OldandStillaVol
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I assume he is referring to a rate for younger people such as under 60. Given the death rate using actual positive tests and extrapolating out for people that do not bother getting tested because they are generally asymptomatic (or close enough not to bother getting tested), I think it is pretty clear that it is a very, very low death rate for younger people.
I know you have been studying the numbers carefully so interested in your thoughts if people older than 60 are discounted. Would you agree that the death rate appears to be basically like the flu for people under 60 based on recent data?
I think the 0.66 estimate was overall so it includes people over sixty. I don't think an overall estimate is useful now because it is clear that the fatality rate is a function of age and other conditions. A single number isn't informative. The flu is worse for the very young (infants) than Covid-19. Covid-19 probably becomes more dangerous than the flu in the older middle age group but it is unclear how much of that is due to other conditions like diabetes, respiratory illness, et. For very elderly, Covid-19 is likely much more dangerous even among those without underlying conditions.
