Deleted member 2897
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Actually, I thought the federal guidelines about re-opening were pretty good, if they were followed. But I never expected that they would be and I was right. None of the SE states that are re-opening have even begun to reach the "plateau, then decrease" phase of their epidemics and, of course, none of them are ready with anything approximating the test/contact trace apparatus they would need to even go to phase 1, much less phase 2. When you add on top of this that the states involved - Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, and Florida - are not what you would call paragons for public health delivery in the first place and you get a potentially dreadful scenario.
If the federal guidelines are followed by governments that actually want to be sincere about it, I'd say we could start to re-open safely for most of the country in late May - early June. It would depend on the states involved. (If, say, North Dakota had decided to re-open like Georgia is planning to do, I'd be a lot less apprehensive about the effects for them.) Not re-opening does mean hardship and it will continue, especially if the virus re-ignites and we have to move back to square 1. What I fear is that if we re-open and we aren't ready - which is the case - then when the virus becomes more virulent there will be considerable pushback on any attempt to shut down to stop it. That's a recipe for raising our projected death toll from 100K to 250K or worse. And, unfortunately, that's what I think will happen.
I don't express to be an expert in other states' business, but this assertion is false in my state. At the city, county, and state level, we are running at less than half the case volume we were at the peak. Furthermore, even at the peak, we had hardly any traffic in our hospitals. I live in a 500,000 person county (Charleston County) and at the peak there were less than 10 COVID-19 patients in any given hospital. Most of the hospitals had 0. The hospitals have been ghost towns, bleeding money. Starting this week, they are allowing elective surgeries and normal traffic and activity. The number of nurses, doctors, and other healthcare workers that had lost hours and jobs was extreme. One hospital all by themselves had laid off over 1,000. Hopefully most of those people will be gainfully employed again in the next week or two. Our total deaths all-time is 5 - all very elderly in previously bad condition. (Not trying to minimize it, but just saying.). We actually had 0 new cases this Saturday in the entire county. We've been running < 10 about 70% of the time since peaking 2 weeks ago. We're about to start our 6th week of stay-at-home/shutdown, so all this data makes sense to me - we should be past the peak. We were the first in the country to get FDA/CDC approval for the types of reagents we use in our tests, and we were the second in the country to have drive-through testing...that's been in place for about 6 weeks. So part of all this could be that we've had adequate testing all along too.