From China?
Pass
Let's get a study from the USA to verify
Maybe so, but the moment this strays too far into politics, poof, off it goes to the CE Board. And the OP knows that.
Cytokine storm description reminded me of those articles I read with a patient having low oxygen levels but not in any real outward distress. His attending doctor asking him does he think he’s having a cytokine storm lol. Then also the 87 year old prior stroke covid patient being discharged in 3 days. Just crazy the way the virus presents and also the wide range of affects on different people.SIAP, but this is a fascinating and very scary account of living through a serious coronavirus infection, including the dreaded "cytokine storm" of an overreacting immune system in the lungs, by a pulmonologist in NYC. Yeah, this is not just the flu.
https://www.salon.com/2020/04/05/what-it-feels-like-to-survive-covid-19s-dreaded-cytokine-storm/
Worst kept secret ever, lol. Don't want to retype a bunch of stuff, so just linking the posts from the past few days on this. The Times article in the first link contains fantastic investigative journalism detailing the many ways the Chinese local officials, in particular, hid the growing epidemic data from their CDC and intimidated their scientists also, which was then repeated at the larger stage by the Chinese leadership.
Logical "proof" of this to me is that even if they did as well in controlling the outbreak as South Korea did - which they didn't, as they were first and had no idea what had hit them for awhile - they'd have 270K infections on a per capita basis (27X the population of SK, which has ~10K cases), which is 3-4X the 83K they've reported and I think they've likely done significantly worse than SK or at least 5X what they've reported or more.
Having said all that, none of this excuses the US from its weak and late response to what we already knew was a coming pandemic.
https://rutgers.forums.rivals.com/t...social-distancing.191275/page-46#post-4481643
https://rutgers.forums.rivals.com/t...social-distancing.191275/page-46#post-4482033
SIAP, but this is a fascinating and very scary account of living through a serious coronavirus infection, including the dreaded "cytokine storm" of an overreacting immune system in the lungs, by a pulmonologist in NYC. Yeah, this is not just the flu.
https://www.salon.com/2020/04/05/what-it-feels-like-to-survive-covid-19s-dreaded-cytokine-storm/
Certain parts of our communities are not doing their part.Has NJ peak really moved out to 2 weeks from now? Why and how is that possible? I think we're entering full month of quarantine.
Has NJ peak really moved out to 2 weeks from now? Why and how is that possible? I think we're entering full month of quarantine.
As you know, I disagree on what happened in the US; however, in the interests of keeping this thread from getting bogged down in arguing over that, maybe we could argue in the thread I started on the CE board on that topic. I'm sure @DJ Spanky would approve. :Wink:To trust anything the Chinese have said or will say is admittedly stupid. They lied , covered up, withheld information which would have definitely changed the narrative in Europe and most likely
the rest of the world. Then add the blatant incompetent WHO and it would not have mattered who was President or what party was in power in the US. Now the China news wants to place the blame everywhere else. Sadly ,though many in this country know this to be untrue, they will jump on board accepting Chinese lies ...as long as it fits political agendas here at home.
What’s the definition of peak? Peak deaths, peak cases, peak hospitalizations?
Sadly, the NYC death toll increased by 3700 to over 10,000, based on a change in accounting for deaths, as the new deaths are presumed to be COVID-related, based on symptoms/medical history, but never had a confirming positive viral test. I would imagine this is an issue everywhere, as many people, even in hospitals (where most of these presumed COVID-deaths occurred) don't get tests before they die, since the focus is on treating them for COVID and not on a test they know would be positive. I don't think these have been added to any of the major tracking sites, though.
The revised death toll renewed focus on shortcomings in testing that have hamstrung city and state officials since the beginning of the outbreak. A limited number of tests have been available, and until now, only deaths where a person had tested positive were officially counted among those killed by the virus in New York.
But for weeks, the Health Department also had been recording additional deaths tied to the virus, according to two people briefed on the matter. Those cases involved people who were presumed to have been infected because of their symptoms and medical history.
They were not included in the counts given publicly by Mayor Bill de Blasio because no tests had confirmed that the victims had the disease, Covid-19.
Mr. de Blasio decided, after another round of briefings over the weekend, to release the presumptive cases, the people said. Most of the added deaths took place in hospitals, according to the data. Others occurred in nursing homes or other long-term care facilities and in residences.
“In the heat of battle, our primary focus has been on saving lives,” said Freddi Goldstein, the mayor’s press secretary. “As soon as the issue was raised, the mayor immediately moved to release the data.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/04/14/nyregion/new-york-coronavirus-deaths.html
Agreed and they still are not saying anything about deaths from the flu so what is the real number and what is the number versus the fluGreat, so now accounting switches swing the death total. It would be helpful if someone would figure out the increase in deaths in NY in March 2020 v. a typical March. Or April 1-15. Or some time period. That is the only way to get an accurate picture of the damage. Really though, even that will not be so telling. If an 80+ year old sick person was going to die a month later even if Corona never existed, how is that measured?
The "number of deaths" statistic being used leaves a lot to be desired. It has no perspective and now we see accounting can change the number widely.
No idea what the commissioner is talking about. We are clearly past the peak of new daily cases.Has NJ peak really moved out to 2 weeks from now? Why and how is that possible? I think we're entering full month of quarantine.
In the end the total US deaths will be no worse than a typical bad flu year. Now that may very well be due to the social distancing and measures that have been taken, but it makes one wonder whether it was really worth it to shut down the economy.
The models that predicted so many more deaths were way off.
It wasn't completely clear from her remark, but I thought she was referring to the peak of hospitalizations/icu/vents.No idea what the commissioner is talking about. We are clearly past the peak of new daily cases.
How do you know that?No idea what the commissioner is talking about. We are clearly past the peak of new daily cases.
Not quite. Here's some data on the flu vs. COVID-19. The average flu year is ~35K deaths (2010-2017) over about 5-6 months with the worst year being 51K. We've had <1000 deaths through March 24th and about 25,000 deaths in the last 3 weeks and will very likely have 50K+ deaths over less than 2 months. That is a lot worse than a typical flu year (as are the serious hospitalzation rates).In the end the total US deaths will be no worse than a typical bad flu year. Now that may very well be due to the social distancing and measures that have been taken, but it makes one wonder whether it was really worth it to shut down the economy.
The models that predicted so many more deaths were way off.
Yep, we've had 25,000+ deaths in about a month and are still reporting 1,500-2,000 per day.But the big difference is you are comparing the number of deaths in a flu YEAR. The numbers for this are what, 4-6 WEEKS?
How do you know that?
The number of positive cases reported each day is very closely correlated to the number of tests reported each day. If the number of tests reported go up 15%, the number of positive results go up about 15%. Since the number of tests performed each day has plateaued, the number of new cases reported has also plateaued. But that doesn't mean that the number of infections has plateaued. It just means we aren't doing enough testing.
The flip side is that many deaths that were categorized as "influenza" are now known to be from coronavirus, probably more than the other way.Agreed and they still are not saying anything about deaths from the flu so what is the real number and what is the number versus the flu
In the end the total US deaths will be no worse than a typical bad flu year. Now that may very well be due to the social distancing and measures that have been taken, but it makes one wonder whether it was really worth it to shut down the economy.
The models that predicted so many more deaths were way off.
"Flu deaths" are also just based on models. Flu is never on most death certificates. Modelers use "flu related" or "complications of the flu." Lots of things just end-up in the flu bin no matter if they belong there or not. New Hampshire doesn't even consider flu death reportable. Gov. Models are used to predict yearly deaths. If the number goes over the prediction - bingo - the extra deaths go to the flu bin.
Lots of researchers find the flu figures inflated (and not by accident). Few people can even remember a bunch of people dropping dead from the flu the years before shots were sold. Certainly there was nothing on the level of what we've seen with CV (aside from 1918 of course).
100K total hospitalizations so far and I'm sure that number is low as many who normally would've ended up in a hospital were sent home, due to capacity issues in some hospitals. Again, that would be much greater if not for interventions implemented. Agree on hospitalizations being a better stat than cases, given the limits on testing in most locations.Yep, we've had 25,000+ deaths in about a month and are still reporting 1,500-2,000 per day.
I'd rather track the number of new and total hospitalizations than the number of "positives" because the latter are definitely a function of testing capacity.
"Flu deaths" are also just based on models. Flu is never on most death certificates. Modelers use "flu related" or "complications of the flu." Lots of things just end-up in the flu bin no matter if they belong there or not. New Hampshire doesn't even consider flu death reportable. Gov. Models are used to predict yearly deaths. If the number goes over the prediction - bingo - the extra deaths go to the flu bin.
Lots of researchers find the flu figures inflated (and not by accident). Few people can even remember a bunch of people dropping dead from the flu the years before shots were sold. Certainly there was nothing on the level of what we've seen with CV (aside from 1918 of course).
That is something I have thought about a lot in terms of this virus being here earlier than many thought. Flu season was characterized as being bad this year with high hospital volumes during the height of it. Were they all flu cases? Probably not in hindsight.The flip side is that many deaths that were categorized as "influenza" are now known to be from coronavirus, probably more than the other way.
I'd rather track the number of new and total hospitalizations than the number of "positives" because the latter are definitely a function of testing capacity.
Does this help (from the NJ Hospital Association):Can anyone give me a stat on how many hospitalizations there are a year due to flu...heard in the radio 800k plus 2 years ago and 600k last year..is this accurate or not
Sure, they'll come in due time. But what's your logic here? You think Chinese scientists (not the government here) designed and executed a randomized trial JUST to show HCQ doesn't work? And an open label one at that (where it's far easier to conceptually doctor the numbers)? Your argument literally makes no sense.From China?
Pass
Let's get a study from the USA to verify
Does this help (from the NJ Hospital Association):
Based on this, it looks like total flu hospitalizations in NJ were about 2400 last year and 3900 the prior year. That is over the full flu season.
By comparison, yesterday there were about 8300 patients in NJ hospitals with confirmed or suspected Covid infections. There were also another 3000 Covid patients discharged from NJ hospitals over the past 5 days. And another 1200 Covid deaths were reported over the past 5 days in NJ (though not all those deaths occurred in hospitals.)
(The numbers you quote above, look fairly close to the CDC estimates for nationwide. But those CDC estimates seem to be about 6 times too high compared to the the NJ Hospital data -- assuming that the NJ rate of flu infection and hospitalization is not below the national average.)
Any idea if the April 30th date is going to get pushed back into May?