Wouldn't the modeled curve show the daily deaths without the lockdown?Good news! From this day forward, the models are getting more accurate:
View attachment 211562
Come September, the predictive capability will be almost perfect.
Their best case model was projecting about 250 deaths per day (peak). They were (and still are) hilariously wrong regardless of how you look at it.Wouldn't the modeled curve show the daily deaths without the lockdown?
We've known since the beginning who dies from this disease. Protect the more vulnerable populations instead of wasting resources on restraining those least likely to suffer long-term effects. What we don't know how to shield the most vulnerable when there is widespread community transmission but it's something we really need to get right quickly instead of relying on low community rates because that can't work for long term without an effective vaccine and a highly vaccinated general population most expect to take years to happen.Their best case model was projecting about 250 deaths per day (peak). They were (and still are) hilariously wrong regardless of how you look at it.
https://mn.gov/covid19/assets/MNmodel_PPT 5.21.20 1019AM_tcm1148-434753.pdf
https://covid19.healthdata.org/united-states-of-americaUsing old school shoe-leather information-gathering, the Times journalists identified 54,000 Covid-19 deaths in long-term care facilities among patients and staff (the breakdown between the two groups is not given). This represents a staggering 43% of all Covid-19 deaths in the US, a proportion similar to what was previously reported from France.
Furthermore, the Times constructed a state-by-state table that demonstrates that almost half of these deaths (26,331) occurred in just five states that were part of the devastating March and April wave in the Northern US: New Jersey, New York, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Illinois. (Florida sits in 10th place, with 1,748 nursing home deaths).
Which means that a crucial issue affecting mortality is whether the raging epidemic in Southern states will result in the virus further spreading into nursing homes.
Canada’s “national shame”: Covid-19 in nursing homes
Nursing homes account for 81 percent of Covid-19 deaths in the country. How did this happen?
I think i may have mentioned this but the European guy who came up with the original model was wrong with every model he ever produced, yet he was still believed with the projections for the corona virus outbreak.Good news! From this day forward, the models are getting more accurate:
View attachment 211562
Come September, the predictive capability will be almost perfect.

...for a policy expected to save one life (which means a probability of about 0.0000000033 that it will save your life), we should be willing to sacrifice up to 3.3 cents per American, or $10 million altogether. (This is exactly what economists mean when they say that in the United States, the value of a life is about $10 million.)
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/sweden/STOCKHOLM (Reuters) - Sweden’s daily tally of new COVID-19 cases fell to its lowest since late May on Tuesday, a sharp reversal from June when expanded testing fuelled record numbers in a country that drew global attention for its rejection of a lockdown.
Cases in the Nordic country have declined sharply over the past few days and on Tuesday only 283 new cases were recorded.
Either they're attaining herd immunity (could be, but I have my doubts) or people are finally being very careful.
Hi there,Either they're attaining herd immunity (could be, but I have my doubts) or people are finally being very careful.
I hope it never comes to that...I suppose if I get a severe infection, I'll feel differently.
I could also get hit by a bus, fall in a manhole, or have my brains blown out by a micrometeorite that survives reentry.I hope it never comes to that...
Funny the movie "A Million Ways To Die In The West" just played two times on channel Fx recently. The movie is set in 1882 and the lead character talks about how many ways you could die in that period.I could also get hit by a bus, fall in a manhole, or have my brains blown out by a micrometeorite that survives reentry.
So many dumb ways to die...
Funny the movie "A Million Ways To Die In The West" just played two times on channel Fx recently. The movie is set in 1882 and the lead character talks about how many ways you could die in that period.
Now you would think we've come a long way since then, but all of a sudden it doesnt seem that way. Cures for this, cures for that, but no cure for some things. People still die in unusual ways for unusual reasons.
Awesome! I've never heard of this. Next binge-watch series...So many dumb ways to die for dummies.
Shoppers in Australia's second-biggest city stripped supermarket shelves Wednesday as millions in Melbourne prepared for a return to virus lockdown, with warnings the new restrictions could prompt a mental health crisis.
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Restaurants and cafes will be limited to serving takeaway food, while gyms, beauty salons and cinemas will be forced to close again.
Residents will be restricted to their homes except for work, exercise, medical care or to buy essentials -- a return to social isolation that was only recently lifted.