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Nzoner's Game Room>***NON-POLITICAL COVID-19 Discussion Thread***
JakeF 10:28 PM 02-26-2020
A couple of reminders...

Originally Posted by Bwana:
Once again, don't come in this thread with some kind of political agenda, or you will be shown the door. If you want to go that route, there is a thread about this in DC.
Originally Posted by Dartgod:
People, there is a lot of good information in this thread, let's try to keep the petty bickering to a minimum.

We all have varying opinions about the impact of this, the numbers, etc. We will all never agree with each other. But we can all keep it civil.

Thanks!

Click here for the original OP:

Spoiler!

[Reply]
petegz28 11:30 AM 09-04-2020
So yesterday there was talk about the KC area getting slammed or something. Here are some stats..

KC Area:
5.2% of hospital beds are used for Covid
33.6% of hospital beds are available

8.7% of ICU beds are used for Covid
33.3% of ICU beds are available


JoCo:
5.4% of beds are used for Covid
41.8% of beds are available

8.8% of ICU beds are used for Covid
52.7% of ICU beds are available

Jackson County:
5.7% of beds used for Covid
29% of beds available

7.8% of ICU beds used for Covid
29.5% of ICU beds available



So whomever is saying KC is getting ran on or whatever I think needs to re-think their take.

In the entire KC area over 1/3 of the hospital beds are empty

In JoCo alone damn near half the beds are empty and over half of the ICU beds
[Reply]
BWillie 11:34 AM 09-04-2020
It will be interesting to see how the cold and flu season goes. It may just be that enough people have already got the virus and have some immunity that it limits the spread to some degree. I certainly expect an uptick of cases in a couple months though to levels we may have never seen before or at the top of levels we have seen.

I wonder what percentage of the population has some immunity? If there are some 6-7M reported cases, one would think there is at least triple that of ACTUAL cases that have ran it's course. Combine that with the people that already seem to not be susceptible to the virus that will hopefully help mitigate the spread even at peak cold and flue times.
[Reply]
petegz28 11:39 AM 09-04-2020
Some more fun stats:

Since July 19th 7-day average for testing in the KC area has dropped almost 50%
[Reply]
Frenchy 11:44 AM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by Pants:
They probably shelved it due to the fact that both MERS and SARS were curbed before they could spread due to their relatively slow spread.
I've seen this point brought up in a lot of conspiracy corners of the internet. Basic rules of supply and demand answer this question.
[Reply]
petegz28 11:47 AM 09-04-2020
Interesting as well...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of tests was 4,041 tests a day in the KC area. As of yesterday it has dropped to 2,225.

Now for the fun...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of %positive was 11.2%. As of yesterday it is at 12.3%.

As I stated a few days ago though it as only Kansas I was referring too, testing has dropped significantly which is inflating the %positive rate. This is fairly logical as that is how math works when you test less people and the people you test have reason to suspect they have Covid.

In other words the %positivity rate is rather misleading.
[Reply]
Frenchy 11:59 AM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
Interesting as well...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of tests was 4,041 tests a day in the KC area. As of yesterday it has dropped to 2,225.

Now for the fun...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of %positive was 11.2%. As of yesterday it is at 12.3%.

As I stated a few days ago though it as only Kansas I was referring too, testing has dropped significantly which is inflating the %positive rate. This is fairly logical as that is how math works when you test less people and the people you test have reason to suspect they have Covid.

In other words the %positivity rate is rather misleading.
What's the testing availability like in KC? In my city they've closed two of the test centers (one that got results back to you in 48 hours). Our current centers are all backlogged and notoriously inaccurate. Not saying that's what's happening in KC, but once that happened in my city I've pretty much disregarded the data they've reported since.
[Reply]
petegz28 12:06 PM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by Frenchy:
What's the testing availability like in KC? In my city they've closed two of the test centers (one that got results back to you in 48 hours). Our current centers are all backlogged and notoriously inaccurate. Not saying that's what's happening in KC, but once that happened in my city I've pretty much disregarded the data they've reported since.
That I could not say. The problem is we have the various counties and voards for both health and school using the %positive rate as the key metric to opening schools. I won't get into why I think they are latching onto that particular metric but there are reasons and it is a very easily manipulated stat.

The point being I don't think the %positive rate has increased but rather that the number of tests given has shrunk significantly thus keeping or inflating the %positive rate. Classic case of 1 out of 100 = 1% but 1 out of 50 = 2%.
[Reply]
Hawker007 12:12 PM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
Interesting as well...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of tests was 4,041 tests a day in the KC area. As of yesterday it has dropped to 2,225.

Now for the fun...

On 7-17 the 7 day average of %positive was 11.2%. As of yesterday it is at 12.3%.

As I stated a few days ago though it as only Kansas I was referring too, testing has dropped significantly which is inflating the %positive rate. This is fairly logical as that is how math works when you test less people and the people you test have reason to suspect they have Covid.

In other words the %positivity rate is rather misleading.
I've been saying this for weeks, that using this stat as a way to determine policy is fucking absurd. The denominator is wayyyy too subjective.
[Reply]
lewdog 12:22 PM 09-04-2020
I agree.

Positivity rate means little if testing isn’t consistent.
[Reply]
TLO 12:45 PM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by lewdog:
I agree.

Positivity rate means little if testing isn’t consistent.
Possibly on this note - can anyone get past the paywall to this article?

https://www.wsj.com/articles/covid-1...es-11599211800
[Reply]
MahomesMagic 12:55 PM 09-04-2020
The Londoner: Let children be exposed to viruses, says Professor Gupta

Professor Sunetra Gupta, who has been a leading critic of the cost of lockdown, says she welcomes the return of schools as children “if anything... would benefit from being exposed to this and other seasonal coronaviruses”.

Gupta, who is a professor of theoretical epidemiology at Oxford, told The Londoner that alongside huge social and educational benefits, the “evidence is mounting that early exposure to these various coronaviruses is what enables people to survive them”.

Professor Gupta came to prominence earlier this year when she questioned the government’s reliance on the Imperial College London modelling of the coronavirus epidemic. Professor Gupta and her team produced modelling that posited a greater number of Britons could have immunity to the virus than thought. She has been a longstanding critic of the wider impacts of lockdown on the poorest in society and across the world.

https://www.standard.co.uk/news/lond...-a4538386.html
[Reply]
jdubya 02:14 PM 09-04-2020
Russian vaccine working?????? Maybe it is....

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-suggests.html
[Reply]
eDave 02:16 PM 09-04-2020
Sweden Now Has a Lower COVID-19 Death Rate Than the US.

The United States currently has 578 COVID-19 deaths per million compared to Sweden’s 577 per million, according to the global statistics web site Worldometers.

https://fee.org/articles/sweden-now-...hy-it-matters/
[Reply]
Marcellus 03:08 PM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by eDave:
Sweden Now Has a Lower COVID-19 Death Rate Than the US.

The United States currently has 578 COVID-19 deaths per million compared to Sweden’s 577 per million, according to the global statistics web site Worldometers.

https://fee.org/articles/sweden-now-...hy-it-matters/
The interesting thing about this is I doubt eDave understands the implication.
[Reply]
Discuss Thrower 04:48 PM 09-04-2020
Originally Posted by Marcellus:
The interesting thing about this is I doubt eDave understands the implication.
Europe good. America bad.
[Reply]
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