I refer to all the data trickling in that show that the actual death rate is far lower than what has been assumed. It's the German data, the Texas data, the Santa Clara data. It's in line with our very first, the Diamond Princess data. They all converge to 1% or MUCH LESS. The highest death rate of 1% belongs to the Diamond Princess; it is in line with their much older cohort.
The apparent death rate (0.02-0.3%), even though somewhat higher than 'regular' yearly flu outbreaks, does not call for closing down the world.
High quality data (eg, age-adjusted Diamond Princess data) puts the death rate around the 0.5% mark, which is 5 times more lethal than seasonal flu at 0.1%. We will no doubt get more accurate figures as time goes on.
But it's not just the death rate which is an issue: it's also the fact that a pretty large percentage of the population with coronavirus require hospitalization. I've seen figures of 5% of infected people requiring hospitalization, and a third of those requiring ICUs. Most will survive, but it nevertheless puts massive strain on the hospital system, and so the system would without doubt collapse if measures were not put in place to limit the amount of people who are infected at the same time.
During regular seasonal flu, we do not have 5% of our population in hospital, so this makes coronavirus very different to flu.
But as I have mentioned before, all this talk of whether the severity of the pandemic warrants lockdown only distracts us from the real issue, which is the question of why the West did not follow the highly successful Asian model of pandemic control, which allowed them to minimize death, avoid lockdown and keep open for business.
This issue is not resolved. We in the West are still not following the Asian model. Since this pandemic may go on for at least another 12 months, if we do not start following the Asian model soon, we are going to cripple our economy AND have a lot of death.
So rather than argue whether the coronavirus death rate is 0.5% or 0.6% or whatever, we should be all writing to our leaders, urging them to follow the model of Asian countries like Taiwan.
What you say about Taiwan only confirms that the WHO proved itself worse than useless. The US is considered the world leader so in absence of the WHO leadership it was up to the CDC to call the shots. From what I have seen the rest of the world was only happy to look up to the US and, by and large --even Russia!-- they just copied the Americans, often to a t, just a few weeks later. So it looks like those experts at the CDC have failed us all terribly. Unforgivably.
I hope we can still cut the losses if we act swiftly. Otherwise, the consequences of the mess we are still in the process of getting in are too awful to even contemplate.
I think the WHO's major error was the face mask advice. But they've also given good advice. And don't forget it was the WHO that tackled the Ebola outbreak in Africa, and prevented it from becoming a pandemic. Nobody else seemed to care about Ebola at the time, just carrying on in their own indifferent ways, while the WHO was on the frontline, saving the world from an Ebola, with many of their doctors being killed by that virus. So the WHO may have made an error with face mask advice, but they do good, and Trump is very wrong to cut their funding.
Glad to see the US CDC showing some common sense, though, and overriding the WHO advice not to wear face masks or face coverings. The CDC now recommend some form of face covering in public. But it should go further: they should make it a law to cover your face in public, not just a recommendation. And the US government should be setting up new factories to make masks for everyone in the US.
The UK government is well behind the curve, and have still not recommended any form of face covering. The UK government don't seem to be thinking for themselves, they just follow the WHO advice, and the politicians extricate themselves from blame by saying "we are following the scientific advice".
Edited by Hip, 21 April 2020 - 01:16 AM.