onpoint
Well-known member
It's your thread Randy11.
I will honor your "like".
Stay well.
SMH
I will honor your "like".
Stay well.
SMH
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I too am optimistic of these numbers. I'll take an uneducated stab based on my observations. The disease has been around a little longer than originally thought. These people testing positive didn't likely just catch the disease in the last couple of days prior to testing. It wasn't initially contained well at all or it wouldn't be in 100's of countries and all 50 states. We are just now getting more widespread confirmed cases due to increased testing. Deaths will obviously continue to rise but I'm not expecting exponential increases. Number of confirmed cases will go up and mortality will go down. This is my hope and prediction or whatever you want to call it.Curious if anyone has any information to help decipher some of the data seen here? Right now we are at 1.3% death rate. We all can agree that the number of cases is underestimated, possibly vastly underestimated. So the death rate is lower.
Will the number of deaths increase dramatically with time? How long does it take for someone to die from this?
If you compare our numbers to Italy, we have half the number of cases, but only 7% as many deaths. I sure would like to look optimistically at these number.View attachment 132061
It's not about politics. It's about a complete lack of leadership during a time of national crisis. I don't GAF what letter is behind his name. Leaders can either move us forward or continue to let us flounder in our inept response and subsequent public fear of the unknown.Ugh, and we're back to politics
Not sure if this trend has been brought up yet, it's an interesting one. Some important clues could be uncovered from this big discrepancy IMO.
More men dying from coronavirus than women, data suggests
As she struggled to understand what was taking so long, she turned on the TV, and there was President Donald Trump holding a briefing and talking about her state leader, Gov. Jim Justice.
"I'm in the middle of all this and President Trump was giving a press conference complimenting 'big Jim' on how well he's managing the health care in West Virginia and managing the Covid process. And I was like, you have got to be kidding me," Carolyn explains.
The West Virginia department of health says James' test was misplaced by a shipping company. They say James was tested a second time. Carolyn says he was not.
Curious if anyone has any information to help decipher some of the data seen here? Right now we are at 1.3% death rate. We all can agree that the number of cases is underestimated, possibly vastly underestimated. So the death rate is lower.
Will the number of deaths increase dramatically with time? How long does it take for someone to die from this?
The American Hospital Association estimated roughly 96 million infections with 480k deaths here in the US before this is over. That's a 0.5% mortality rate and to put it in perspective that's 10x a bad influenza year. Initially, I thought this seemed worse case scenario but now my gut feeling is that's probably optimistic.
I figure one of these day we will all look back and think how stupid everyone was for worrying about testing everyone instead of just worrying about fixing this.
Maybe. What is more likely is people will look back and wonder how stupid people were they didn't understand one of the integral facets of being able to isolate and contain a disease is being able to test those they suspect have it.I figure one of these day we will all look back and think how stupid everyone was for worrying about testing everyone instead of just worrying about fixing this.
I'm starting to think people believe that getting tested will somehow cure folks. Testing fixes nothing. If you are sick stay home, if you feel you need a doc call or videos conference with a doc. If you need to be hospitalized the doc will make arrangements. If everyone would simply follow these simple steps as well as personal hygiene then we will weather this storm.
Eventually the whole country will figure this out, until then does anyone have any spare TP?
But the South Korea model is one that we could follow. Unfortunately, it requires doing the proportionate number of tests that they did—they did well over a quarter of a million tests. In fact, by the time South Korea had done 200,000 tests, we had probably done less than 1,000.
Now that we've missed the opportunity for early testing, is it too late for testing to make a difference?
Absolutely not. Tests would make a measurable difference. We should be doing a stochastic process random probability sample of the country to find out where the hell the virus really is. Because we don't know. Maybe Mississippi is reporting no cases because it's not looking. How would they know? Zimbabwe reports zero cases because they don't have testing capability, not because they don't have the virus. We need something that looks like a home pregnancy test, that you can do at home.
Maybe. What is more likely is people will look back and wonder how stupid people were they didn't understand one of the integral facets of being able to isolate and contain a disease is being able to test those they suspect have it.
Not to mention, it further displays the gross incompetence and dishonesty that has been displayed thus far, and how it is simply being glossed over as no big deal.
Carry on.
The last number I seen ,don’t ask for the article because I don’t remember, was somewhere between 5-7x the Confirmed number of casesSenator Paul has tested positive but is asymptomatic.
Considering you have to be rich, famous or a politician to get tested without having symptoms, I wonder how many cases there are.
Senator Paul has tested positive but is asymptomatic.
Considering you have to be rich, famous or a politician to get tested without having symptoms, I wonder how many cases there are.
Curious if anyone has any information to help decipher some of the data seen here? Right now we are at 1.3% death rate. We all can agree that the number of cases is underestimated, possibly vastly underestimated. So the death rate is lower.
Will the number of deaths increase dramatically with time? How long does it take for someone to die from this?
If you compare our numbers to Italy, we have half the number of cases, but only 7% as many deaths. I sure would like to look optimistically at these number.View attachment 132061