Why not. I reckon it would be fun. Shut everything down. No powerplants, no water, no farming, no food, no petrol.Dave The Man wrote:Then should we just stay in Lockdown permanently until the Pandamic is over?Pies4shaw wrote:That’s just a crude measure of the proportion of the population that has been killed, so far, by the disease. It isn’t a “death rate”.
Coronavirus 4 - Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
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- What'sinaname
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Given no one can get tested the rate is probably even lower with tens of thousands of unreported cases.What'sinaname wrote:In Victoria, the death rate (deaths / cases) is now 0.28%.
It was
0.83% on 1 January 2022
1.09% on 1 December 2021
3.96% on 1 July 2021
4.02% on 1 January 2021
When you consider that the vast majority of deaths occur in the elderly and people with comorbidities, this is why we don't need to lock down millions of healthy people.
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Maybe - but that isn’t what those numbers measure. I’m not arguing about what the data means - just proposing that people use actual data, rather than meaningless drivel they make up. A moment’s thought about dividing the number of deaths on a given day by the number of cases that happen to be reported on the same day must tell you it isn't measuring anything of meaning.
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The measure of mortality rate is used by the expert medical profession.Pies4shaw wrote:Maybe - but that isn’t what those numbers measure. I’m not arguing about what the data means - just proposing that people use actual data, rather than meaningless drivel they make up. A moment’s thought about dividing the number of deaths on a given day by the number of cases that happen to be reported on the same day must tell you it isn't measuring anything of meaning.
Nothing is meaningfully identified by a spot division of the number of deaths reported on a given day by the number of cases that also happen to be reported that day, in circumstances where:
(a) none (or almost none) of the deaths that day are referable to the cases that day; and
(b) the number of cases is rapidly escalating.
On 15 January, Australia had reported approximately1,640,000 cases from the start of the pandemic. In the previous 14 days, that total number of reported cases just about quadrupled (from about 431,000 cases reported to 1 January). The deaths reported yesterday are of people who got the disease historically, not of people who caught it yesterday and died yesterday. That wouldn't matter if the deaths were derived from a pool of cases of similar size to the pool of cases reported on a given day - but we know that's wrong for Australia's experience of the last 14 days, so the calculation is a classic example of "garbage in, garbage out".
What we do know at the moment is that Omicron generally causes a lower proportion of serious infections than earlier significant variants but also causes a vastly greater number of infections because it is so much more transmissible. The combination of those two factors is leading to record numbers of hospitalizations and deaths from COVID in Australia on a daily basis. No amount of singing "Tomorrow Belongs to Me", however loudly, can get around that.
(a) none (or almost none) of the deaths that day are referable to the cases that day; and
(b) the number of cases is rapidly escalating.
On 15 January, Australia had reported approximately1,640,000 cases from the start of the pandemic. In the previous 14 days, that total number of reported cases just about quadrupled (from about 431,000 cases reported to 1 January). The deaths reported yesterday are of people who got the disease historically, not of people who caught it yesterday and died yesterday. That wouldn't matter if the deaths were derived from a pool of cases of similar size to the pool of cases reported on a given day - but we know that's wrong for Australia's experience of the last 14 days, so the calculation is a classic example of "garbage in, garbage out".
What we do know at the moment is that Omicron generally causes a lower proportion of serious infections than earlier significant variants but also causes a vastly greater number of infections because it is so much more transmissible. The combination of those two factors is leading to record numbers of hospitalizations and deaths from COVID in Australia on a daily basis. No amount of singing "Tomorrow Belongs to Me", however loudly, can get around that.
- What'sinaname
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I don't "claim" anything. I merely point out from time to time the pointless irrelevance of the calcuations you're performing.
Ebola is extraordinarily scary, if you get it - but almost no-one gets it, which is why the total deaths all-time from Ebola (which has existed for decades) are a trivial fraction of the deaths caused by COVID.
Ebola is extraordinarily scary, if you get it - but almost no-one gets it, which is why the total deaths all-time from Ebola (which has existed for decades) are a trivial fraction of the deaths caused by COVID.
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Hears about the Same as People Die of Cold/FluPies4shaw wrote:I don't "claim" anything. I merely point out from time to time the pointless irrelevance of the calcuations you're performing.
Ebola is extraordinarily scary, if you get it - but almost no-one gets it, which is why the total deaths all-time from Ebola (which has existed for decades) are a trivial fraction of the deaths caused by COVID.
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