How do you "protect the most vulnerable"? This seems like a bit of double talk.
Cut visitors, ensure workers wear masks and gloves at all times, are constantly tested and keep the disease away from them. Ones living on their own, much the same - only mix with others equally protected, get groceries & medicine delivered, etc.
It's going to be a lot easier to find people to do that than find ICU and staff to intubate and monitor them.
And even if the actual mortality rate is 1% that's still 10x that of the flu. 0.5%... 5x that of the flu. That's a lot of dead people.
I've been doing the maths since the start.
All that said, I don't think there's only one way to deal with this pandemic. But like many experts there's no real consensus as to which method will turn out the best.
South Korea & Singapore seem to have it fairly sorted, and they were very early starters, in both infection and testing/tracking. They were top of the list and now aren't anywhere it.
They just have to stay holed up in their home to avoid infecting anyone with the virus they can't get tested for.
Another coworker is also sick with a fever, and does not seem to be able to get a test either.
That's outrageous, but does fit what I've been suspecting all along - that this is everywhere and numbers are an order of magnitude higher than announced.
Tests are not really that important. As long as you can breath by yourself, doctors can't do anything for you anyway.
Yeah they can. Not a lot, I admit, but oxygen & intubation are saving lives. You also probably won't die of a secondary infection, and one university hospital says it can even get the rate of death from cytokine storm down from about 100% to 28%.
To all of you so diligently working the figures on the COVID death rate, has it dawned on anyone that some deaths of younger persons with no risk factors in the US almost certainly occurred without COVID testing?
Nope, and John covers most of the reasons why that isn't the case right here:
But those people will still have been presenting with Covid-19-like symptoms (respiration problems, high fever, etc), so I'd find it hard to believe that if they went through hospital admission with those symptoms, the hospital wouldn't have tested them. And if they stayed and died at home, there'd have to be an autopsy, which would almost certainly detect the lung scarring/fibrosis along with post-mortem blood tests. I suppose that these sorts of Covid-19 deaths might lag by a couple of days in their detection and reporting, but I find it hard to believe that they would (as a rule) be missed altogether.
Even if they didn't get tested in hospital, with no precautions being taken, EMT and paramedic staff would have shown up lots of infections by now.