Might want to call her an 'outlier' and wish her well.
Note where Cameron County is.
http://maps.google.com/maps?hl=en&q...CPBw&sa=X&oi=geocode_result&ct=title&resnum=1
FWIW: last week, local school district closed up shop. For two weeks, they said.
Hmm.
This morning, they will re open after a week closed. Seems the latest assessment down here, south of I-10, is "it's not as lethal as we suspected." A few folks are still asking "Wwhat about the second wave" with concerned looks on their faces.
We shall see.
DR
I thought we got past this part of the debate. Perhaps you are late to the discussion.
You cannot draw conclusions beyond the evidence you have, much as people are tempted to. We have a grossly inadequate sample at this point to say anything about the demographics we are going to see in the deaths. We won't see what the US death pattern is going to be until there are tens of thousands of infections in the US.
We do now have a large enough sample to draw two conclusions at this point. The death rate is not going to look like 1918 (future virus genetic drift still unknown), and, contagiousness is quite high.
If the pattern of contagiousness continues and does not slow down significantly as the season changes, we could easily see half the population infected. That could translate into 20,000 deaths on the low end and 50,000 on the high end. If the contagiousness does slow down, it's likely we'll see the same accumulation of total deaths but not until next winter. The unknown factor is going to be how many people over 50 have some immunity if that very early evidence turns out to be confirmed. Even if there is some immunity in the older population, that will skew the age range of total deaths toward the younger end. But seasonal flu infects a population with some immunity every year and the US deaths averaged 36,000/year over the last decade.
Shouldn't we see those deaths by now? The answer is no. You are thinking too small. The bucket is still barely dripping as it's being turned over. In the next couple weeks you can expect the cases to pour out of that bucket. If not in the Northern hemisphere, it will in the Southern.
There was a conference 2 days ago here at the U of WA. I didn't go but they played it on the tele today. Public health officials reported there are hundreds of cases in the county that are not being counted in the official numbers and in addition, there is such a backlog of tests at the CDC, the numbers you are seeing on the news are a week old but the time they are reported.