99% of Those Who Died From Virus Had Other Illness, Italy Says (bloomberg.com) 257
More than 99% of Italy's coronavirus fatalities were people who suffered from previous medical conditions, according to a study [PDF] by the country's national health authority. Reader schwit1 shares a report: The new study could provide insight into why Italy's death rate, at about 8% of total infected people, is higher than in other countries. The Rome-based institute has examined medical records of about 18% of the country's coronavirus fatalities, finding that just three victims, or 0.8% of the total, had no previous pathology. Almost half of the victims suffered from at least three prior illnesses and about a fourth had either one or two previous conditions. More than 75% had high blood pressure, about 35% had diabetes and a third suffered from heart disease.
Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:4, Informative)
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:4, Interesting)
The need to extra steps to protect the vulnerable has been clear. They should also be the first targeted when/if some sort of vaccine or helpful meds are identified.
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Sure, because Japan's older generations were also raised on diets of pasta.
But of course they were. Their pasta is usually called "noodles" in the West. Soba, men, udon, there's a lot to choose from. You'd know if you knew something about the Japanese culture.
It sounds like you know nothing of Japanese or Italian culture.
It appears you're very well-versed in both :))))
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Hay fever, acid reflux and sleep apnea weren't on the list they considered.
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:3)
Maybe, the article says that the average of those who died was ~79 years. That only 17 (from memory, so double check me) persons under 50 have died, and all of those under 40 were Male with serious preconditions. It really sounds like it's sick elderly people.
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Hard to accept, I know, but: If anything this is a Natural form of population control. There are too many of us already and this is Natures' response to that. Our civilization, our ability to adapt our environment (as opposed to adapting to our environment, like all other animals) has taken Natural Sele
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That's silly. Humans have lots of natural predators. Large groups and modern civilization let us avoid most of them. Same thing works for most herd animals, although civilization lets us be a bit better at it.
As for "Nature" trying to reassert a balance, a 1% cull of mostly the old or sick wouldn't even be noticed by most species.
Italy's head epidemiologist.... (Score:2)
Italy's head epidemiologist is Captain Obvious.
How many people only have one illness or condition by the time they need to be put in the ICU? I suspect very few.
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The response in the West hasn't been "dismal".
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And we already know that Italy's medical services are so overwhelmed that the doctors are picking and choosing who lives and who dies so if people with pre-conditions are considered to be a bad bet then they don't get the life-saving treatment, the doctors instead give life-saving treatment to people who they think it will save.
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Same as it could likely be everywhere else.
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Looks pretty similar in the UK and Germany, although less diabetes in Germany.
It's irrelevant though, the Italian doctors have had to choose who got treatment and who didn't, they're highly unlikely to give treatment to the guy with diabetes and heart disease if they think the person without these has a better chance of living and will need the equipment for less time.
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:2)
How does this excuse...
Who said anything about excuses? In any case, living a disease-causing life - genetic "predispositions" notwithstanding - simply carries consequences; if our distant ancestors have any idea what a bunch of soft, sickly fucks we've turned into, they'd surely disown us from beyond the grave.
Re:Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:5, Insightful)
"Stopping the entire world, at great cost to most, does raise the question of if it's a fair trade."
No it doesn't, because "stopping the entire world" is not done to save the "elderly and more frail", it's to slow the rate of infection so as to not overwhelm the medical system. Furthermore, it's not up to you or anyone else to decide, and it takes a moron to make a comment like yours.
"Plus many root for a recession to help Biden along."
Ah, a Trump supporter. A moron it is.
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Furthermore, it's not up to you or anyone else to decide,
Except that it is up to someone to decide. You realize that right, that a choice was made by people? Specifically by people in power, who coincidentally skew much older. So you are quite wrong when you assert that it's not for anyone to decide.
Is it really moronic to question if it's a fair trade? Seems like a very fair question as many are losing their jobs and worse. Saving some lives may or may not be a fair trade for wrecking many more. I doubt that it can be considered fair unless those whose liv
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Absolutely, Biden is different from Trump. Biden never bankrupted his own casino. Biden was not handed millions in inheritance. Biden is just a run of the mill machine politician. Trump is an abomination.
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Biden is a lifelong professional politician who has accomplished zero in his career. We'll be in much better shape with a businessperson in charge for the the recovery.
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Well that rules Trump out. Almost every business he has ever run went bankrupt, that's six different hotels and casinos. Trump is a reality television star.
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Does restricting travel to China in January count as action a week or so ago?
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And what did he do with the time that bought us? Nothing. He squandered that time just like he squandered daddy's fortune.
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> Nothing.
You sure about that? The DoD began preparing for pandemic in February (arguably a month earlier as well) as travel was further restricted. What was supposed to happen and what do you think we would have gained from it? You can't stop the flu like you can't stop the wind. Testing wouldn't happen because there weren't enough kits anywhere and were largely ineffective. Sound the panic alarm for you to criticize?
The biggest issue is China threatening exports of medicine and medical supplies. As of
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Like Trump doesn't just do everything the rich tell him to do. How's those trade deals? Oh yeah, pretty much the same as they were before. You're fooling yourself if you think Trump cares about anyone but Trump.
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well trump has sure failed. over and over and over. to be clear, he has never really done anything but fail.
he took millions and millions from daddy and blew it all on one failed business after another.
all the while making sure to ensure his family made billions (not millions).
trump is a galactic disaster and if you are too stuck up fox news and trumps arse to see if than your a fool
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He's going to be re-elected now. Because of you.
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Wishful thinking. Sad noises from Trump cultists who can see, before their very eyes, as Trump's chances evaporate into thin air.
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But Trump has sucked at the public teat all his life, as well as using his connections to give his family positions they never earned. He got tax breaks for his projects, then bankrupted them. He simply refuses to pay people who do work for him.
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Well, IMHO...even those that dislike Trump aren't going to be blaming him for a recession due to the corona virus.
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:3, Informative)
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Good grief. CNN has blamed everything on Trump and they've been lying through they're teeth about him since he won the election. Nobody is swayed by anything on CNN.
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You [thehill.com] would [realclearpolitics.com] be [nymag.com] wrong [commondreams.org].
There are many who root for a recession to get rid of President Trump [realclearpolitics.com]. This includes elected Representatives [realclearpolitics.com].
Realize that, at its core, socialism/communism doesn't care about a person; it cares about "the People". If you have to sacrifice a few hundred thousand or million, that's OK - as long as you get to advance your own belief of what "the People" demand. Individuals are irrelevant in this ethos; only the betterment of the corporate body matters. And of course, it is those in po
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Mr. Schwartz, I am sorry to inform you that someone else seems to need your job more than you, any last words? NO? Good, *BANG* thud cull complete...
Re:Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:4, Interesting)
I think the point is that it's not too untimely if there are lots of pre-existing conditions.
Meh. What percentage of people 50+ don't have some pre-existing condition? I'll bet it's a minority. Personally, I have chronic asthma, and I suspect that if I don't lose some weight I'm going to start fighting high blood pressure; it's been inching up. I'm 50. But were I to die now, I'm sure that basically everyone would call my death untimely. In most ways I'm in the prime of my life.
For that matter, I suspect that a large minority of people in their 40s have some pre-existing condition, and that it's a significant number even of people in their 30s. If you include being overweight as a pre-existing condition, the majority of American adults have one.
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I think the point is that it's not too untimely if there are lots of pre-existing conditions. It's not news that sick people and the elderly are more frail
I understand the point, and I point out how absurd it is given how thin on facts the quoted "study" is. We do not know well what kind of "preconditions" we're talking about outside of a division in several large groups, we have no understanding of their severity, and how important was the precondition for the fatal outcome. The study is the textbook example of the oft-quoted "correlation is not causation" meme here.
And we have seen a lot of evidence that the response was botched. I witnessed it first-hand
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I get the impression that you didn't really think about that sentence before you wrote it...
Either that, or you are incapable of empathising with anyone who has lost someone that they love.
Since having any number of pre-existing but otherwise not imminently fatal conditions is no reason to conclude that death would be particularly welcome. there is little reason to suggest that death of a human being is ever "tim
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Keep in mind that when the hospitals are overwhelmed, the young and healthy get the preferred treatment over the sick and elderly. If we allow this to spread too fast, we'll be condemning people to die when they didn't necessarily have to. We know that people die all the time, but we mostly do what we can to prevent deaths that are preventable, or to save people when possible. I don't think there's a reasonable answer for "what cost is too much?" The answer very much depends if you're talking about a st
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Stopping the entire world, at great cost to most, does raise the question of if it's a fair trade. One person's frail health for another's economic devestation and possible homelessness. I don't think that calculation has been done and thoughtfully considered.
I believe it has been carefully considered by the people making those decisions and they are more concerned with putting their political party first. The only way Trump was not going to win the November election was to tank the economy.
The governor of my state has made it a crime to stand among more than 10 people.
78 people in the state so far have tested positive. 1 person died (was 78 years old).
My company laid off 500 people today. Including me.
That governor likes to put shoe polish on his face and ma
Re: Yes, that's what modern life is like. (Score:3)
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This sockpuppet is posting the exact same copy pasta under multiple accounts. If you see one that you previously thought was a thinking human being, now you know.
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Preventing public panic is another kind of word for that behavior and you're a fool if you think any other President would've said anything differently. Perhaps if we weren't in the middle of the impeachment sham he might've been able to take more thorough measures, but we all know what you would've accused him of at the time had he tried.
So everybody (Score:5, Insightful)
30% of Americans have high blood pressure. 10% of Americans have diabetes. I know that there is a lot of overlap.
"Nearly Half of all adult Americans have cardiovascular disease"
https://www.sciencedaily.com/r... [sciencedaily.com]
If we are looking at 50+ years old then I'm sure the rates are even higher.
This headline might as well say "Nearly all people over 65 have at least one illness."
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We are about to find out how obesity figures into it, as well.
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The UK seems to be doing OK for now.
but... (Score:2)
...but the UK has only tested 64,581 people as of March 19 and they say you don't need testing if you stay at home.
(from https://www.gov.uk/guidance/co... [www.gov.uk])
What to do if you have symptoms
Stay at home for 7 days if you have either:
a high temperature
a new continuous cough
if you live with other people, they should stay at home for 14 days from the day the first person got symptoms.
This will help to protect others in your community while you are infectious.
Do not go to a GP surgery, pharmacy or hospital.
You do not need to contact NHS 111 to tell them you’re staying at home.
Testing for coronavirus is not needed if you’re staying at home.
So, I guess the NHS will just have some people collect the bodies when they want to make the final tally someday.
Re:So everybody (Score:5, Funny)
> 30% of Americans have high blood pressure. 10% of Americans have diabetes.
Good news everybody. Those numbers are about to go down.
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Blaming the victim is ALWAYS popular
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Well, 95% of that 10% have Type 2 diabetes. Only 0.5% have Type 1 (being the type that requires insulin), as opposed to Type 2, which just requires that you watch your diet...
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There seems to be evidence that lowering insulin resistance through fasting actually often is able to reverse type type 2...
But seeing how most of the foodstuff in the USseems to contain corn syrup, it's quite possible that they are fucked anyway.
I am unsure how to feel about that.
China v. Italy (Score:2)
So, apparently China has less than half the percentage of healthy people than Italy?
Not so reassuring (Score:4, Interesting)
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So much for the Mediterranian Diet [wikipedia.org].
Everybody and their Dog to. (Score:2)
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Average life expectancy for a dog is 10-13 years, depending on breed. 17 is an amazingly long lived dog. A 17 year old dog dying is a lot like a centenarian dying - the only surprise is that it lasted this long....
And there's a cap on how many people might get it (Score:2, Interesting)
Worth considering - in the worst case conditions, a cruise ship full of people touching everything, with pretty much no part of the ship safe, only 20% of people got Covid19. So a large percent of the population could simply be immune.
Re:And there's a cap on how many people might get (Score:4, Insightful)
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You really aren't qualified to extrapolate from what happened on that cruise ship to the general public, but you know who is? Epidemiologists and infectologists. When they start saying there's a 20% cap on the percent of people who can get infected, I'll believe it.
Right now the people who actually know what they're talking about are throwing around numbers like 60%-70% of the population.
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In SuperKendall's defense, it seems to me that lately more scientists love to see their names and faces in the news so just because someone knowledgeable is saying it doesn't necessarily mean it's the truth.
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Not necessarily, but they are much more to be believed than Internet randos.
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So you're saying we should trust SuperKendall's Internet quackery more than scientists.
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It's because the incubation period was much shorter.
Re:And there's a cap on how many people might get (Score:5, Informative)
Worth considering - in the worst case conditions, a cruise ship full of people touching everything, with pretty much no part of the ship safe, only 20% of people got Covid19.
You forgot to mention that those people were all quarantined in their cabins as soon as a few had tested positive.
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If you're referring to the Imperial report, the do nothing response is literally that.
The mitigation response is high risk people social distancing and everyone else doing nothing.
The suppression response is every social distancing, self-isolating, etc.
They were locked in their rooms (Score:3)
So yeah, if we do a total lock down as soon as the spread of the virus is underway we can get it down to 20%. Hooray?
Realistically we can't keep the entire economy shut down for more than a few weeks. Our society just isn't set up for it. Please will run out of money for rent & food and go ballistic. In America that means bands of armed bandits. Gun sales are way, way up, btw.
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What about the other 1%? (Score:2)
that is all.
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Well within statistical error margin, you'll be fine.
98% of human beings have an illness (Score:2)
That's helpful! Because only a certain percentage of human beings have some illness or condition at any given moment. Say... 98%? Oh wait...
(I understand that 15-29 y.o.s can be in a much better health situation and may not have a complicating factor [though some do!]. That's not the case once one passes the 30 barrier. As much as the youngs may want the grups out of the way doing all in one go would create... unanticipated problems)
Starvation more Likely (Score:4)
Surprisingly you can't find whole chickens, but there were a few chicken joints available - surprising because whole chickens must be an inefficient use of freezer space.
I'm hoping they will introduce rationing. Some supermarkets have already set some informal rationing, but without legal force there have already been some nasty scenes at the checkouts - so the checkout operator told me today. People will fight each other for food if it gets short.
Won't be a problem (Score:2, Interesting)
Here in the UK I am more worried about dying of starvation than the virus, seriously. The shelves of the food shops are mostly empty.
By next week all C19 problems will have blown over.
Firstly, people are starting to realize that tanking the economy is not a good idea, and I expect things to get significantly better in a day or two.
Secondly, it looks like Chloroquine is virtually a cure for C19 and this fact has reached public awareness.
Expect the US to start heavily using Chloroquine to combat the disease (and verify large-scale testing), then produce and ship massive amounts of it to other nations.
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By next week all C19 problems will have blown over.
I really hope you're right, but the science (medical and social) seem to be against you.
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Here in the UK I am more worried about dying of starvation than the virus, seriously. The shelves of the food shops are mostly empty.
Secondly, it looks like Chloroquine is virtually a cure for C19 and this fact has reached public awareness.
Expect the US to start heavily using Chloroquine to combat the disease (and verify large-scale testing), then produce and ship massive amounts of it to other nations.
That's a bit premature [slashdot.org]. The FDA is only initiating clinical trials of chloroquine "to actually see if that benefits patients". It may turn out to be a silver bullet for C19 (which would obviously be great), but we're not there yet.
In the UK today, during the prime minister's daily briefing [bbc.com] he said he hoped that "we can turn the tide within the next 12 weeks". But when pressed, he admitted that there's no guarantee.
Re:Won't be a problem (Score:4, Interesting)
it looks like Chloroquine is virtually a cure for C19
Except it'll turn the pH of the endosome of a 70 year old so acidic that it'll be a race to see what burns up first, their kidneys or their lungs. Ionic regulation isn't at any kind of pace to be giving it to the elderly, they have way slower metabolisms. Heck even 60+ crowd will have to be watched for ruptures in their eyes, ears, finger tips especially around the small arteries as the pH level will already affect those weakened walls. You know to prevent blindness, seizures, loss of hearing, renal failure, standard stuff that comes with random ruptures.
Now people may say, "Wait a minute! The President said that it wouldn't kill anyone!!" That's also correct. If you're being giving the medication slowly in a controlled environment and have staff to attend, you can totally watch the whole process, manage blood pH levels, and what not. I mean shits been around since the 1930s, we're pretty good at using it. However, we can't use it as a vaccine and using it as a treatment eats a shit ton of nurse and medical resources. So if 100 people are all on this at the same time in a middle of the road hospital, you've basically eaten every single attendant's time in the house. Good luck if you come in for a car wreck. And no, it has no medical system to watch and report to the nurse's hub, so it's all good old fashioned manual stats taking and blood draw that is required and running that down to lab. But hey, if anyone is feeling inventive, go get'em tiger. If someone can get that built like, um, two weeks ago would be awesome.
Now ignoring the 60+ crowd for a minute. The 40-60 crowd should be fine (especially with tab form of the medication), but the upper end of that bound will need to "FUCKING REST!!!". Your tendons become jelly with the stuff so lie down in bed and don't freaking move for the course of the treatment (unless you're on the maintenance formula, but that kind of defeats the point of taking it since you'll get better way before the medication hits a useful level, so you kinda need the fast acting higher dose). There's literally no end to the number of people who get springs in their joints while on this stuff, mostly because they were picking up a cereal box or something and suddenly their flexor tendon decided to split into two. Now they need repair and "Oh yeah that's right", we're treating the 60+ crowd and that's eating up all the resources, looks like that's going to have to heal on it's own! (wink, wink, you've going to have lifelong problems with it)
Everyone younger than 40 pretty much it's a non-issue, just drink lots of water, lots of rest, stop doing dumb shit. But then again, this current virus isn't really hammering them hard to begin with. So, what benefit are you getting out of using this? Yeah we'll stop a few deaths in the <40 group, but they aren't even remotely the focus to begin with. In treatment at least. For spread, STOP FUCKING GOING TO BARS AND SHIT!!
At the hospital, the point isn't to save people, that's kind of like the after effect. The point is to treat people faster, so they can get out the door faster, so that the next person in line can be treated faster. There's no fucking end to treatments that can be used on this, but that's not the fucking point. There's so many sick, we need to treat them FASTER. So yeah, Chloroquine could totally be used in this case. It's antiviral is well known. That is not the point though. It's potentially a slower method of treatment in people who would have recovered all by themselves with the help of a ventilator and it is a method of treatment that requires more human resources to monitor than a ventilator that's hooked into the hospital's network and some computer can beep beep at the nurse when shit hits the fan. Now where it might be interesting to consider are for people where they aren't recovering on a ventilator, ya know the worse of the worse cases. But even then using on maybe 1 out of 5 in
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It would be surprising if it came to starvation. Stores generally only stock enough for normal buying each week. When the shipments for the next week come in, the shelves will be filled again. And everyone who bought stuff they didn't normally won't be buying it again, because it will be still sitting in their cabinet.
In my area everyone stocked up on toilet paper, peanut butter, and pasta, but left all the vegetables. So I bought a pile of tomatoes and some basil and cooked up a big pot of tomato soup. For
Italy's population is older than most (Score:5, Informative)
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except the death figures are far beyond what would be expected just from that population age skew.
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So Healthy (Score:2)
Sounds like used-car salesman talk (Score:2)
Well, what do you expect. Italy designs and manufactures some of the least reliable cars and making excuses for it is so ingrained into their culture that they cannot help but make excuses for the poor prognoses.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
No consolation (Score:5, Interesting)
100 million Americans have high blood pressure, 100 million Americans have diabetes or prediabetes and 30 million Americans have heart disease. Of course there is likely plenty of cross-over here but the summary won't be much consolation for many Americans.
https://www.heart.org/en/news/... [heart.org]
https://www.cdc.gov/media/rele... [cdc.gov]
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fasta... [cdc.gov]
And the percentage of people in the population? (Score:2)
So 99% of the people who died had some other illness. This tells us little about whether this is relevant without also listing how many people in the total population have any other illnesses. Or does it even take another illness to develop a serious case of the infection? Or to get infected at all? What percentage of people recovering have other illnesses?
I hate it when statistics are paraded out without actually containing any kind of information.
Re:coronavirus = media hype factory (Score:5, Insightful)
Almost nobody does (Score:2)
For 40 years we've worked hard to figure out the minimum number of employees and the minimum amount of stock on hand. Look up a company called McKinsey, it's what they do. But that sort of "fly by the seat of your pants, trust in God & the Invisible Hand" economics just doesn't work. As so
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And the toilet paper thing? Well that I have no fucking clue.
It's a stampede. Nobody's really sure why the herd is running, but panic breeds panic until you run off a cliff all by yourself. And unlike a lot of other bullshit claims if enough people raid the stores for toilet paper the shortage becomes real, so pretty early on even non-skittish people start buying extra causing more fear and triggering more hoarding. And those who went nuts can go all smug that yeah we saw it coming I have a six month supply stowed away. You'd be surprised to know how many people are
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And the toilet paper thing? Well that I have no fucking clue.
In the 70s (during the oil shortage) Johnny Carson made some jokes about what would be a real shortage crisis: toilet paper. At the time there wasn't a toilet paper shortage, but after he made the jokes, people emptied the toilet paper shelves. Ever since then, people have been buying toilet paper when faces with a crisis (happens every time there's a hurricane in Hawaii, for example).
And let's be honest, next time there's a crisis, you're going to check if you have enough toilet paper for the next month
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Re:coronavirus = media hype factory (Score:4, Insightful)
we pulled 3.5 trillion dollars out of thin air to prop up the stock market, we will almost certainly bail out airlines and other industries as part of this (the shareholders, not the workers) at an amazing cost. I bet we could do something to make sure people don't starve or even go bankrupt but that might cost the wealthy some money in the long run so I guess die of exposure and starvation.
Suspending mortgage payments (and requiring landlords to suspend rent) would go a long way.
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Or their civilizations?
Do you really think this or is hyperbole your standard way of communicating? Just curious.
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It's not hyperbole. Stop food deliveries to any big city and society will completely break down in about 3 days.
You take Western Civilization for granted if you don't appreciate how fragile it really is.
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It's not hyperbole. Stop food deliveries to any big city and society will completely break down in about 3 days.
You take Western Civilization for granted if you don't appreciate how fragile it really is.
I realize exactly how fragile big cities are. That's merely one of several reasons I wouldn't want to live in one.
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