0.1 percent of the US population has a confirmed diagnosis. Do you really think that is going to be a big help in a reemergence next fall?
No.... I feel any situations like this..... there are going to be successes and failures.... the initial test was a failure but all the tests plus the 15 minute test is a success..... you learn from the failures and correct them for next time.....You know one way we won’t fix the issues? By deflecting that we had real problems and just accepting that we did the best we could do.
Do you believe total infected = confirmed cases?
This thing still has a ways to go though as well. I do find it incredibly interesting we might be already peaking in active cases in NY. I was pretty confident that wouldn’t happen yet. That must mean we are doing an even better job of social distancing there than I thought. But it also means unless infected is well over 10x the cases confirmed, it’s going to take a while to come back to normal without this lighting off again.
Do you believe that the problem is due to a specific individual?
Where were we (USA) going to get more test kits or equipment when (apparently) China had been expats hoarding medical supplies from Australia, Canada and other places and sending those supplies back to China?
Wouldnt a targeted approach have been better then? 50 and younger healthy people existing as normal. They get infected, while not being as likely to need healthcare, and simultaneously reducing the number of future vectors.
England actually wanted to try something like this. That was the idea.
One thing I’m not certain of is hospitalization rate vs death rate for younger than 50. I know mortality rate seems to be quite low. Not sure of hospitalization rate.
The UK ultimately abandoned this approach but I’m not sure why.
It’s an interesting question, though. One I’ve wondered about.
No I dont, that's why I said confirmed.
So we are basically trying to balance a see saw here. Dont wont so much infection that you overwhelm the healthcare system, but you'd like enough so as to build up a larger pool of immune people. Hope we nail that.
I still think a targeted quarantine for at risk folks makes more sense. It builds herd immunity faster while still limiting the risk for people in danger. It feels like we have see-sawed to much in the safe direction and the end result is we will have to do this again. The frustrating thing for me is it seems like it is for ratings and political maneuvering. Nobody wants to be the first to say “it really isn’t that bad” to only be skewered by the press when the first healthy person dies. Especially the doctors and scientists. It’s simply easier to sell the fear than the solution at this point.
I get the initial shock campaign to get it under control. I really do, and I agree with it.
However, given what we know now, anybody under about 45 that is healthy should be getting back to normal.
Snopes said that who never offered us tests and it was not uncommon for the US/countries to make their own tests.... the CDC tests were showing inconclusive and have since been fixed from what I understandFrom what I understand -- and I certainly hope that after this there is a full review of the Trump administration's mishandling of things, coming right form the top -- we initially rejected test kits coming in from the WHO and others. The stated reason was that we wanted to do our own.
Are you really going to be surprised if it turns out that the US makers of tests had something to do with that decision?
I agree even though I would be one of the ones quarantinedI still think a targeted quarantine for at risk folks makes more sense. It builds herd immunity faster while still limiting the risk for people in danger. It feels like we have see-sawed to much in the safe direction and the end result is we will have to do this again. The frustrating thing for me is it seems like it is for ratings and political maneuvering. Nobody wants to be the first to say “it really isn’t that bad” to only be skewered by the press when the first healthy person dies. Especially the doctors and scientists. It’s simply easier to sell the fear than the solution at this point.
I get the initial shock campaign to get it under control. I really do, and I agree with it.
However, given what we know now, anybody under about 45 that is healthy should be getting back to normal.
Stats arent your craft either it seems.Intentionally misleading statistic.
Snopes said that who never offered us tests and it was not uncommon for the US/countries to make their own tests.... the CDC tests were showing inconclusive and have since been fixed from what I understand
You complain about the Admin, FDA and CDC and argue we should have leaned on WHO? Have you not seen their incompetence in line with China? Youd trust WHO with anything? As far as I'm concerned, this is a reason to withdraw from the shoddy org.https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...-what-went-wrong-with-coronavirus-testing-us/
Long, but a good read.
Lack of leadership was the problem. The White House, the FDA, and the CDC needed to coordinate, not work at odds with one another.
That is serious Monday morning quarterbacking.... they had strict guidelines on who could get tested as they built up the amount of tests they had available.....they have tested lore people than anyone in the world including developing a test that gets the results back in fifte minutes.https://www.washingtonpost.com/poli...-what-went-wrong-with-coronavirus-testing-us/
Long, but a good read.
Lack of leadership was the problem. The White House, the FDA, and the CDC needed to coordinate, not work at odds with one another.
You aren't even in the game.
Let's start here: When was the unit in question created and for what purpose?
You aren't even in the game.
Let's start here: When was the unit in question created and for what purpose?
Not every potential pandemic...Test and contain - like we do every potential epidemic.
You can’t know where hotspots are if you aren’t testing.
You can’t enact targeted disease-specific protocols unless you know when and where to act.
You don’t have to test everyone. But you need accurate and available tests to find hotspots and then aggressively pursue cases there. Early.
This has nothing to do with January. The errors were made in February.