I see that The Guardian is again referencing the IHME report (that of the 2,932 peak and 66,314 deaths) in today's paper. To me this seems both irresponsible and lazy journalism.
IHME appears to be using a general model (i.e. not designed specifically for the UK) into which, at some point in the past, it fed the parameters for 140 countries, regions within countries and all US states. As far as the UK is concerned it *appears* that the model has only been updated by replacing forecast deaths with the actual numbers (to 5th April) but the the starting parameters don't appear to have been amended to reflect the current situation. There is also the issue of how accurate those initial parameters were, especially when the UK was just one of the 140 regions being modelled.
Something of the accuracy of IHME model and the figures quoted by The Guardian can be judged by comparing the model's projections for the 7th April with the actual data:
(The IHME gives mean, lower and higher projections. The Guardian has only quoted the mean projection.)
7th April: IHME vs Actual
Hospital beds for Covid-19 patients
IHME ("covidbeds needed by day"): mean 56,379, lower 40,911, higher 75,770
Actual: 19,438 excluding NI
Intensive Care Beds
IHME ("ICU covid beds needed by day"): mean 12,468, lower 9,164, higher 16,821
Actual: 3,067 excluding NI
Deaths
IHME: mean 1,233, lower 480, higher 2,614
Actual: 938, but the average of the past 3 days might be a better figure: 721
Rate of increase of the deaths as at 7th April
IHME: mean 20%, lower 8%, higher 35%
Actual: 13.3% (average of the last 3 days)
So as far as deaths are concerned the UK might be somewhat higher than the IHME lower projections but markedly lower than the mean projections quoted by The Guardian. Time will tell.
IHME appears to be using a general model (i.e. not designed specifically for the UK) into which, at some point in the past, it fed the parameters for 140 countries, regions within countries and all US states. As far as the UK is concerned it *appears* that the model has only been updated by replacing forecast deaths with the actual numbers (to 5th April) but the the starting parameters don't appear to have been amended to reflect the current situation. There is also the issue of how accurate those initial parameters were, especially when the UK was just one of the 140 regions being modelled.
Something of the accuracy of IHME model and the figures quoted by The Guardian can be judged by comparing the model's projections for the 7th April with the actual data:
(The IHME gives mean, lower and higher projections. The Guardian has only quoted the mean projection.)
7th April: IHME vs Actual
Hospital beds for Covid-19 patients
IHME ("covidbeds needed by day"): mean 56,379, lower 40,911, higher 75,770
Actual: 19,438 excluding NI
Intensive Care Beds
IHME ("ICU covid beds needed by day"): mean 12,468, lower 9,164, higher 16,821
Actual: 3,067 excluding NI
Deaths
IHME: mean 1,233, lower 480, higher 2,614
Actual: 938, but the average of the past 3 days might be a better figure: 721
Rate of increase of the deaths as at 7th April
IHME: mean 20%, lower 8%, higher 35%
Actual: 13.3% (average of the last 3 days)
So as far as deaths are concerned the UK might be somewhat higher than the IHME lower projections but markedly lower than the mean projections quoted by The Guardian. Time will tell.
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