
Multiple cases raise fears UK variant is already widespread in US
Cases in Colorado and California raise questions about how mutation entered the country and whether its too late to stop it
there probably is no such thing as big picture right now,because it looks like so many variables that making accurate predictions is impossible but..many vaccines coming on line, yes many hospitals are full but technique and technology are making doctors and nurses much more effective in every way from the results they got 3,6,8 months ago. In 3 weeks major changes to many essential systems, but immediate and dramatic will be the Department of Defense. And with some motivating actions at a federal level behavior mods done by law will probably help..masks in all federal agencies and facilities..Army Corp of engineers set to repurpose many things nationwide for testing and treatment..The short answer is yes. The long answer is too long and would end up wit ha lot of OT for here.
Coming from a state in Pennsylvania where there are a lot of restrictions, [NBA] coach Doc Rivers was surprised to see how loose things were in Florida.
“I don’t want to take a shot in any state but, my God,” said Rivers. “Yesterday I was under my bed I was so scared. People are walking around like there’s nothing here, I’m surprised. I know there’s only going to be about 3,000 or so at the arena so that’ll a little safer, but I’ve been pretty surprised how open and maskless this place is.”
The holidays here (Belgium) have been really calm. Rules for gathering are strict, and people are quite well motivated to follow them. We've seen cases drop until one of the lowest levels in Europe, and I think that's also stimulating people to hang on. We've seen two huge waves (March and October), and that's enough. It's interesting to see how other countries do. For example, the Czech Republic had a mild first wave, then a huge second wave (October) that has given way to a very high current third wave. That's very tough for hospitals. Switzerland a similar story, only their second wave has never abated and now that they've welcomed thousands of Brits in for skiing, they've very likely also welcomed the variant in with open arms. All that for some ski resort revenue (while all other alpine countries kept their ski slopes closed). There seems to be some kind of 'arrogance' trap that few countries that did well in the first wave have been able to avoid.
We were scared from Italy. We are Italy now and we are not scared. But I think people will be scared because they will know dead people soon.
Herd mentality instead of herd immunity ? Obviously there will be plenty of papers written about pandemic psychology and hopefully some of it will find it's way into pandemic planning for the future. Hopefully politicians are also paying attention, well you can only hope. The next lot of state elections in the USA should be interesting but not only in the USA........there will be years of material for academics to dwell on and write about.Yes, I think this all is a very interesting 'experiment' on human psychology. It seems that when countries have "decided" to behave in a certain way (either positive or negative), it is pretty persistent. There seem to be thresholds when people decide to almost collectively throw caution in the wind, or adhere to regulations. Peer pressure not to be the 'odd one out', either in being strict or being loose?
the best and brightest, will get the smartest people that there is..it's a promise that was made 4+ years ago..not sure if the organizers are drunk or drinking from the toilet. You may have seen multiple accounts of the United States being described as a third world country..anywhere and everywhere you look, monetary aid, testing, PPE, vaccine distribution and now the utter national chaos to administer the shots..disgraced all of us..and watching other countries..if Trump doesn't feel shame he is brain dead..and the two predominant meds are from the US.. Sputnik zoomed past us..Sinopharm sailed throughThey are still doing first come, first served vaccination in this Florida county. What a disaster. Although, if your goal is to get it to the people with the most means, this is probably a good strategy.
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Like I mentioned a couple of weeks ago, in Belgium, the excess mortality in 2020 was lower than the number of reported covid deaths (15000 vs. 17000). We are reporting very broadly, counting every death that may be attributable to covid, hence our 'high ranking' in covid dead/capita lists (looking at excess mortality, several countries rank ahead of us). Say we are overreporting perhaps a tad, but not much, you'd still have excess mortality underestimating covid deaths, because there has been lower mortality than expected in all age categories < 65 here. I expect that there would be indirect excess mortality in later years because of undiagnosed cancers for instance, but this wouldn't play out immediately. I thus would guess that the real covid mortality in the US may be even more than 470,000 for 2020.According to a NYT study, on Dec. 5, there were 377,000 excess deaths—deaths above the normal number expected, and thus attributed to C19. That is 31% higher than the officially reported number of deaths on that day by worldometer, about 287,750. If we apply that same % to the currently reported number of deaths of about 358,000, we get a staggering total of 470,000 deaths. I emphasize that these include not only people who died from complications of the virus, but who may have died from other causes indirectly related to the virus—e.g., someone who didn’t seek treatment for a heart condition, because of fears of exposing oneself to the virus at the hospital, or because it was too difficult to get an appointment from the overcrowded staff. Another source would be suicides and drug overdoses, problems that have been exacerbated by lockdowns and other social restrictions. OTOH, some deaths have probably been offset by the fact that social restrictions have reduced the kinds of activities that might lead to death in some instances. But the bottom line is that these are real deaths that, according to statistics, would not have happened but for the pandemic.