RonJohn
Helluva Engineer
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- 4,995
Those are total percentages for the virus. Why would you only look at a fraction of the number? You have to view the entire data range to see the effects. You just can't pick and choose what stats to follow.
And don't forget:
we don't have a number for the total number of tests administered
the covid-19 positive tests include; covids 1-18 and the common cold. So how accurate are the tests?
It is only part of the picture. Are percentages of ICU admissions more important than ICU capacity remaining? If the number of infected goes up and the percentage or people in ICUs goes down that is good. However, if ICUs run out of capacity, then it doesn't matter what percentage of people with the virus didn't enter the ICU, only that someone can't enter an ICU because there is no space left. The Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency has a status report that includes availability of ER beds, ICU beds, and hospital beds. ER and normal beds look OK at the moment. ICU beds only have 14% capacity remaining. If the number of cases keeps going up, even if the percentage of hospitalizations continues to decline, Georgia could run out of ICU beds.
I am not a doom-and-gloom, everyone is going to die type of poster. However, to believe that Georgia is in excellent shape at the moment is not accurate either.