I wonder why you assume that someone with a half a brain has not understood back in Feb. that lockdowns were necessary "to avoid having everyone that is going to be infected coming in at the hospital AT THE SAME TIME". You don't seem to realize that we are already past that point. Now we are at the point when we should be questioning how good were the estimates and how effective were the measures based on them at "saving lives".
We are not actually past that point. Antibody testing of the general population has produced difference results in different areas, but they indicate that so far only small percentage of the population has contracted coronavirus. For example, a study in Santa Clara in the US found only 3% of the population had been infected.
It will not be until around 80% are infected that we will reach herd immunity and the pandemic will then be over. So we have a long way to go.
Lockdowns have achieved a flattening of the curve of daily deaths for the moment, but as soon as restrictions are lifted, the daily deaths will surge up again.
So we are not past that point.
If you have not got a mathematical brain it's probably hard to understand this, because to understand pandemics you have to understand not only medical science, but mathematics too.
The whole point of my post was to emphasize that, having built makeshift hospitals and acquired enough ventilators and equipment, the NYC actual experience showed that the additional measure of a 2-month lockdown may not have been necessary -- i.e. maybe just a couple of weeks would suffice? Or, alternatively, with the 2-months lockdown in place the numbers of needed hospital and ICU beds were grossly overestimated. Turned out, no lives were lost due to lack of beds, ICUs, ventilators or med personnel -- much of which has remained unused.
The models have lied. The numbers were inflated. At what cost? I don't know how more clearly to put this.
The models have not lied. They were pretty accurate. The only reason we have spare ICU bed capacity at the moment is because (a) we built more makeshift hospitals very quickly, and (b) we imposed a series of drastic viral transmission control measures which greatly reduced the speed of the pandemic, and thus reduced the number of people who get infected at the same time. With both these strategies in place, we fortunately have some spare ICU capacity.
But if it had not been for those models, then we would not have imposed control measures, nor built those hospitals, then right now we would have total pandemonium and a totally broken healthcare system.
So no, the models did not lie. The models were fine.
The thing we did wrong in the West was not preparing enough for the pandemic in advance, and not adopting more intelligent control measures like universal mask wearing, that I think would have been much more effective than lockdowns, thus saving hundreds of thousands of lives, and trillions of dollars.
Edited by Hip, 20 April 2020 - 09:37 PM.