Coronavirus
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Originally posted by Anastasius View PostAt last...someone who knows what they are talking about. Many many thanks for the reply.
He really did make all these up and knows much less than you do
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Originally posted by Simon B View PostFewer Smart things. More smart people.
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Originally posted by burning dog View PostNo-one would , but it may give hope to someone 80 plus if they do get infected. A few older relatives in my family seem to think if they contract Corona virus it's "curtains"
Regrettably it's not just about survive/don't though. I forget the figure - is it something like 15% of all diagnosed sufferers to-date require hospital admission? Given the age distribution, that must be heavily skewed to older cohorts? 50% of diagnosed 80+ or something? Another basis for asserting that the rate of infection must be heavily attenuated to give the NHS some chance of coping.
Cynics (I might be among them) may consider that the govt doesn't really care about, well, anyone except their "tribe" really. However, what options are there to protect the most at-risk cohorts:
1) Isolate them - i.e. what the govt is already proposing, with whatever motives.
2) Isolate everyone as much as possible - Italy style total lockdown.
3) ... ... ... ?
Any ideas? I'm not hearing any.
Is 2) really better than 1)? Maybe it is, but why? What does it achieve in the medium term?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View Post
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Originally posted by Anastasius View PostTrue. But it does not factor in if they had (and how many) underlying medical conditions.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostYou consider your epidemiological opinion superior to the author - a Harvard professor - of this article?Fewer Smart things. More smart people.
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Originally posted by Simon B View PostIndeed so. More emphasis on calm appraisals of the evidence in various corners of the media would be welcome, but is about as likely as <add really unlikely thing here>.
Regrettably it's not just about survive/don't though. I forget the figure - is it something like 15% of all diagnosed sufferers to-date require hospital admission? Given the age distribution, that must be heavily skewed to older cohorts? 50% of diagnosed 80+ or something? Another basis for asserting that the rate of infection must be heavily attenuated to give the NHS some chance of coping.
Cynics (I might be among them) may consider that the govt doesn't really care about, well, anyone except their "tribe" really. However, what options are there to protect the most at-risk cohorts:
1) Isolate them - i.e. what the govt is already proposing, with whatever motives.
2) Isolate everyone as much as possible - Italy style total lockdown.
3) ... ... ... ?
Any ideas? I'm not hearing any.
Is 2) really better than 1)? Maybe it is, but why? What does it achieve in the medium term?
Arguments against , such as non compliance , can be levelled at almost any strategy.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Count Boso
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostWell I’m certainly no fan of the government, and I wouldn’t be directly impacted by the over 70’s isolation policy ( though will be indirectly), but I haven’t yet seen any strong arguments against the proposed policy .
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Originally posted by Anastasius View PostTrue. But it does not factor in if they had (and how many) underlying medical conditions.
Again, extrapolating individual circumstances from population statistics is a fallacious exercise. That doesn't in any way invalidate conclusions about the overall effect of a policy based on population statistics. ("Population" here just means a sufficiently large sample. Part of the problem with the recorded COV-19 stats is that they are inevitably a small, biased sample of the actual population. This is why the measured mortality rate is viewed as probably being an overestimate of the true "population" statistic. The WHO is being strident on this matter for good reasons - if you aren't testing enough people, you don't know what is really going on which makes inferences drawn from the data less reliable.)
Just to reiterate: I have no real expertise on any of this. Getting the detail right is an enormously complex task best left to proper epidemiologists - PhD+ level mathematicians/statisticians/virologists/computer scientists around the world whose working lives are dedicated to trying to understand it.
The broad thrust should be understandable to anyone with a decent grounding in science and logic though.
Whether governments are making the right political decisions based on scientific advice which ultimately is uncertain by its very nature, is a quite separate question.
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If the reaction of those with whom we chatted during the interval in this afternoon's concert in a local church - quite a lot of of them in the age group that will be affected - is anything to go by, Matt Hancock is going to have a real battle on his hands if he expect over-70s who are not suffering symptoms to stay at home for 12 weeks.
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<< Bit confusing as to whether 'isolation' means, literally "staying at home" , inside their four walls, or allowing people to at least go out for walks and stay clear of (at least 2 metres away from) other people - and not touching hard surfaces. Though the main reason for the policy appears to be to avoid the elderly putting a huge strain strain on available services, rather than for their own well-being. >>
Absolutely at the core of this problem.
What, exactly and detailedly, IS 'self-isolation'?
Lots of thoughts, ideas ec, but what does the govt say / will act on, and what do properly qualified medics say?
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Originally posted by Count Boso View PostBit confusing as to whether 'isolation' means, literally "staying at home" , inside their four walls, or allowing people to at least go out for walks and stay clear of (at least 2 metres away from) other people - and not touching hard surfaces. Though the main reason for the policy appears to be to avoid the elderly putting a huge strain strain on available services, rather than for their own well-being.
I think it would be good for “ isolation “ to be presented as something of benefit to all, including those affected by it. And allowing sensible observance ( contact between those isolated, encouraging safe outdoor activity etc) seems likely to increase compliance.
Incidentally , AFAICS, the NHS has already ground to a halt for all practical purposes at GP level, but then again we have little choice at this point than to trust the professionals.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostIf the reaction of those with whom we chatted during the interval in this afternoon's concert in a local church - quite a lot of of them in the age group that will be affected - is anything to go by, Matt Hancock is going to have a real battle on his hands if he expect over-70s who are not suffering symptoms to stay at home for 12 weeks.
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[QUOTE=LMcD;782862]If the reaction of those with whom we chatted during the interval in this afternoon's concert in a local church - quite a lot of of them in the age group that will be affected - is anything to go by, Matt Hancock is going to have a real battle on his hands if he expect over-70s who are not suffering symptoms to stay at home for 12 weeks.[/QUOTE
I don’t expect Millenials to be very impressed by that kind of attitude. And they are , to a considerable extent, the ones paying the bills round here, and the ones keeping the NHS running.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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