Dr. Ioannidis is one of the professors of the Stanford study that has been widely criticized over the last week for having a biased sample, simple math errors and other issues.
He has a solid contrarian view, but his science behind it has not been very good to this point and littered with errors that shouldn't be made.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/23/coronavirus-antibody-studies-california-stanford
Cal Berkeley study out this week using alot of available Italian data to try to determine the fatality rate.
This paper also confirms what I know many on here have said that it it much more likely to kill at risk people.
it shows how the percentage of people that will die within an age group depends upon the age distribution of the population. in italy with its aging population a very high percentage of the deaths occur in the oldest population. In NYC on the other hand, while the highest death group is that same oldest population, the percentage of younger killed is higher 26% of undre 65 in NYC vs 10% under 65 in Italy.
This study also concludes the lowest possible infection fatality rate for COVID19 would be 0.5%.
https://news.berkeley.edu/2020/04/24/study-challenges-reports-of-low-fatality-rate-for-covid-19/
FWIW, I don't know yet whether shutting down colleges this fall is the right decision yet. I don't think the policy makers have the knowledge to make that decision yet.
I think the only thing infectious disease experts were very sure about early on was that travel had to be stopped as much as possible. Both locally and nationally. Otherwise the disease spreads to fast to be contained and the whole country gets overwhelmed. We were probably 1-2 weeks from it being too late. Instead it was somewhat contained in larger cities and areas that had travel as well as some locations like Albany where there were a large gathering where someone was already contagious so it spread. But stopping that movement of people kept the virus from spreading to alot of smaller and more separated areas.
i think some areas should be able to open up more, others will have to stay more locked down. The biggest thing is we need well thought out plans on how to move forward and expand smartly.
I do think the nursing care industry is going to really take it on the chin though. as more and more stories come out of large death tolls in these homes and hiding of bodies and whatnot, that industry is going to have to be reorganized. That is one area that is well known we are way undercounting as most states are lagging significantly on reporting on deaths from nursing homes.