistic thing. You claim on it, you get your payout, but you pay more next year, and generally speaking it doesn't affect anybody else's policy because via things like investment performance and increased policy volume the insurer can replenish that loss (indeed they will usually write an expected amount of losses into their projected performances) without it impacting the average policyholder who isn't having claims.

With disaster and catastrophic losses - and when this is done it undoubtedly will qualify - that's just not possible. The losses will be at a volume, frequency and amount which the insurer may be able to respond to - at least in Europe, we have EU legislation to enforce insurers holding a sufficient amount plus a default percentage of extra money in reserve - but that simply can't be replenished in the same way without it impacting the average policyholder, because they've suddenly got to raise a large amount of money.

Say you have a company which has $100m in reserve and $100m in potential liabilities (if every policyholder claims up to the maximum amount they are entitled to)(these are tiny figures but I'm using them for convenient round figure purposes). They have $5m of claims to pay one year, so now there's $95m in reserve and $100m potential liabilities - so they've got to raise $5m. If you've got a large number of policyholders, you can do that without impacting anybody too hard, especially if you weight it as companies do to more heavily penalise the policyholders who are losing you money (the amount they claim for is more than the amount they pay into the pot). But with Covid-19, that same company if they insure a class of business which is susceptible for claims due to Covid-19, their losses this year could be several times the expected value. Even if it doesn't reach it's max, they could have, say, $60m in potential claims arising from Covid-19, so in order to be able to insure everybody equally next year, they have to raise $60m, which is much, much harder, even with weighting it to penalise the clients who are claiming more than those who aren't - because you can't recoup ALL of your losses just from the people who had those claims, because then they don't get any benefit from claiming and so why have insurance in the first place, right? So in the end even people who didn't have claims end up paying loads more.

And because this is a pretty universal problem across the board, every insurer is likely going through the same, so it's not like you can even say "well, I'm not having claims, so I'm not paying that much more, I'm going to go and find another insurer" - because every insurer is likely being inundated with claims (or expecting to be once the value of losses is known, for things like business interruption and travel), every insurer is suffering the same kind of huge losses that mean they have to replenish their reserves - they are required to do so by law, because an insurer that is potentially unable to pay its claims is effectively defrauding its customers and this kind of massive catastrophic event is precisely why they have to hold that much money in reserve - so every insurer is likely putting its prices up to try to recoup that loss. Because it's not like there's suddenly a whole wave of potential new customers. If anything, there is going to be fewer, with people dying affecting the number of personal insurances, and businesses failing as a result of not being able to withstand the loss of trade reducing the number of commercial insurances available. So you've got to raise all that money, potentially from fewer consumers - so inevitably rates go up.

That's kind of one of the reasons why the American health system seems pretty barbaric to us in Europe, and certainly it is a bit of a special case as a result because it's something that is relatively unique - the general market principles apply to it, but the US will be hit harder than most because while the nationalised health services in Europe are being inundated, they will generally be replenished through tax income rather than in individual competition.
 
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Health insurance in the US is a bit of a special case, but insurance premiums are set to go up worldwide as a result of this. Allow me to explain a bit.

Insurance is one of the only products that people buy - oftentimes are obligated to buy by law in the case of certain classes - with the intent of never using. But because people hold that insurance, insurers are obligated to have access to sufficient funds to cover if that insurance is required. If you have cover for, say, up to €10m for a particular class of cover, the insurers must have access to enough money to provide you with that payment if you claim on it.

Obviously, realistically, an insurance company does not sit on the trillions of dollars/Euros/pounds/rials/rubles/yuan/yen/kroner/whatever that it would require to do this, if they're issuing thousands of policies a year with limits running into the millions. In practice, their money is tied up in various other assets - property, bonds, shares, private equity, and so on. And a large part of this will be reinsurance treaties, where the insurance company themselves buys insurance against catastrophic level losses that prevent them having enough money to pay claims. Usually, the company providing that reinsurance will put restrictions on what the insurer is allowed to insure for that reinsurance to be valid (for example, don't write billions of dollars of property insurance in Tornado Alley, don't insure goods on ships transporting oil through the Strait of Hormuz).

Because Covid-19 is a new disease, however, there will be a lot of legal ramifications towards this, depending on what wordings are used for cover for contagious diseases under various forms of insurance. And a lot of insurers will wind up paying a lot of money in claims on lots of different policies - including several that you might not expect. Business Interruption, for example - where a company is unable to trade or its trade is disrupted through no fault of their own - the claims for this across all countries could run into several billions, maybe trillions by the time this is finished.

Ordinarily, insurance is a very simplistic thing. You claim on it, you get your payout, but you pay more next year, and generally speaking it doesn't affect anybody else's policy because via things like investment performance and increased policy volume the insurer can replenish that loss (indeed they will usually write an expected amount of losses into their projected performances) without it impacting the average policyholder who isn't having claims.

With disaster and catastrophic losses - and when this is done it undoubtedly will qualify - that's just not possible. The losses will be at a volume, frequency and amount which the insurer may be able to respond to - at least in Europe, we have EU legislation to enforce insurers holding a sufficient amount plus a default percentage of extra money in reserve - but that simply can't be replenished in the same way without it impacting the average policyholder, because they've suddenly got to raise a large amount of money.

Say you have a company which has $100m in reserve and $100m in potential liabilities (if every policyholder claims up to the maximum amount they are entitled to)(these are tiny figures but I'm using them for convenient round figure purposes). They have $5m of claims to pay one year, so now there's $95m in reserve and $100m potential liabilities - so they've got to raise $5m. If you've got a large number of policyholders, you can do that without impacting anybody too hard, especially if you weight it as companies do to more heavily penalise the policyholders who are losing you money (the amount they claim for is more than the amount they pay into the pot). But with Covid-19, that same company if they insure a class of business which is susceptible for claims due to Covid-19, their losses this year could be several times the expected value. Even if it doesn't reach it's max, they could have, say, $60m in potential claims arising from Covid-19, so in order to be able to insure everybody equally next year, they have to raise $60m, which is much, much harder, even with weighting it to penalise the clients who are claiming more than those who aren't - because you can't recoup ALL of your losses just from the people who had those claims, because then they don't get any benefit from claiming and so why have insurance in the first place, right? So in the end even people who didn't have claims end up paying loads more.

And because this is a pretty universal problem across the board, every insurer is likely going through the same, so it's not like you can even say "well, I'm not having claims, so I'm not paying that much more, I'm going to go and find another insurer" - because every insurer is likely being inundated with claims (or expecting to be once the value of losses is known, for things like business interruption and travel), every insurer is suffering the same kind of huge losses that mean they have to replenish their reserves - they are required to do so by law, because an insurer that is potentially unable to pay its claims is effectively defrauding its customers and this kind of massive catastrophic event is precisely why they have to hold that much money in reserve - so every insurer is likely putting its prices up to try to recoup that loss. Because it's not like there's suddenly a whole wave of potential new customers. If anything, there is going to be fewer, with people dying affecting the number of personal insurances, and businesses failing as a result of not being able to withstand the loss of trade reducing the number of commercial insurances available. So you've got to raise all that money, potentially from fewer consumers - so inevitably rates go up.

That's kind of one of the reasons why the American health system seems pretty barbaric to us in Europe, and certainly it is a bit of a special case as a result because it's something that is relatively unique - the general market principles apply to it, but the US will be hit harder than most because while the nationalised health services in Europe are being inundated, they will generally be replenished through tax income rather than in individual competition.
Everything that you typed is accurate, but (without getting into a finance or politics discussion), I'll be shocked if insurance companies (at least in the USA) don't come out of this still very profitable which IMO health insurance shouldn't be.
 
…. because while the nationalised health services in Europe are being inundated, they will generally be replenished through tax income rather than in individual competition.
Whilst I agree with the general thrust of your post, this quoted sentence isn't economically sustainable. That European tax income isn't a bottomless pit. When the productive portion of the EU economy shrinks and you become reliant on inefficient government rather than market driven innovation and expansion for too long you have a problem. Right now, through central banks buying back of bonds, we are inviting another GFC type crash that could make October 2008 look like a party. Of course capitalism will be blamed should this occur rather than the failure of big government to generate a sustainable economic return. I truly hope I'm wrong otherwise the human suffering that would occur across the globe for potentially decades afterwards will dwarf anything that COVID-19 could deliver.
 
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Whilst I agree with the general thrust of your post, this quoted sentence isn't economically sustainable. That European tax income isn't a bottomless pit. When the productive portion of the EU economy shrinks and you become reliant on inefficient government rather than market driven innovation and expansion for too long you have a problem. Right now, through central banks buying back of bonds, we are inviting another GFC type crash that could make October 2008 look like a party. Of course capitalism will be blamed should this occur rather than the failure of big government to generate a sustainable economic return. I truly hope I'm wrong otherwise the human suffering that would occur across the globe for potentially decades afterwards will dwarf anything that COVID-19 could deliver.
I think that - for the moment - the impact of the coronavirus will be something of a leftward move in a lot of Europe, though. We've seen a great deal of community spirit. Having seen the importance and the necessity of the health services at a time like this, people will be willing to accept the higher tax that is required to sustain it. The health services in Europe are generally funded from tax. Now, there is probably a cap to the amount of tax people are willing - or indeed able to pay, and there may need to be cuts to other taxes to enable it, but if there's one thing this crisis won't do, it's encourage Europeans that a market-based health system is the solution, because a crisis like this one is a huge equaliser, because this is not a disease that really has any differentiator between rich and poor like some do as a result of living conditions etc.. Now, if the crisis deepens to such an extent that it breaks the community spirit and turns it into a pure fight for survival then things may lurch back rightward. But I'd expect it to take a LOT to catalyse that. Just look at Britain - in 1945 they voted out the man that led the victorious World War II effort and voted in the most left wing government in its history.
 
Yes, these figures will tell us more about the true covid-mortality, although it has to be noted that mortality from other causes may also change: e.g. less traffic related deaths but perhaps more deaths by non-treated problems (because people don't dare go to the hospital). In any case, like I said, Belgium is currently reporting all suspected covid deaths, hospital, care home or at home. The number of reported deaths in The Netherlands is far lower, but if you then look at the deviation from normal in the total number of dead, that is very similar between the two countries. So yes, there's a lot of under-reporting. But again, in combination with the notion that mortality rates may realistically be close to 0.5%, it indicates widespread infection in several countries or regions. We'll soon know more.

This is also very interesting regarding excess mortality (z-scores relate to deviation from normal):
Multicountry-zscore-Total.png
 
Waves in San Diego,K38 and Reuben 's 2-3 ft..chest to shoulder high..little bumpy texture..ooops. Surfing currently off limits in SD county and Tijuana Baja District..
looks like road biking may stand as the only outdoor thing that can be enjoyed w\o police- lifeguard oversight.
I have seen a few folks many 10000's of times out of my league running..w and wo a dog..I am always jealous to see people who effortlessly glide..
outdoor activities are in need of some research beforehand..some have restrictions..others off limits..w rare and late snow falls around here it's heartbreaking to think that
It's raining very hard but in remote breaks it's nice to be out in the ocean..in San Diego and city beaches in N.Mexico the rain water run off makes being in the ocean, @48hrs after measurable precipitation dangerous..the bacteria levels are off the chart and that is pre Covid precautions.
I don't know about everyone else but right about now I am overly appreciative of artists..movies,music and everything else is certainly saving me. I have also put in a que YouTube videos of awesome photographs and marvel at watching random beautiful pictures..
 
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Potentially very useful. Going on ventilators is hard to reverse for the majority of folks.

View: https://mobile.twitter.com/EricTopol/status/1248699556591579138

There was an article I saw this week (likely difficult to find it again) where I saw that remdesivir has been started in a basically mass clinical trial. That should mean they were happy with the results they got back from their smaller trial. They said they'd have results in early April and go from there with this drug. This is the drug by the company Gilead that was originally developed for SARS.
 
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Results of random testing in Austria suggest just 0.33% of the population is infected. This is based on a sample of 1500 subjects. The RNA test, not the antibody test, was used, which has the advantage of identifying everyone who is actually infected, other than recovered people. However, currently roughly half of the cases in Austria are recovered.

Some other qualifications are in order. If 0.33% of the sample was infected, this is just 5 people, so the uncertainty should be quite high. Indeed, the range reported was 0.12 - 0. 76%, which would correspond to 2 - 11 people. Seems like a lot more testing needs to be done, but the very low number does show quite clearly that the % of the population infected is not very high, as some theories/models have hypothesized. These numbers would double if the recovered people are taken into account, but still would give a maximum of about 1.5%.

At the time at which this study was carried out, about 0.1% of the population had tested positive, so this suggests that asymptomatics might be double that of symptomatics, or four times as much taking into account recovereds. This is higher than the roughly equal number of asymptomatics and symptomatics suggested by other studies, but is more in line with the German Ab test, which found seven times as many people with Abs as tested negative. But the Austrian study would be consistent with asymptomatics and symptomatics being about equal if the lowest number in the range is used. Finally, the study excluded testing people in the hospital, which would tilt the results slightly more to asymptomatics, i.e., a significant number of symptomatic positives were not being tested.

I don't know if this information was obtained, but it would be very useful to know how many in the test sample were known recovereds, i.e., experienced symptoms at some time. You could then add these to the total to get a clearer picture of the % of symptomatics.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ria-infected-with-coronavirus-new-study-shows
 
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Yes, these figures will tell us more about the true covid-mortality, although it has to be noted that mortality from other causes may also change: e.g. less traffic related deaths but perhaps more deaths by non-treated problems (because people don't dare go to the hospital). In any case, like I said, Belgium is currently reporting all suspected covid deaths, hospital, care home or at home. The number of reported deaths in The Netherlands is far lower, but if you then look at the deviation from normal in the total number of dead, that is very similar between the two countries. So yes, there's a lot of under-reporting. But again, in combination with the notion that mortality rates may realistically be close to 0.5%, it indicates widespread infection in several countries or regions. We'll soon know more.

This is also very interesting regarding excess mortality (z-scores relate to deviation from normal):
Multicountry-zscore-Total.png
If this data is accurate, the scale they had to use for Spain's y-axis is very striking.
 
Results of random testing in Austria suggest just 0.33% of the population is infected. This is based on a sample of 1500 subjects. The RNA test, not the antibody test, was used, which has the advantage of identifying everyone who is actually infected, other than recovered people. However, currently roughly half of the cases in Austria are recovered.

Some other qualifications are in order. If 0.33% of the sample was infected, this is just 5 people, so the uncertainty should be quite high. Indeed, the range reported was 0.12 - 0. 76%, which would correspond to 2 - 11 people. Seems like a lot more testing needs to be done, but the very low number does show quite clearly that the % of the population infected is not very high, as some theories/models have hypothesized. These numbers would double if the recovered people are taken into account, but still would give a maximum of about 1.5%.

At the time at which this study was carried out, about 0.1% of the population had tested positive, so this suggests that asymptomatics might be double that of symptomatics, or four times as much taking into account recovereds. This is higher than the roughly equal number of asymptomatics and symptomatics suggested by other studies, but is more in line with the German Ab test, which found seven times as many people with Abs as tested negative. But the Austrian study would be consistent with asymptomatics and symptomatics being about equal if the lowest number in the range is used. Finally, the study excluded testing people in the hospital, which would tilt the results slightly more to asymptomatics, i.e., a significant number of symptomatic positives were not being tested.

I don't know if this information was obtained, but it would be very useful to know how many in the test sample were known recovereds, i.e., experienced symptoms at some time. You could then add these to the total to get a clearer picture of the % of symptomatics.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ria-infected-with-coronavirus-new-study-shows
I am convinced that the best current estimate in % infections (current and past) is in the absolute mortality. If a country's care system is not overrun, then there shouldn't be very high differences in the actual relative mortality between countries with a similar age structure and genetics (let's say, 0.4% based on a number of studies). Austria is home to c. 8.9 million people, and there have been about 330 deaths. I don't know if they count all suspected cases or not, but let's say the real number is 500. That would mean about 125000 past and present infections, or 1.4% of the population. Not too different from the above study. Switzerland - more than a thousand deaths and similar population - would probably be closer to 5% infections. Belgium and The Netherlands between 5-10%, and so on.
 
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There is consensus that covering your nose and mouth in public places will help protect others from your snotlets therefore I have to assume that those who choose not to do so at the grocery store don't give a F about others.
 
There is consensus that covering your nose and mouth in public places will help protect others from your snotlets therefore I have to assume that those who choose not to do so at the grocery store don't give a F about others.
I think along similar lines,that not wearing a mask for most is an act of social contempt. I follow a few YouTube channels on semi- accident. I do lots of motorcycle camping, and I bought an RV. The algorithm has given me picks that I often watch and enjoy.
The RV stuff is literally crazy..I don't know about the rest of the world,but in the US we have many people living full time in recreational vehicles. When you ask people to shelter in place..and their place is a camper..immediate quandary. Campgrounds are closed..most BLM closed. Many communities in total rejection of incoming "tourism" as people try and wait out what everyone hopes is a temporary state of emergency.
You see cops doing license plate checks all over..a an emphasis on New Yorkers lots of the time in the east..in the West pretty much the same..big signs officially and unofficially.. " Don't come here "
I watched people in Peru being repatriated to the Netherlands..@12+ hour flight and then automated messages speakered throughout the airport demanding 2 meter minimum distancing.
I think in the US there should be an absolute national mandate for mandatory masks on public transportation. Trains,ferries,buses,trains,Subways,light rail ,planes and of course Uber or Lyft and Taxi rides..
Enter into a essential public forum like a pharmacy,bank or grocery store..should not be a regional option..nation wide..and all residents in the US should be mandated period.
 
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