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-   -   COVID-19 - Wuhan Coronavirus (a non-political thread, see pg. 36 #1778) (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//showthread.php?t=96561)

thesloppy 05-07-2020 01:59 PM

I do think something that confuses people, or at least me, is that nobody ever seems to directly address social guidelines. Everything (at least in America) is spoken of entirely in relations to business, but I think there are a lot of people that simply want guidance on if/when/how they can socialize with their friends and family, and some of the general frustration and anger across the country comes from poor efforts at addressing that directly.

Arles 05-07-2020 02:02 PM

Most states are now testing 5-10x the number of people that they did in April. Arizona has tested 111,000 people and they want to test another 60,000 people in the next three weeks. There is zero chance their counted cases will go down - even if the actual number is decreasing. Having that 14-day decline is essentially incentivizing states to reduce their testing if they want to open up - which is a terrible idea. What states should do is rely on other indicators on a slow re-opening, but keep testing like crazy. This way we could still isolate certain counties/cities if there is a bigger outbreak there. I'm thankful there isn't a requirement to follow the Gottlieb plan or people would just reduce testing to apparent healthy people and call everything great.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 02:05 PM

Speaking of SW Georgia, this sobering article was came out by the AP:

https://apnews.com/b2a2add19ce7f4f75f42b29331034706

One of the most frightening lines was this one:

Quote:

Of the 20 counties with the highest death rate in America, six of them are in rural southwest Georgia, where there are no packed skyrise apartment buildings or subways

SW Georgia is one of the places where hospitals were overrun. There is a story about an older married couple with health issues who got sick in a few days of each other. The hospital was packed, so the husband was told to go to a hospital an hour south and then the wife was told to go to a hospital an hour north. They both have since died.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 02:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3280244)
Most states are now testing 5-10x the number of people that they did in April. Arizona has tested 111,000 people and they want to test another 60,000 people in the next three weeks. There is zero chance their counted cases will go down - even if the actual number is decreasing. Having that 14-day decline is essentially incentivizing states to reduce their testing if they want to open up - which is a terrible idea.


I feel like banging my head against a wall. Are you even reading?

"positive tests as a percent of total tests"

Opening up testing makes that % decrease as you start testing people without symptoms.

Arles 05-07-2020 02:09 PM

So, basically, you want states to go test a bunch of healthy people and then open up? Because that's what you are basically incentivizing.

I'd rather keep testing sick and healthy and get a better idea of what is really out there- but not sit in some state of paralyzed shelter in place until August/September when maybe you get "lucky" and hit an inside straight on cases per tested. IMO, we have tested so few people that hospitalization rates/beds are the only real way to know how things are. Even if we quadrupled the testing number by August in most states, we would still have tested less than 10% of the population. This 14-day thing on an insignificant sample seems pointless.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 02:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3280250)
So, basically, you want states to go test a bunch of healthy people and then open up? Because that's what you are basically incentivizing.


That would be far better than just randomly opening up because they feel it's time. Also that would provide some good numbers of asymptomatic infection rates - if they only tested healthy people, which no state will limit it to. Regardless, it's a massive incentive to increase testing.

Btw, once a state 'opens up' based on no plan at all they are really not going to have much of an incentive to test more. Because no Governor is going to want data to show they were completely wrong, especially if they went against White House guidelines.

Arles 05-07-2020 02:20 PM

No, all it does is incentivize you to test until you hit a magic number (that is basically meaningless) and then stop. We shouldn't have anything reliant on testing and should always incentivize more testing (no matter the results).

Using testing rates to determine safety is like having Brady, Rodgers, Blake Bortles and Nathan Peterman all throw one pass in a pitch black practice facility - then say whomever completes that pass to an unseen WR is the best QB in the NFL.

Butter 05-07-2020 02:22 PM

Do you really think healthy people are going to go in and pay to get tested to help the state get their numbers up?

I don't even know what that argument is

NobodyHere 05-07-2020 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3280256)
Do you really think healthy people are going to go in and pay to get tested to help the state get their numbers up?

I don't even know what that argument is


If we're relying on testing people who can pay, doesn't that generally leave the poor (who are probably the most vulnerable) out of the equation?

That could lead to us believing that we're more virus free than we actually are.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3280255)
No, all it does is incentivize you to test until you hit a magic number (that is basically meaningless) and then stop. We shouldn't have anything reliant on testing and should always incentivize more testing (no matter the results).


By incentivizing increased testing. Seems like a win to me. There is no incentive to test more once you open up in opposition to the WH guidelines - why have the numbers show you were wrong.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3280256)
Do you really think healthy people are going to go in and pay to get tested to help the state get their numbers up?

I don't even know what that argument is


It's a way to argue against having any semi-objective plan for reopening at all is what I'm seeing.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 02:32 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280257)
If we're relying on testing people who can pay, doesn't that generally leave the poor (who are probably the most vulnerable) out of the equation?

That could lead to us believing that we're more virus free than we actually are.


Most likely so. Though, better than nothing. It's not perfect, but I don't want to minimize the benefits of increased testing, even if it is mostly from a higher socio-economic level. The asymptomatic amount of infection is one of the scary parts.

Arles 05-07-2020 02:35 PM

I just don't see how any logical person could rely on testing numbers at this point. The sample is so infinitesimal that you don't get any real data. You can convince me the death numbers are more usable, but the actual count of cases has no real significance.

Butter 05-07-2020 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280257)
If we're relying on testing people who can pay, doesn't that generally leave the poor (who are probably the most vulnerable) out of the equation?

That could lead to us believing that we're more virus free than we actually are.


Hopefully this is not some kind of revelation for you

Butter 05-07-2020 02:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3280262)
I just don't see how any logical person could rely on testing numbers at this point. The sample is so infinitesimal that you don't get any real data. You can convince me the death numbers are more usable, but the actual count of cases has no real significance.


Yeah, you're right, just fuck it, why test at all?

Let's just leave it all to chance and hope for the best

NobodyHere 05-07-2020 02:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3280264)
Hopefully this is not some kind of revelation for you


I guess I naively thought there was some good old fashioned random sampling testing going on.

If not then the numbers are kind of useless.

albionmoonlight 05-07-2020 03:11 PM

Surprising Silver Linings To The Chaos We're Living Through | Cracked.com

Ben E Lou 05-07-2020 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3280239)
You are correct. We have messed up by not testing quick enough. But a state just itching to reopen would definitely know the percentage of tests that are positive compared to the days or weeks before. And in fact, by dramatically ratcheting up testing and providing it to people who have no symptoms, they could make sure that the % of tests that are positive would decline, even if the raw numbers went up.

But they aren't even doing that.

What good would that be for determining whether it’s wise to reopen though? Seems like it'd be no more real info than we have now.

At this point we're talking about "Hey, let's open up because it'll help me in November!" vs. "Hey, let's open up because we've manipulated the data to make it look like a wise choice!" Both suck.

Arles 05-07-2020 03:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3280265)
Yeah, you're right, just fuck it, why test at all?

Let's just leave it all to chance and hope for the best

I don't have problem with the act of testing and think we should be doing it in orders of magnitude higher ASAP. My issue is using the 2% of each state we've tested as some kind of massive yardstick on progress in returning back. It's just not enough data.

It is unfortunate that we didn't test a lot more back in April, but it is what it is. We are now forced to use other methods to determine when it is safe for a transition back (with numerous safety precautions and restrictions). It would be great if we even had 10% of each state tested, but we don't and won't anytime soon.

GrantDawg 05-07-2020 03:24 PM

Anyone else a little freaked out that the military has put a permanent ban on anybody who has ever had the virus from joining the Armed Services? What exactly do they know?

NobodyHere 05-07-2020 03:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3280274)
Anyone else a little freaked out that the military has put a permanent ban on anybody who has ever had the virus from joining the Armed Services? What exactly do they know?


You can still join if you get a waiver.

RainMaker 05-07-2020 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3280274)
Anyone else a little freaked out that the military has put a permanent ban on anybody who has ever had the virus from joining the Armed Services? What exactly do they know?


Looks like it is only those who have been hospitalized. And you can still get a medical waiver if you can prove you're healthy.

Doesn't seem like a big deal. They flag stuff like asthma. And with how it appears to cause permanent lung damage to those who have the most serious cases, they're likely just being cautious.

Butter 05-07-2020 03:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280267)
I guess I naively thought there was some good old fashioned random sampling testing going on.

If not then the numbers are kind of useless.


I've heard of a couple, but mostly not AFAIK

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 03:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280269)
What good would that be for determining whether it’s wise to reopen though? Seems like it'd be no more real info than we have now.

At this point we're talking about "Hey, let's open up because it'll help me in November!" vs. "Hey, let's open up because we've manipulated the data to make it look like a wise choice!" Both suck.


It would likely give a lot more information on asymptomatic infection rates. At this point, we don't know a ton about that.

RainMaker 05-07-2020 03:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280267)
I guess I naively thought there was some good old fashioned random sampling testing going on.

If not then the numbers are kind of useless.


There have been a few. But with lack of testing available it was hard to justify sampling 40,000 people when people going to a hospital couldn't even get a test

Brian Swartz 05-07-2020 04:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles
I don't have problem with the act of testing and think we should be doing it in orders of magnitude higher ASAP. My issue is using the 2% of each state we've tested as some kind of massive yardstick on progress in returning back. It's just not enough data.

It is unfortunate that we didn't test a lot more back in April, but it is what it is. We are now forced to use other methods to determine when it is safe for a transition back (with numerous safety precautions and restrictions). It would be great if we even had 10% of each state tested, but we don't and won't anytime soon.


100% agree here. By the way, here's an exhaustive list of nations who have done one test per each ten people:

Faroe Islands
Iceland
UAE
Falkland Islands

No major industrialized nations are better than 1 in 20. So waiting for it to get to that kind of level is IMO a pipe dream.

molson 05-07-2020 04:19 PM

How does a state or country increase their testing beyond those who are actively seeking it out because they are sick or have been exposed?

I talked a while ago here about an Idaho non-profit that is offering testing, and antibody testing, to anyone who wants it. It's covered by insurance, you can pay out of pocket, or there was some talk of a subsidy if you couldn't afford it - no idea how that played out. They got some people (I went! negative on antibodies, damn it), but nobody else I know was excited to run down to a hospital parking lot and wait in line to do that on their time off.

(Results of the first batch of testing was 3.1% positive COVID tests out of 1,598, and 1.75% positive antibody test out of 1,946). And those antibody tests were people who thought they may have had it. So the numbers are very low here. Leaving us very vulnerable to a second wave, presumably more so that those who here hit harder/weren't restrictive enough earlier).

miami_fan 05-07-2020 04:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3280274)
Anyone else a little freaked out that the military has put a permanent ban on anybody who has ever had the virus from joining the Armed Services? What exactly do they know?


I would be more concerned with insurance companies using it as a pre-existing condition.

RainMaker 05-07-2020 05:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molson (Post 3280290)
How does a state or country increase their testing beyond those who are actively seeking it out because they are sick or have been exposed?

I talked a while ago here about an Idaho non-profit that is offering testing, and antibody testing, to anyone who wants it. It's covered by insurance, you can pay out of pocket, or there was some talk of a subsidy if you couldn't afford it - no idea how that played out. They got some people (I went! negative on antibodies, damn it), but nobody else I know was excited to run down to a hospital parking lot and wait in line to do that on their time off.

(Results of the first batch of testing was 3.1% positive COVID tests out of 1,598, and 1.75% positive antibody test out of 1,946). And those antibody tests were people who thought they may have had it. So the numbers are very low here. Leaving us very vulnerable to a second wave, presumably more so that those who here hit harder/weren't restrictive enough earlier).


Guess it depends on where you are. In Illinois it is still tough to get tested. Usually have to be real sick to get one.

As for how to test more people, you do it by testing those who might have been exposed. So if your wife tests positive, everyone in the house gets tested. People who were around her get tested. That hopefully stops the spread there.

cuervo72 05-07-2020 05:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3280234)


The White House is using WordPress??

Butter 05-07-2020 05:46 PM

They built a COVID-19 "mathematical analysis" in Excel, what do you expect?

whomario 05-07-2020 05:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3280300)
Guess it depends on where you are. In Illinois it is still tough to get tested. Usually have to be real sick to get one.

As for how to test more people, you do it by testing those who might have been exposed. So if your wife tests positive, everyone in the house gets tested. People who were around her get tested. That hopefully stops the spread there.


This + routine testing (every week f.e) in Retirement/nursing homes (both employees and inhabitants), medical personnel of all sort both in hospitals, doctors offices or mobile services. Or 'designated' contacts of people in care-settings.

PCR testing is not an adequate tool to use for some sort of "let's randomly test as much as possible", it is a tool to identify either likely infected (symptoms or contacts with known infected) and to stop outbreaks before they take hold and ideally catch quite a few possible spreaders before they do so in vulnerable closed settings. And no, doing it won't prevent that totally, but lowers the odds by a lot as well as the size of Clusters.

For all that you not only need tests and labs but local authorities to organize that and do that contact tracing. The goal should be that each of those local Teams is in a position to actually do this. As soon as they can't you again loose track of developments and are flying totally blind. On the other hand there is currently no way to do that in many areas in the US, because you need to actually get low enough to start this on decent footing otherwise all you can hope for is a bit if damage controll. Testing isn't the magic bullet to replace hygiene measures (keep a distance, wear a mask, limit capacity, limit contacts) that you need to do when opening, it is a suporting measure (the more you find, the more you Quarantine and thus break a chain of infections) and a warning system for when to restrict some things again (to at least then be able to make an informed decision).

It really is not realistic to come close to catching every case, but that does not mean that finding 1 in 4/5 isn't helping a lot more than 1/10. Especially entering winter. In essence this was the difference in February/early march between Germany, Austria, Norway or Portugal vs Spain, Italy or the UK in terms is hitting/missing the break point.

But all that also relies on a fast return, so testing more but waiting longer on results is not good as well.

Ben E Lou 05-07-2020 06:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3280284)
It would likely give a lot more information on asymptomatic infection rates. At this point, we don't know a ton about that.

Got it. I thought we were speaking specifically about the decision to reopen. Sure, it’s good to get that info, but it’s not part of the metrics. So, point being, I really do think we’re stuck with either:
—gaming the tests to make it look like the metrics have been achieved
—waiting an absurd amount of time for them to come down as we continue to increase testing for the next several months
—coming up with entirely different metrics like number of deaths (and then fighting over what constitutes a COVID19 death)
—Leroy Jenkins

Options 1&2 suck. Option 3 ain’t happenin’.

Leroy isn’t the hero we want, but he’s pretty much what 2020 deserves. *shurg*

whomario 05-07-2020 06:07 PM

Yeah, i really fail to see it working as way to get the curve down. It is an important tool important to keep it down once you get there by brute force measures... (Which many countries managed)
Again, in Germany the estimate is about 1k cases can be actually traced and managed per day (goal is to increase that, of course). And then you get ever closer to those 1k being a larger % of actual infected because you break chains of infections. 1k traced might mean 2-3k real infections, 1.5k (of which 500 ger pushed to the next day) over time might mean 1.5 are really 10+.
1k would be the equivalent of 4 or 5 in the US under similar testing patterns.

I think a big problem for the US is the big distances which protected some areas from the worst early but also puts them on an entirely different trajectory now than NY or NJ.

What could be a game changer are 'instant' tests working on spit and are somewhat similarly intuitive as pregnancy tests. Which won't be available tomorrow, but is very likely going to be available soonish. Mass production needs to be figured out, but especially for people in contact with elderly people (by profession or privately) this would be huge as a safety net. Which is what it should be used for first and foremost ...
Because that way a higher number of cases in younger people is less of a Problem. Not no problem, but for the big picture not a neck breaker.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 06:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280311)
Got it. I thought we were speaking specifically about the decision to reopen.


Partially it is. These states are going balls to the wall to reopen (Leroy Jenkins-ing it as you say). I think having them have some measurable metrics is good. Some states are going to game it, because that's just who their Governors are. I think a bunch would take it seriously. But even the states that game it, we can perhaps get some usable information from them. While testing isn't being done in necessarily a random statistical sample to extrapolate, it can be a good tool to see how things are looking - enough for a decent statistical sample for a certain socio-economic group I guess (and you don't need all that much for that - see how political polling is done). IIRC, about 19+ states are doing a statistically significant amount of testing for their state population, including most Southern states (including both Carolinas) - at least as of the end of April.

Is the alternative, like you said, wait for a neighboring state to reopen and see how many die in 2 weeks? Or just throw caution to the wind? (because as I noted, why would those states continue to test at any real level outside of hospitals if they did that)

whomario 05-07-2020 06:41 PM

Is anybody (CDC ?) 'curating' the data from testing on a national level btw ? I know the Institute in charge here keeps detailed statistics on a ton of stuff including certain professions or when a case actually showed symptoms vs. when they were tested etc. If anybody is interested:

https://www.rki.de/DE/Content/InfAZ/...ublicationFile

RKI - Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 - Archiv der Situationsberichte des Robert Koch-Instituts zu COVID-19 (ab 4.3.2020)

(Not always the same stats/graphs every day and those are only a small portion, basically the easier ones for the public and available in german and english, lots more only in german like where the tests were done between doctors offices, tracing or hospitals etc)

rjolley 05-07-2020 07:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280238)
But...am I missing something, or how could they even know? Most (all?) are increasing their testing capacity still, and it doesn't appear that said capacity is going to stabilize any time soon, thus making it impossible to know if we are dealing with an increase in cases, or just an increase in testing.

In short, unless I'm missing something, we royally screwed the pooch by not ramping up testing fast enough--even during the lockdowns--and now it's just a total SNAFU.


:withstupid:

Seems like the best way forward has always been to test better, show that even though the infection rate is high, the death rate is actually low, and we have a way to manage both by tracking people who are infected. That would elevate the numbers, but would've helped us get to a place where a majority of the population would feel comfortable going out and adhering to the regulations.

Instead, we're basically still guessing. While the stay at home orders have helped reduce the load on hospitals, we don't know whether we're in a good place to be out. We should have an educated guess by now.

sterlingice 05-07-2020 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3280274)
Anyone else a little freaked out that the military has put a permanent ban on anybody who has ever had the virus from joining the Armed Services? What exactly do they know?


I've seen a couple of theories on that online. The first is that they're treating it a bit like childhood asthma as it's a respiratory disease and that's not a disqualifier but makes it pretty hard to get in. Second theory I've seen is that they don't want to take on the medical liability for the services or the VA. Of course, the whole "military knows (or strongly suspects) something we don't about it" is quite popular, as well, and that one's a bit more scary. Then again, there were a number of gnarly aftereffects from SARS.

SI

BishopMVP 05-07-2020 09:31 PM

I know the feds aren't the answer but I don't get why at least a couple states or even cities haven't done their own random sampling because you really don't need large numbers to get a better idea. I heard about one in Boston where 32% of people in Chelsea tested positive, there was a plan for a test of a larger number (2000?) across more neighborhoods and... crickets. (Now Brookline says it will partner with MGH to test 200 asymptomatic first responders and 400 residents. Brookline Plans Randomized COVID-19 Antibody Testing Of Residents – CBS Boston )

Plus you see weird stories like the shockingly high numbers who test positive in a homeless shelter Coronavirus: CDC reviewing ‘stunning’ universal testing results from Boston homeless shelter or jails Ohio’s Marion prison reveals coronavirus challenges behind bars. None is easy. All are urgent - cleveland.com , the even more shocking number who show no symptoms, and the follow up focusing on what actually happens to this random sampling who got it is again minimal. This article at least has some stats (and says 11 deaths later in it), but as unfortunate it is it exploded in prisons, this seems like a perfect place to get some better data and extrapolate it and it's barely covered by the media.
Quote:

Cleveland.com’s Jeremy Pelzer has reported that, as of April 21, 2,011 inmates, or more than 80 percent of the population at Marion Correctional Institution, had “tested positive for COVID-19, according to state data.” At the time, Pelzer noted, that represented 16 percent of Ohio’s total coronavirus cases.

The state has since said 96 percent of Marion inmates testing positive had no symptoms. As of Monday, according to state data, 409 Marion inmates had recovered, 703 were quarantined, 1,746 who’d tested positive were in isolation and 14 were awaiting test results.

Also (unsurprisingly), thanks New York! https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/07/u...-outbreak.html

CU Tiger 05-07-2020 10:02 PM

Just had a two hour conversation. With one of my oldest friends who stopped by. We social distanced around my pool table.

He has a daughter same age as my daughter so they've spent a lot of nights together at both houses and she considers him dad 2. So she was hanging out in the basement with us guys and even shot a game.

We were both confused and talking about why we both aren't worried at all about the virus, yet totally respect it and social distance (mostly - tonight excluded i suppose) etc. Just that we hsve zero fear for our safety despite fearing for our family.

It was refreshing to have someone else get your feelings and understand. But we were both confused. Then 16 year old sweet daughter chimes in.

Y'all both work high risk electric. You literally prepare to die if you mess up 10x a week. Y'all are over being scared of dieing. Me and Maddie are over being scared of y'all dieing. We used to cry to each other worried about y'all when we figured out what you do at like 10. Now we just hope it doesn't happen.

It was sobering to realize she had this fear and never shared it. And eye opening to realize she was right.

Don't know what that says about me but felt like sharing.
From the mouth of babes and such.

Bottoms up.

JPhillips 05-07-2020 10:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BishopMVP (Post 3280372)
I know the feds aren't the answer but I don't get why at least a couple states or even cities haven't done their own random sampling because you really don't need large numbers to get a better idea. I heard about one in Boston where 32% of people in Chelsea tested positive, there was a plan for a test of a larger number (2000?) across more neighborhoods and... crickets. (Now Brookline says it will partner with MGH to test 200 asymptomatic first responders and 400 residents. Brookline Plans Randomized COVID-19 Antibody Testing Of Residents – CBS Boston )

Plus you see weird stories like the shockingly high numbers who test positive in a homeless shelter Coronavirus: CDC reviewing ‘stunning’ universal testing results from Boston homeless shelter or jails Ohio’s Marion prison reveals coronavirus challenges behind bars. None is easy. All are urgent - cleveland.com , the even more shocking number who show no symptoms, and the follow up focusing on what actually happens to this random sampling who got it is again minimal. This article at least has some stats (and says 11 deaths later in it), but as unfortunate it is it exploded in prisons, this seems like a perfect place to get some better data and extrapolate it and it's barely covered by the media.

Also (unsurprisingly), thanks New York! https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/07/u...-outbreak.html


I think there's been a lot of concern that the serology tests right now produce too many false positives.

ISiddiqui 05-07-2020 11:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3280373)
Bottoms up.


Indeed. A shot (and a prayer) for y'all - literally, FWIW.

Lathum 05-07-2020 11:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3280384)
Indeed. A shot (and a prayer) for y'all - literally, FWIW.


chins down boys

whomario 05-08-2020 02:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3280375)
I think there's been a lot of concern that the serology tests right now produce too many false positives.


With the newest good ones that is more an issue in areas with few cases. Say only 2-3% had it, than a 98/99 % rate of correct diagnosis is a problem (because quite conceivably from 500 tests you might find not 10 positives but 20 f.e.) but in total and clear hotspots that is somewhat negligible for academic purposes (!).

But personally i don't think these purely "how many had it" 'studies' are remotely useful, especially when they are random rather than representative/preplanned. Because at the end they do not really tell you much by itself other than how many had it in a very specific setting (,jail) or how many might (!) have had it in one town/zip code. Take the supermarket shoppers in NY which is simply flawed and really can't give you more than a very rough idea on it's own.
I mean, what exact use has that number, the jail number for any other setting ? Zero if you are honest.

So either you do big representative (not random !) studies on at least a big city level in multiple cities or countrywide with many criteria: demografic, social, racial etc spread of participants, big cities, small citis, rural, with many care homes, few care homes, high median age, low median age, many cases few cases etc). Or you use local studies to actually get Information: Like, how does it spread, who infects whome, who is sick when, what happens in households, what sort of jobs or habits di infected/uninfected have, how many antibodies are produced relative to symptoms/exposure etc, etc
And ideally you test those participants every week (both antibody and PCR) to get more than a mere snapshot from 10 days ago (antibodies take time to develop)

That then actually tells you sth about the disease and how it spreads that you can use for adjusting your strategy, but is not sth that you can whip up, do and analyse in a week.

The german study in Heinsberg has it's most relevant results not in their flawed IFR extrapolation (in essence they take one municipality with 7 deaths and end up guessing 1.8 mio in Germany were infected. Which is utter BS, because if 7,4 or 14 people in one little town die is highly random based on who gets infected or how/when they get treated There are similar sized and affected towns with 40 dead and much bigger ones with less).

But in analysing f.e. spread in households (the larger the household the lower the risk for each person. Highest in 2 persons, lowest with 4), relationship between exposure (a superspreading even at a local carnival session/party) and mild/bad cases or demografics of infections (children ARE infected at a similar rate).
And they are currently working on a fascinating analyses of that carnival session. Who sat where how long, who drank or didn't, who sang or didn't, who got sick when afterwards (or how sick) etc to figur out why who might have gotten infected or NOT infected.

whomario 05-08-2020 09:07 AM

The South Korean Prime Minister demostrating safety measures in a school cafeteria:

https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default...770_170034.jpg

Meanwhile, westerners can't be bothered to bring themselves to make the sacrifice of wearing a bloody selfmade mask in select locations.(yes, obviously during meals the masks will come off ;) )

Everybody thinking the South Korean model would work in Europe/US is dreaming. Testing is only part of it, protection, consideration for others and a very, very close digital and analogue monitoring are other pillars.

They just had a single person presumably infect at least 12 already identified people in 3 different night clubs (more are expected as it has only been 4 days, but still that is insane to find these 12 starting from 1) and thinking about quarantining 1500 people.

Imagine a night club in the US or Europe being open right now and, say, 10 people with the virus (no symptoms or still before symptoms or even just not giving a fuck) visiting and spreading it to 50 more (to be conservative). How many infected would be identified 4 days later ? How many visitors would be identified ?

CrimsonFox 05-08-2020 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ISiddiqui (Post 3280384)
Indeed. A shot (and a prayer) for y'all - literally, FWIW.


that's sure different from "a shot and a beer"

ISiddiqui 05-08-2020 09:43 AM

Hell, I'd even take consideration for others. It seems as soon as an inch is given, people take not just yards, but miles.

MrBug708 05-08-2020 09:47 AM

That safety measure inthe cafeteria is an instance where people who don't understand what it's like in person, creating something they think will help the situation. Sure, it's a great idea in theory, but he hasn't clearly been in a school cafeteria in a very long time. That might be fine at a college campus or a small school. No way does any school cafeteria have that much space, at least at the schools that I have been at and worked at.

Lathum 05-08-2020 10:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by whomario (Post 3280410)
The South Korean Prime Minister demostrating safety measures in a school cafeteria:

https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default...770_170034.jpg

Meanwhile, westerners can't be bothered to bring themselves to make the sacrifice of wearing a bloody selfmade mask in select locations.(yes, obviously during meals the masks will come off ;) )

Everybody thinking the South Korean model would work in Europe/US is dreaming. Testing is only part of it, protection, consideration for others and a very, very close digital and analogue monitoring are other pillars.

They just had a single person presumably infect at least 12 already identified people in 3 different night clubs (more are expected as it has only been 4 days, but still that is insane to find these 12 starting from 1) and thinking about quarantining 1500 people.

Imagine a night club in the US or Europe being open right now and, say, 10 people with the virus (no symptoms or still before symptoms or even just not giving a fuck) visiting and spreading it to 50 more (to be conservative). How many infected would be identified 4 days later ? How many visitors would be identified ?


He;s wearing a mask so he is already light years ahead of our leaders

Danny 05-08-2020 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MrBug708 (Post 3280427)
That safety measure inthe cafeteria is an instance where people who don't understand what it's like in person, creating something they think will help the situation. Sure, it's a great idea in theory, but he hasn't clearly been in a school cafeteria in a very long time. That might be fine at a college campus or a small school. No way does any school cafeteria have that much space, at least at the schools that I have been at and worked at.


Elementary school cafeteria's are the wild wild west. Average distance probably lucky to be 6 inches

Lathum 05-08-2020 12:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Danny (Post 3280460)
Elementary school cafeteria's are the wild wild west. Average distance probably lucky to be 6 inches


In Oregon where my son went to school K-2 they eat lunch in the classroom. When we moved to NJ starting in 3rd grade they eat at the cafeteria here, he was like, WTF?

Danny 05-08-2020 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lathum (Post 3280461)
In Oregon where my son went to school K-2 they eat lunch in the classroom. When we moved to NJ starting in 3rd grade they eat at the cafeteria here, he was like, WTF?


It's crazy, I usually have a headache after observing students in there. They cant do lunches in the classroom because its teachers mandated lunch time during that but they will have to stagger it more (right now there is just a younger and older lunch time). And maybe have more outdoor tables to spread out.

The most concerning thing is we all have to adjust how we do school in ways which require more resources but we are all looking at budget cuts and reduced resources

Brian Swartz 05-08-2020 03:39 PM

Michigan extends stay-at-home through May 28th, but manufacturing is allowed to open on May 11th. The conspiracists are swarming. They are more and more including people I know to be level-headed and apolitical in most circumstances.

I'm having a hard time keeping my brain from exploding.

RainMaker 05-08-2020 04:05 PM


ISiddiqui 05-08-2020 04:30 PM

Mythbusters did something like that as well regarding a 'dinner party'. It turned out the germs got on everyone except 1 - even those who were told to act like 'germaphobes' (and that one it didn't was an actual germaphobe who didn't touch anything with her bare hands).

RainMaker 05-08-2020 05:08 PM

State no longer allowed to track processing plant data - NORTHEAST - NEWS CHANNEL NEBRASKA

IlliniCub 05-08-2020 06:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3280479)
Michigan extends stay-at-home through May 28th, but manufacturing is allowed to open on May 11th. The conspiracists are swarming. They are more and more including people I know to be level-headed and apolitical in most circumstances.

I'm having a hard time keeping my brain from exploding.

I'm seeing a lot of people I know that I would say should know better falling in to conspiracy BS. I'm guessing it stems from their desire to have their "old life" back. I do find it very disturbing how anti vaxxers have co-opted the movement and are convincing otherwise rational people.

Lathum 05-08-2020 09:13 PM

Roy from Siegfried and Roy died today from the virus

miami_fan 05-09-2020 07:29 AM

They have opened up testing for asymptomatic people locally so my wife, son mother and I have appointments to get tested on Tuesday.

QuikSand 05-09-2020 07:51 AM

Some political overtones, but posted here because it's a level-headed view of the economic issues right now, and the illusory notion that all we need for the economy is to lift some laws:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/ar...ession/611398/

whomario 05-09-2020 07:52 AM

Some good news on the medical front:

1) Pretty much proven that blod clotting (even when the patients had no issues with that prior) is a major contributor for death. Hope is that giving blood thinners early on prevents that.

2) A hospital in Hongkong testet a new Mix of medications and got great results in mild cases.

3) A german institute developed a blood test/analysis that looks to do a great job predicting those just hospitalised that take a bad turn a few days later. Being able to identify those would be huge, making it possible and ethically sound to treat them more 'agressively' early on rather than wait and see if they need it.

sterlingice 05-09-2020 08:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by whomario (Post 3280550)
2) A hospital in Hongkong testet a new Mix of medications and got great results in mild cases.


Hasn't pretty much every drug tested in mild cases looked good? I mean, after all, the majority of people still get well on their own from it.

SI

Edward64 05-09-2020 08:45 AM

Went to do my Kroger 8am run today. I scored a Charmin Extra-strong 12-roll !! TBH, I really didn't need any more TP but this is the first Charmin I've seen in at least 6 weeks so had to buy it. Lots of Bounce paper towels too.

There were maybe 20-25 customers in the store. All but 2 had masks on but it did get a little too crowed at a corner for the vegetables (just waited till they all cleared out). All Kroger workers had them on too and, for the first time for me, there was a woman cleaning shopping carts at the entrance and pointed to the ones that had been cleaned.

Plenty of vegetables, fruits. Lots of meats but there were limits to 2 each for beef & chicken. It may be my imagination but think the meat prices have gone up. Lots of milk, eggs. Limited flour though and all the bread flour was gone.

I should go back to Kroger late afternoon and see if there is a significant difference). We haven't ordered on-line for a pickup this past week. Things are getting better at the grocery stores and easy enough to go at a non-rush time.

Edward64 05-09-2020 08:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miami_fan (Post 3280548)
They have opened up testing for asymptomatic people locally so my wife, son mother and I have appointments to get tested on Tuesday.


Assume it'll be free?

Galaril 05-09-2020 10:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by QuikSand (Post 3280549)
Some political overtones, but posted here because it's a level-headed view of the economic issues right now, and the illusory notion that all we need for the economy is to lift some laws:

https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/ar...ession/611398/


This is a great article and spot on. The economy is f’ed because of the pandemic not the shutdowns and thus rolling those back will not keep us out of a recession.

Thomkal 05-09-2020 12:40 PM

Sorry if this has been posted already, but I was curious if anybody was tracking the health of those who attended the rallies protesting against the stay at home orders in various states. This is one of the first I've seen and qualifies that the Health Dept did not ask what large gathering they attended:

72 got COVID-19 after being at large event

whomario 05-09-2020 03:27 PM

Early Release - Coronavirus Disease Outbreak in Call Center, South Korea - Volume 26, Number 8—August 2020 - Emerging Infectious Diseases journal - CDC



Spread of SarsCov2 in a large Office Space in South Korea in mid march.

Quote:

Building X was closed on March 9, 2020, immediately after the outbreak was reported. We offered testing to all occupants (office workers and apartment residents) during March 9–12.

Despite reacting immediately after the first positive test (March 8th, presumably the first or among the first to get sick) almost 100 people were infected in the building and some outside.

Again, this organised response would likely not be possible here. So the number of infections in the 'outside world' would be greater (bringing the virus directly or indirectly to vulnerable people).
It is interesting how it seems more likely to catch it in this setting than at home.

And now consider having to work in a retirement home in these times and living with that scenario over your head unless you take extreme measures that also threaten the mental wellbeing of all involved...

whomario 05-09-2020 03:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Thomkal (Post 3280597)
Sorry if this has been posted already, but I was curious if anybody was tracking the health of those who attended the rallies protesting against the stay at home orders in various states. This is one of the first I've seen and qualifies that the Health Dept did not ask what large gathering they attended:

72 got COVID-19 after being at large event


Now add twice as many that did "attend a large gathering" but were to chicken to confess to it ...

Meanwhile, a user in another forum that i have known for years is living in Brazil and i get sick reading his updates. Seems like thousands of aditional "pneumonia" and "stroke" victims are emerging where it seems more than likely that a majority is actually untested Covid19 ... Also, like early on in New York, a massive spike of deaths at home. Funeral homes and service reporting 3 times as many deaths than normal etc ...
At the end of all this, whoever points to the official cases and says "see, not thaaat bad, why the fuss ?" i will want to strangle ...

whomario 05-09-2020 04:28 PM

Another fascinating graphic:




From an Austrian study. Thickness of dots = number of cases that cases generated (some aditional ones might simply never been found), bottom scale is days and days in the graphic are alternating grey/black. Colour of dots mark which "generation" im that chain it is.

Shows what happened starting with 1 traveller returning from Italy who got tested 4 days after returning and he and his contacts got quarantined 1 day later (so 5 after returning) 3 initial contacts he infected, 2 did not infect anybody else (maybe only because quarantined in time), the 3rd passed it on before he was quarantined and started a cascade of cases.
The latter parts of the chain were during the lockdown, so also visually shows how that helped in stopping these 3+ infections at a time and then mostly being 1 at a time.

This is why testing and tracing as well as quarantining is so crucial. But it also shows how small the margin of error is.

Edit: are the pictures too big ?

miami_fan 05-09-2020 09:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3280568)
Assume it'll be free?


Testing is covered by all insurance companies by law. Now you may be charged for going to a out of network provider or something like that.

BishopMVP 05-10-2020 02:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by whomario (Post 3280390)
But personally i don't think these purely "how many had it" 'studies' are remotely useful, especially when they are random rather than representative/preplanned. Because at the end they do not really tell you much by itself other than how many had it in a very specific setting (,jail) or how many might (!) have had it in one town/zip code. Take the supermarket shoppers in NY which is simply flawed and really can't give you more than a very rough idea on it's own.
I mean, what exact use has that number, the jail number for any other setting ? Zero if you are honest.

So either you do big representative (not random !) studies on at least a big city level in multiple cities or countrywide with many criteria: demografic, social, racial etc spread of participants, big cities, small citis, rural, with many care homes, few care homes, high median age, low median age, many cases few cases etc).

Representative studies are done all the time based off small sample sizes. And yes, the number of people who caught Covid-19 (or tested positive for it) in a jail is not representative of the general public, but their outcomes would seem to be very informative and something worth tracking & reporting on.

And I agree I'd love more tests across bigger areas and with a longer period of time they're monitored, but the few smaller scale studies we've seen are saying the numbers are different than the estimates being used to drive public policy, and I don't understand why you're adamantly saying they are wrong instead of saying "hmm, let's get a bigger study".
Quote:

Originally Posted by Galaril (Post 3280584)
This is a great article and spot on. The economy is f’ed because of the pandemic not the shutdowns and thus rolling those back will not keep us out of a recession.

Why not both? There is a good argument that shelter in place orders & shutting most things down were the right call due to the potential for exponential growth in the number of hospital patients & fatalities, but if we are willing to open back up now when there hasn't been any drastic change in potential infection or cure rate it begs the question of what exactly changed other than people understanding how much shelter at home hurts economically and socially. And if we're willing to accept the increased fatalities opening the economy this much will bring it shows that the economy could have kept functioning at 60-70% instead of 20-30% (or whatever) for the last 2 months, which would not have kept us out of a recession but is a material difference.
Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3280375)
I think there's been a lot of concern that the serology tests right now produce too many false positives.

I've seen that too (and it's also very dependent on which of the dozens of tests, of which I have no idea which are better), but stats like over 90% of 3000+ prisoners had it are way too high to be waved away as a testing flaw or margin of error issue.


Long story short, we all agree we need better and more widespread testing and the federal government won't be taking the point role they should, but it's very weird there aren't more initiatives on a state/county/city level, and I'm not sure why we're digging in heels in the discussion about when/if to open up instead of looking to get better info before advocating for a position.

albionmoonlight 05-10-2020 10:43 AM



Why isn't the story whether the restrictions are being lifted too quickly? If so, then who cares what the majority of people think. If no, then who cares what a majority of the people think.

When did "actually figure out the right answer" go out of vogue?

SirFozzie 05-10-2020 10:56 AM

Because the answer can't be mathmatically proven? Also, if people think the coronavirus restrictions are being lifted too quickly, they will hesitate to go out, meaning the benefits from reopening will not be as great.

Ben E Lou 05-10-2020 11:11 AM

To piggyback on what Foz said, a huge chunk of the country doesn’t trust the administration/conservative politicians, a huge chunk doesn’t trust the mainstream media, a huge chunk doesn’t trust conservative media, and a huge chunk doesn’t trust the Dems. Other than in a fantasy world where Rs, Ds, Fox, and MSNBC are delivering basically the same message to the populace, the success of reopening is pretty much completely dependent on how people feel about it.

PilotMan 05-10-2020 11:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280683)
To piggyback on what Foz said, a huge chunk of the country doesn’t trust the administration/conservative politicians, a huge chunk doesn’t trust the mainstream media, a huge chunk doesn’t trust conservative media, and a huge chunk doesn’t trust the Dems. Other than in a fantasy world where Rs, Ds, Fox, and MSNBC are delivering basically the same message to the populace, the success of reopening is pretty much completely dependent on how people feel about it.


Well I can tell you that my 72 yr old, lung damaged and compromised father, who lived through being a POW in Vietnam, told me yesterday that this is all been blown so far out of proportion by the media, and that it's all completely outrageous, because 7,500 people die in this country every single day.

He was holding back, and I was escalating in response (typical family discussion/argument over the phone), and he said, you'll have to forgive me, this gets me pretty worked up. So he certainly has nothing to worry about.

cuervo72 05-10-2020 12:48 PM

Quote:

What was the deadliest day in Vietnam?
Jan. 31, 1968
The single most lethal day of the war for American troops was Jan. 31, 1968, when 246 personnel were killed or mortally wounded as the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese Army regulars launched the Tet Offensive.

If that's the case, why should we care about this? Or really anything?

rjolley 05-10-2020 01:11 PM

Read through some of this article this morning and thought it was interesting. The Risks - Know Them - Avoid Them

whomario 05-10-2020 01:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BishopMVP (Post 3280668)
and I don't understand why you're adamantly saying they are wrong instead of saying "hmm, let's get a bigger study".



I figured that me wanting bigger studies was implied by pointing out those would help a lot more. But that's not the same as simply doing more random testing.

Plus, "flawed" is sth entirely different than "wrong". Science isn't perfect and also done by people. Sometimes those people make mistakes (which might not even be anyones 'fault' as it is simply to be expected whe the subject is new), sometimes they (need to) take shortcuts, sometimes they get led by their bias.
The Problem comes from wanting a study to say more than it actually can/does. A study always tells us sth, but a study with certain limitations tells us less than a study without those. Which is not a problem in itself, unless you expect it to show a sufficient result and then stop there because you figure that is all you need. Or that you take it to say sth it doesn't

NobodyHere 05-10-2020 01:23 PM

https://www.businessinsider.com/cali...ory-row-2020-5

Looks like Elon Musk and California are divorcing.

whomario 05-10-2020 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3280681)


Why isn't the story whether the restrictions are being lifted too quickly? If so, then who cares what the majority of people think. If no, then who cares what a majority of the people think.



Because right now that majority has no real eye opening way to express that. I mean, they can't well do a counter protest to drown out the angry mob.
Which at least in Germany seems to be a boon to those, because all the folk normally ranting merely online come out to play because a) police has to treat them with Kid gloves (for fear of playing into their "this is government opression" narrative) and b) the other side won't physically engage (not as in "violence" but simply counter protests with much larger numbers).
It is literally the one time they can expect to spread their message unopposed because it literally can't be opposed by the majority that disagrees with them.

Brian Swartz 05-10-2020 01:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight
Why isn't the story whether the restrictions are being lifted too quickly? If so, then who cares what the majority of people think. If no, then who cares what a majority of the people think.

When did "actually figure out the right answer" go out of vogue?


I don't think that's the media's job, which is to report things, not tell people what to think. I've seen lots of articles quoting Fauci, Birx, other experts, talking about what Trump has said, polls like this, etc.

There are other institutions whose job it is to figure out the right answer. Journalism isn't supposed to be about that. .

JPhillips 05-10-2020 01:53 PM

Journalism should be about finding the truth. If it's just an exercise in printing what people email you, what's the need for it?

Brian Swartz 05-10-2020 02:00 PM

Policy positions are inherently debatable matters. The scholarship on when, how, under what conditions we should open is not unanimous. The point is that journalism can and should serve as a reputable, minimally-biased source of information on what all the relevant parties have said and the validity of their claims, so that the people can decide for themselves what approach is best.

whomario 05-10-2020 02:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rjolley (Post 3280692)
Read through some of this article this morning and thought it was interesting. The Risks - Know Them - Avoid Them


One thing i would add is that infections happening at home within the family are actually surprisingly low. Those certainly are a big part, but the current data actually points to it being way less than you'd think (a couple studies in China, Netherlands and Germany found quite low transmissions at home, certainly lower than at 'social gatherings'. As low as 1 of 3 in a 4 person household catching it from the first one). But very informative and well written, definitely needs more of those sort of summaries IMO.
One thing though: I don't think you can exclude gatherings in crowds outside (sports events, concerts etc). Those were all stopped everywhere, so naturally played no role in the documentation.


The core problem as far as the 'curve' is that the US simply has not managed to have the infection level subside sufficiently to be able to manage it without collective measures. Then it is truly a question of "what are we willing to accept".

If you react later (relative to the real infection level) you would have to havena longer, stricter lockdown to get to the same low level that others reach that reacted sooner. While the case numbers are just an indicator, you can still surmise using case numbers, test volume and % of positives) that the US by and large * is still at a higher level than you can really controll/manage.

Because the lower the level, the better the chance to keep it low by other means than a lockdown. Again, estimates are that in Germany we can right now just about track and quarantine most contacts of most new cases. And we get about 1k a day.

* Although part of the problem is that due to the 'geography' of the US you have even more vastly different trajectories within the country as other countries have. Which is why countrywide numbers don't look as bad as Italy or the UK.

thesloppy 05-10-2020 02:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280695)


Neither side of this is behaving like the massive entities they are, but it's hard not to notice that, for all of their outrage and concern about personal freedom, all of Elon's rants (that I've seen) seem to ignore the actual folks working at his California factories entirely.

rjolley 05-10-2020 02:46 PM

The Elon Musk vs California thing is interesting. Is there some big order that Tesla has to fill and that's why he's rushing to get people back in the factory? Or is it driven by wanting to get some part of his life back to normal because everything is in a state of flux right now? Or is there something else?

People aren't buying cars right now, so wouldn't it be better to not have cars sitting on the lot unsold?

JPhillips 05-10-2020 03:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3280699)
Policy positions are inherently debatable matters. The scholarship on when, how, under what conditions we should open is not unanimous. The point is that journalism can and should serve as a reputable, minimally-biased source of information on what all the relevant parties have said and the validity of their claims, so that the people can decide for themselves what approach is best.


Weight of claims also matters. When most of the experts are saying one thing, with data to support it, and a smaller group of non-experts are saying something else, with no data, that should be part of the information given.

For example, journalists shouldn't run the claims from Plandemic as if they are at all similar in weight to guidelines from the CDC.

Ben E Lou 05-10-2020 06:30 PM

And sometimes even when people try, they screw it up. You can’t fix stupid. Just got this in a text from my wife, who is picking up takeout at the nearby Mexican joint. (Yes, it is just called “Mexico.”)

Quote:

People crack me up. I just watched a woman wearing a mask walk into Mexico and open the door with her bare hand and then proceed to touch her face immediately after. Why bother wearing a mask if you were going to be that blasé? I’m sitting in the car because there are three people in the lobby then will wait to go in, but I can sure tell you I will not be touching the door handle!

NobodyHere 05-10-2020 06:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rjolley (Post 3280703)
The Elon Musk vs California thing is interesting. Is there some big order that Tesla has to fill and that's why he's rushing to get people back in the factory? Or is it driven by wanting to get some part of his life back to normal because everything is in a state of flux right now? Or is there something else?

People aren't buying cars right now, so wouldn't it be better to not have cars sitting on the lot unsold?


Wasn't there wait lists for Teslas? It's been my understanding that they have a lot of unfilled orders.

Also I think Tesla has a bunch a debt that isn't magically going to go away while the factory is closed.

Warhammer 05-10-2020 07:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3280704)
Weight of claims also matters. When most of the experts are saying one thing, with data to support it, and a smaller group of non-experts are saying something else, with no data, that should be part of the information given.

For example, journalists shouldn't run the claims from Plandemic as if they are at all similar in weight to guidelines from the CDC.


Part of the problem here is the experts are basing a lot of their claims on models. The problem with the models, this is a new virus with a lot of speculation and not a lot of hard data. Thus most of the info going into the models is questionable, making the models questionable.

How many models from 1 month ago are close to being correct? How many models from 2 months ago are close to being correct?

rjolley 05-10-2020 08:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3280713)
Wasn't there wait lists for Teslas? It's been my understanding that they have a lot of unfilled orders.

Also I think Tesla has a bunch a debt that isn't magically going to go away while the factory is closed.


That would make sense for why he's pushing to open the factory.

albionmoonlight 05-10-2020 08:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280711)
And sometimes even when people try, they screw it up. You can’t fix stupid. Just got this in a text from my wife, who is picking up takeout at the nearby Mexican joint. (Yes, it is just called “Mexico.”)


My friend grew up in a small town in Kentucky in the 80s that had a restaurant that everyone just called "Foreign Food."

RainMaker 05-11-2020 03:47 AM

Tesla isn't going anywhere. They rely heavily on the subsidies and rebates California provides.

He will be back to pretending to make ventilators next week.

whomario 05-11-2020 10:05 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3280711)
And sometimes even when people try, they screw it up. You can’t fix stupid. Just got this in a text from my wife, who is picking up takeout at the nearby Mexican joint. (Yes, it is just called “Mexico.”)


Don't get me started on people only covering their mouth when there are strong indication that you might well be more likely to catch it and catch it en masse through your nose (which is not being reported nearly widely enough)

Also, this guys Twitter has some fascinating graphs:

John Burn-Murdoch (@jburnmurdoch) | Twitter



Even more extreme for the urban areas hit hardest and first (rural and other parts of a country likely would have never gotten that bad but they also benefitted immensely from being hit less and thus the lockdown being imposed before things reached critical mass)



(remember the total numbers are not all taken at the same date and the curve stops at different points, but for most it shows the peak. Numbers of normal mortality are monthly average)

Actually managed with this to have someone admit that maybe (hey, babysteps) the Virus is actually responsible for most aditional deaths and that the 'panic' in countries like Germany might not actually lead to a large portion of people being afraid to call 911 but that this too is more likely to happen in countries that are actually hit hard ... (so that the problem is not by itself the created 'panic' of the 'killer virus' but the virus itself).

Of course there will be longterm ramifications for people being now hesitant to call a doctor but it's not like this happens in a vacuum either. (and heck, look at South Africa for what a decrease in murders and accidents will do at least short term)

Arles 05-11-2020 01:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3280733)
Tesla isn't going anywhere. They rely heavily on the subsidies and rebates California provides.

He will be back to pretending to make ventilators next week.

You don't think Texas can provide similar incentives? The cost of doing business in California is so massive that there's a reason very few people manufacture there. That's the reason Telsa needs all those subsidies. I think the PR aspect of manufacturing in California is a main reason Telsa stays there, but that only goes so far. Other states (esp Texas and Nevada) could easily provide a much better environment for manufacturing than Cali.

albionmoonlight 05-11-2020 01:58 PM

xkcd: Coronavirus Polling

I find these numbers surprising.

And there is a limit to how much we should care about what people think versus what experts say is the right thing to do.

albionmoonlight 05-11-2020 01:59 PM

dola:

And I've love to talk to the 16% of people who do not have a favorable impression of Tom Hanks.

Arles 05-11-2020 01:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Warhammer (Post 3280716)
Part of the problem here is the experts are basing a lot of their claims on models. The problem with the models, this is a new virus with a lot of speculation and not a lot of hard data. Thus most of the info going into the models is questionable, making the models questionable.

How many models from 1 month ago are close to being correct? How many models from 2 months ago are close to being correct?

This comes back to my issue with all these articles from experts. They are making an assumption that because the less than 2% sample numbers in each state don't show a decline - that means the virus isn't decreasing. You have to look at the testing rates. If 100 people a day were testing April and now we are testing 500 a day in a state, the numbers aren't going to decrease (even if the number of people with virus has actually decreased if you counted everyone). Back on April 24, 8.7% of those tested in Arizona had the virus (6,045/69,486). As of today, that percentage had decreased to 7.6% (11,380/150,241). That means that of the last 80,755 tests, just 6.6% came up positive (2% less than March to late April). However - that number doesn't get reported, we just see "record number of cases" because the state has done over double the new tests in the past 2-3 weeks.

With this in mind, I don't think it is silly to try some restricted openings in some states that haven't been hit as hard. If your hospital bed use has been a lower, flat number for weeks (ie, 8- 12%) - you have the safety net to begin rolling back some of the restrictions. The reality is the media is going to scare about 40-50% to stay inside anyway - so if you have a good set of guidelines for the other half to follow, things may be able to re-open slowly. But, at some point, we have to begin this process - if only to find out what things work/don't work and what steps seem to be safer. People are not just going to stay inside all summer. As the shelter in place months increase, people are going to get fed up and go back out (esp younger people). Finding out steps that can help reduce the danger of that while everyone is somewhat patient is better than just "releasing the hounds" in September.

Ironhead 05-11-2020 02:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3280797)
dola:

And I've love to talk to the 16% of people who do not have a favorable impression of Tom Hanks.


In John Oliver's send up of Bob Murray from last year they wrote lyrics that were intentionally so absurd that no one could say they were true. One of them was that Bob Murray didn't like Tom Hanks.

The whole thing starts around the 21 minute mark of the video if you haven't seen it before.

SLAPP Suits: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO) - YouTube

cuervo72 05-11-2020 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3280798)
This comes back to my issue with all these articles from experts. They are making an assumption that because the less than 2% sample numbers in each state don't show a decline - that means the virus isn't decreasing. You have to look at the testing rates. If 100 people a day were testing April and now we are testing 500 a day in a state, the numbers aren't going to decrease (even if the number of people with virus has actually decreased if you counted everyone). Back on April 24, 8.7% of those tested in Arizona had the virus (6,045/69,486). As of today, that percentage had decreased to 7.6% (11,380/150,241). That number doesn't get reported, we just see "record number of cases" because the state has done 30K new tests in the past 2-3 weeks.

At this point, I don't think it is silly to try some restricted openings in some states that haven't been hit as hard. If your hospital bed use has been a lower, flat number (ie, 10%) - you have the safety net to begin rolling back some of the restrictions. The reality is the media is going to scare about 40-50% to stay inside anyway - so if you have a good set of guidelines for the other half to follow, things may be able to re-open slowly. But, at some point, we have to begin this process - if only to find out what things work/don't work and what steps seem to be safer. People are not just going to stay inside all summer. As the shelter in place months increase, people are going to get fed up and go back out (esp younger people). Finding out steps that can help reduce the danger of that while everyone is somewhat patient is better than just "releasing the hounds" in September.


To quibble, nobody has said you can't go outside. I am quite free to use my deck, use my back yard (or more correctly, mow). I can go on car rides. Heck, we can go hiking here. "We can't go outside!" is a bit misleading.

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Also, of course models are going to be off. We're doing things which are affecting the input into those models. Besides, what are we supposed to do, wait to get a baseline until we do anything?

Arles 05-11-2020 02:22 PM

I would recommend looking at the entire picture of a state - not just if the case totals are increasing. Compare hospital bed use, ICU beds, ventilators, positive test rate, etc over the past month and see where you are at. If you are still high on many of these metrics, maybe you wait. But, if you aren't, it seems reasonable to start rolling back restrictions while trying to keep as much social distancing and mask use as possible.

This has been extremely difficult to model - partly because we haven't seen the level of social distancing across the US done in the past 6 weeks in decades. So, every model that comes out now has questionable data backing it. It doesn't mean that you ignore them all, but I also wouldn't take them as fact (like many are).


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