The article doesn't mention the fact that people died because Cuomo sent COVID-19 patients to nursing homes(!)
https://justthenews.com/politics-po...fection-fatality-rate-could-be-low-026-nearly
Totally with you that Cuomo is, and has always been garbage. Putting a shine of polish on garbage and putting a spotlight on it still makes it garbage.
I don't like that justthenews link, at all, because it appears to be disingenuous in multiple places. First:
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention this week continued that trend, releasing a list of what it called "
COVID-19 Pandemic Planning Scenarios." That document laid out five different scenarios for public health experts and government officials to consider, one of which the agency called its "current best estimate" of the parameters of the viral pandemic.
That scenario states that the overall fatality rate of infections that show symptoms is around 0.4%. Yet the CDC says it estimates that around 35% of all infectious are asymptomatic, meaning that the total infection fatality rate under the agency's "best estimate" scenario is around 0.26%, or a little more than twice that of the seasonal flu.
The article mentions five CDC scenarios, but then does all this math based
only on the best case scenario? That's silly, there's a reason the CDC did five different projections; only assessing the happy path means you assume you're living in the best of all possible worlds; this seems unlikely.
The CDC estimates that as many as 60,000 Americans die of the flu in an average year, meaning—if the agency's current estimates are correct—the U.S. could still see tens of thousands of more deaths before the fatalities begin to recede.
This is playing the same game in the opposite direction -- 60,000 is the general upper bound for a bad flu year, but the range CDC gives is 12,000 - 60,000 (
https://www.health.com/condition/cold-flu-sinus/how-many-people-die-of-the-flu-every-year) -- in fact, if we look back over the last 10 years, there's only one year which has hit that (
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/past-seasons.html)
The disease itself also appears to spread more easily than seasonal influenza, meaning even if COVID-19's infection fatality rate were equal to that of the flu, the total number of deaths from it would still likely exceed that of influenza simply because it would infect more people.
Yet the lower numbers, if accurate, are an encouraging sign that the disease is not as lethal as was earlier estimated.
I don't see how A follows B here, because we're responding to C-19 radically different than we've ever responded to the flu in my lifetime in America. It spreads more easily, and the article here provides absolutely no reason why it's harping on "the lower numbers".
We have 5 models there, from the CDC. I think anyone doing this kind of deep dive on one of the spectrum and not the other is more than suspect, whichever direction it's pointing in.
Nothing has really changed, since the lockdown started. The virus is still out there, we have 100,000 dead with relatively low exposure and fairly extreme measures implemented. As those measures are relaxed, we'll have an increase in cases.
It's interesting to look at what's going on in Germany now, since they are "ahead" of us, in that they locked down, unlocked, had cases start to skyrocket, locked down
again and are now trying to figure out how to proceed. It looks like there was general national unity until pretty recently, but now that is fracturing.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...wn-measures-thuringia-second-wave-coronavirus