Italy had a couple hundred people die this weekend from the Coronavirus. Crazy.
Fortunately South Korea, much closer to China and therefore most likely to see spikes early, was out front in doing the most thorough testing. Their data suggests a much milder outcome than that type of extrapolation.This a little disheartening. We’re talking about a first world, healthy country with a decent heal th care system. And per capita if we had their deaths, we’d be at 1,500+. In just 2 weeks. They’re running at 50x the mortality rate of the Flu.
The Atlantic could only verify that 1,895 people have been tested for the coronavirus in the United States, about 10 percent of whom have tested positive. And while the American capacity to test for the coronavirus has ramped up significantly over the past few days, local officials can still test only several thousand people a day, not the tens or hundreds of thousands indicated by the White House’s promises.
That was dated Feb 18. NBC is usually worthless, mostly lies and often has intent to deceive. this one is good for stats.There is now a suspected case in Augusta.
I heard on NBC evening news tonight that there are now more recovered patients in China than new cases .... for the first time. I looked to see if that could be confirmed online, and I found this --- https://www.worldofbuzz.com/more-ca...for-the-first-time-14376-patients-discharged/
You are right; I didn't notice the date on that article. However, what I heard on NBC news was tonight.That was dated Feb 18. NBC is usually worthless, mostly lies and often has intent to deceive. this one is good for stats.
scroll down for a spreadsheet that is updated daily. If your looking for older info by date then keep on scrolling below the ss for older news and highlights.https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/#countries
You should be concerned and take this seriously. But you should not panic.
Unfortunately I don't think the "24 hour news cycle" is apt to put data in appropriate context, meaning new test results will be presented as if the virus is spreading exponentially, where in reality the denominator is increasing primarily because we are finally able to test at scale.https://arstechnica.com/science/202...ensive-ars-technica-guide-to-the-coronavirus/
This article has plenty of data and plenty of information from experts. My general take on the article is "Be concerned, but don't panic." Don't buy face masks if you don't absolutely need them, because health care providers who do absolutely need them can't get them. The article cites ways that untrained people using masks doesn't prevent getting infected and actually can raise the chance of being infected. I guess too many people think it is boring, but the hygiene recommendations that the CDC has touted for years is the best way to protect yourself. That information just doesn't fit the 24 hour, up to the minute news cycle.
Don't be alarmed by the data being presented because it likely isn't accurate. Death rate could be higher, but is likely lower. It won't actually be known until an entire community can be tested to see how many previously undiagnosed cases there were and to count deaths that were previously labeled as cleared.
It's NBC. what do you expect?You are right; I didn't notice the date on that article. However, what I heard on NBC news was tonight.
That is just the U.S.CDC estimates* that from October 1, 2019, through February 29, 2020, there have been:
- 34,000,000 – 49,000,000 flu illnesses
- 350,000 – 620,000 flu hospitalizations
- 20,000 – 52,000 flu deaths
You're not the only one who has posted links regarding how well SK was prepared re: test capabilty which is paying dividends so I'm not disagreeing with your point,however -Fortunately South Korea, much closer to China and therefore most likely to see spikes early, was out front in doing the most thorough testing. Their data suggests a much milder outcome than that type of extrapolation.
https://gtswarm.com/threads/coronavirus-thread.21189/page-12#post-698960
140,000 tested in South Korea as of last week. We've tested < 2,000.
This is a significant reason why coronavirus cases will "rise" across the U.S. It's not as if the virus is just now arriving at cities across the U.S; rather we are just now testing. It is pervasive already and we just aren't capturing the cases when they occur. Fortunately there hasn't been a spike in 'unknown cause of death' to my knowledge.