I confess I made the assumption that this was a lateral move. If OP is moving from a 16 bedroom palace to a 25 sq meter flat, I may need to revisit my calculations. The main point is that the world is going bat shit crazy right now, and anyone who approached messed situations with calm, reserve, and a bit of cash is going to ahead of most people.
My point wasn't that your advice doesn't stand if he doesn't have money, but rather that he doesn't need to have money to tell his landlord that he's terribly sorry but the Prime Minister has just appeared on his tele telling him to stay put.
> All shops closed ... not allowed to get out anymore
This is not true. You are allowed to get out for solitary exercise once a day, for essential basics shopping, for essential work, for medical reasons, to support vulnerable people.
Once a day? Is that supposed to be better? It's similar to what prisoners get ... If anything it actually just highlights the fact that the population is sort of mass incarcerated right now? Even the bans in Italy didn't specify a daily limit, only valid reasons. This is alarming imo.
Do the ends justify the means though? I'm not sure.
My wife has a single functional lung and very bad asthma. We are terrified. I have spent more than a little bit of time helping her down from panic attacks.
…And yet, I'm not sure this is the right way to go about it.
How many people are killed by automobiles each year? 1.25 million. That's more than Corona is estimated to kill, right?
Should we just declare "hell with the economy, outlaw automobiles"?
> Do the ends justify the means though? I'm not sure.
> My wife has a single functional lung and very bad asthma. We are terrified. I have spent more than a little bit of time helping her down from panic attacks.
Have you thought that it may be better for both of you that you _only_ have to calm her down? She is in a very high risk group.
> …And yet, I'm not sure this is the right way to go about it.
> How many people are killed by automobiles each year? 1.25 million. That's more than Corona is estimated to kill, right?
Sure, but it’s not 1.25 million within 10 days having to be in ICU. Those 1.25m would effectively take away medical care from another, minimum, 1.25m. That’s what these measures are trying to prevent. Overcrowding the hospitals and limiting the critical cases. This is what happened in Italy. We can, of course, go about if anybody 60+ should effectively receive a death sentence when things go as bad as in Italy. But do you want to go that way?
You can still go out and do stuff that is necessary to survive for 2 weeks or so. It’s not that bad.
In the uk fewer than 2000 people a year die from car accidents - the take no action modelling has deaths at around 1 million by the end of the summer in the UK(plus a health service that is entirely paralysed)
You're right to question this. It has been analysed by every executive body around the world. A few observations:
- The simulation of how this plays out on a 6M/1Y run might show that the economy will go to a deeper hell otherwise. After seeing the medical system overwhelmed and people starting to present breathing difficulties in the subway at rush hour, many will isolate themselves and reduce economic activity anyway - going out/trips/restaurants for a long time.
- The UK economy is not insulated. If the other countries manage to contain the spread - and they probably will at some point - they will have to stop people coming from the UK since they will be very likely to carry the virus.
It's a very unfortunate trade-off but we need to live with it for the time being.
Yes, well I think get rid of all parking in major cities first in favour of park and rides at the edges
Lots of people drive for unessential journeys which kills people in collisions, by pollution and increases demand for roads, oil, car services etc which kills more
In a climate emergency driving a large Landrover or SUV around cities should be illegal
If we didn't do this the hospitals would quickly be overrun and your wife wouldn't be able to get help if anything were to happen to her. Yes it's pretty necessary.
> All shops closed and not allowed to get out anymore, at the risk of getting fines from the police.
I'm pretty sure it was 'Non-essential stores': shops that sell clothes and electronics stores, etc not 'All shops'. So, supermarkets and pharmacies are still open.
Lockdowns are happening across several other countries anyway even as the UK is weeks behind the worst affected country at the moment, Italy.
No, the worst thing is that this was avoidable and the rest of the world pleaded with the a UKGOV to abandon its criminally insane herd immunity plan, take its head out of the sand and take evasive action.
This is nothing less than a complete failure of leadership.
Apologies for being strong worded and political, but it really boils my blood.
Indeed. The Cheltenham festival went ahead, for example. Several attendees confirmed infected, including overseas visitors. Good for another few thousand infections at least.
The herd immunity plan was probably the most rational plan any government put forward. Instead, due to the irrational panic of the population, we've got this. I'm fairly confident time will show leadership was right, and the people wrong, as they tend to be in times of overwhelming uncertainty.
The average age of COVID-19 fatalities in Italy is 80, median 82.5, and 99% of them had co-morbid conditions (an average of 3 comorbid conditions). In China the average age was mid-high 70s. Almost nobody outside a risk category has died so far. [1] These folks were on death's doorstep as is. If I'm not mistaken the plan was, rationally, to lock them inside while the problem sorted itself out.
Most people who compare Italy (and soon the UK) to say, South Korea or Taiwan would probably disagree with you. Also, whilst you might not mind a few hundred thousand or million dead pensioners, I assume at least some of them would rather spend time with their grandchildren than slowly suffocate amidst the remains of a collapsed health care system. Shouldn't the whole overwhelming uncertainty thing predispose you to not trying to infect a few billion people and see what happens? Did it ever occur to you that herd immunity via mass infection might either not work or could cause a lot of long term health problems in people who are not pensioners? If not, what makes you so sure?
No it wasn't. Your own scientists came forward with numbers on the cost. And it was too high. Health care system would (it might still) crash, leading to a lot of extra deaths and other unpleasant consequences like backlog of non urgent checkups which can turn out to be urgent several months later.
And please f*ck off with 'only old people die from COVID-19'. Old people with 3 comorbid conditions deserve better than to be left to die because some smartasses feel like it. And there are other groups of people risking dire consequences of COVID-19. Like people with weak immune system. Or ones with diabetes. Or ones being treated for cancer. Should we write off them too?
> And please fck off with 'only old people die from COVID-19'. Old people with 3 comorbid conditions deserve better than to be left to die because some smartasses feel like it. And there are other groups of people risking dire consequences of COVID-19. Like people with weak immune system. Or ones with diabetes. Or ones being treated for cancer. Should we write off them too?
Nobody said that, you didn't read my post.
(1) People in risk categories are at risk. One of which is being old, and another is having a comorbid condition, and a huge one is having 3 comorbid conditions while being 82.5. That's a risk category for getting out of your bed in the morning.
(2) Those people, the old, and with comorbid conditions, were to isolate, as they are doing literally right now.
(3) The whole point behind the process was to create a protective buffer around them, otherwise they wouldn't be calling for their isolation.
Your answer is coherent and rational and doesn’t deserve to be downvoted. I also agree with you. This situation is taking weeks from absolutely everybody’s lives.
(1) This doesn't sounds like their original plan to infect all the youth by locking down the vulnerable and letting the youth out. That is the plan to which I was referring. As you know the UK is on total lockdown for 3 weeks [1]
(2) What is described in this post is what everyone else is doing, keeping the vulnerable inside and providing services such as prescription delivery and at least helping coordinate food delivery. ("Please visit gov.uk/coronavirus-extremely-vulnerable to register for the support that you need. This includes help with food, shopping deliveries and additional care you might need. The government is helping pharmacies to deliver prescriptions. Prescriptions will continue to cover the same length of time as usual.")
(3) It specifically says that everyone in a risk category is getting a letter by March 29th ("The NHS in England is directly contacting people with these conditions to provide further advice.")
I don't really know what you're asking for, or what you think is factually incorrect.
We written off much larger groups without a blink of an eye. At least in US unexpected expense of $400 puts 1/3 households in financial hardship [1]. What happens with workers when we shut down entire sectors of economy?
You can't be between leases easily in the UK as without actively signing a new lease the existing one rolls over into standard rental terms (one months notice from tenants, two from landlords) automatically.
As do I, as that was never their plan. Their plan was to isolate the aged and the at-risk, well away from those who may infect them, and send everyone else who wouldn't get horribly sick out. This would create a protective barrier around the old and sick. Nobody has proposed what dingaling has suggested.
Irrational panic, signed by hundreds of experts? It's clear that if we'd just allowed the disease to take its course, the hospital system would be overwhelmed.
How many of those experts were epidemiologists or virologists? Iirc there was 1 microbiologist there but mostly people from math and physics departments.
20% or so were still PhD students...
All the pandemic experts who studied and worked with other SARS varieties have the message. I'm not seeing any of those guys saying the threat of COVID-19 is overestimated.
Possibly. The press keep pushing South Korea as a better alternative, but to be honest I'm not sure even the South Korean government believes their model is sustainable or viable. New clusters of cases that have escaped contact tracing keep popping up no matter what they do and are causing concern, folks are starting to worry about an autumn second wave there, and I don't think their testing has been as extensive as media reports have implied in important areas like nursing homes and hospitals. (There was a 75-person cluster at a nursing home in Daegu, probably the most heavily tested city in all South Korea, that they only discovered some time around Thursday.)
Honest question (I initially reacted strongly against their herd immunity idea but I've started to rethink my position):
Isn't there evidence that a high enough proportion of those low risk people would require hospitalization too and that would overwhelm the capacity? That's my only remaining concern about the idea.
From what I've read of the statistics yes. In addition, 38% of hospitalizations in the UK are in the 20-54 age range, and this is also ignoring the fact that there isn't enough aftercare to discharge certain patients, again reducing capacity.
FWIW I don't think herd immunity will work given that other corronaviruses (the common cold) mutate frequently, it is too early to tell, but TBH a risky move for any government which can see positive results from other approaches elsewhere.
The current approach is really bourne out of a failure to act early - that $1 antibody testing kit was overlooked by ministers until it was pointed out to them by a journalist. That airports weren't locked down immediately with a 2 week mandatory quarantine, drafting ex-NHS staff only last week was 3 weeks late etc
A cynic might point out that this virus is likely to kick the can down the road wrt pensions /ageing populations /finding an economic model not based around GDP/having more kids.
There is a rumour that a senior MP made comments about collateral damage, if you were really cynical it might be pointed out that this constitutes a large portion of some parties' voter base.
There are some silver linings- after all of this teachers are likely to be appreciated as is a national health service (Medicare anyone?), remote working will be easier, and there are some amazing stories of compassion out there!
Great, then you must be the perfect person to alleviate the following additional concerns I still have:
- Isn't there a significant risk that immunity after infection might wear of too soon after infection for herd immunity to be practicable, at least without driving up the deaths yet further?
- Isn't there a significant risk that we end up with a lot of people who survive but have long term health problems?
- Wouldn't the fact that no one else seems to think herd immunity is such a hot idea any more mean the UK faces a high risk to be completely quarantined off by other countries? Brexit probably doesn't reduce the chances of that happening either. Could that not have a few bad economic and other effects?
- Isn't there a significant risk that isolating vulnerable people or the infected in ICUs may not work as well as intended? What if a lot of nurses and doctors get infected and pass it on to other people who have no chronic problems but are temporarily weakened? What if it turns out that seeing a lot of people die miserably without being able to do much about it for weeks on end takes its toll on the current crop of health care professionals or the UK's ability to recruit future generations?
- Wouldn't that most likely mean giving up on eradicating Covid-19 completely? Is it really desirable to permanently reduce life expectancy by keeping it around forever?
- What if the virus changes in an unanticipated direction? Would the herd immunisation strategy not put exactly the type of evolutionary pressure on the virus that you don't want? Namely to become more virulent? Is that not a bit risky?
People keep saying so, but I have yet to see compelling evidence. Can you provide some?
For what it's worth, I think eradicating something world-wide that has already spread widely beyond the relatively competent and affluent countries is going to be tough. But personally, I'd much rather see it eradicated in just competent and affluent countries than not at all.
> But personally, I'd much rather see it eradicated in just competent and affluent countries than not at all.
With something this infectious all it takes is one visitor from one of the have-not countries to put the have-country into total lockdown. That's not a realistic plan moving forward either.
1. People don't just start to magically teleport around if you restrict their travel. I know that defies common wisdom, which is presumably why the UK and others kept (keep?) importing people from disease Epicentres like Milan or Teheran en-masse right up the point of total lockdown. But if, for example, Japan, the UK or Australia decide they don't want Iranians to visit their shores for a while, at least not without on the spot testing, automatic two week quarantine or other heavy restrictions: what is the would be Iranian mass-infector going to do about it? And is greatly restricting travel from incompetent countries really going to wreck your nation?
2. Vaccines are cheap. If it's possible to create a vaccine that is sufficiently safe and covers enough strains of the virus, you can just vaccinate enough of your population that the disease will, effectively, no longer be very infectious. Then you can intelligently spend some comparatively trifling sums to make such vaccination programs available to countries that genuinely can't afford them.
> Wouldn't that most likely mean giving up on eradicating Covid-19 completely? Is it really desirable to permanently reduce life expectancy by keeping it around forever?
If herd immunity would have worked, then a vaccine will work. That might be 2022, but it's definitely not forever.
The problem is that the more cases you have, the higher the likelihood that you will need to end up with multiple strains and need more than one vaccine, which may be fatal to eradication.
I won't even claim that severe lockdowns (which is not what anyone in the US or UK is facing) is the best solution.
However, in the absence of almost any reliable knowledge, it's probably the ONLY rational plan based on the fact that the one thing we do know is the method of spreading, and locking down will prevent that spread.
The only thing we know for sure about this virus is that if people catch it they might die, and various people are at higher risk.
Everything else is still up in the air. We have to buy time, time to find effective antivirals (work in progress), time to get an effective vaccine (work in progress), time to understand the virus enough to know even such a simple thing as how long somebody who's had it and recovered might be immune for. That one critical number you have to know in order to know if a plan like the herd immunity idea is even remotely feasible, that one critical number that NOBODY KNOWS.
Isolation is, from everything I've read, the only strategy currently supported by the available evidence. Maybe in six months we'll have data that says herd immunity would have worked, but we really don't know right now.
Hospitals become overwhelmed with people who need an ICU bed, and a ventilator, and oxygen, and intubation, for weeks. Sure, they go on to recover, but while they're in those beds it means the health system can't provide other treatment. All those hips and knees go un-replaced; a bunch of cancer care gets cancelled; people involved in accidents go without care. Even if you ignore anyone over 80[1] you still have hospitals full of people who need intensive care.
So even if young people do not die of Coronavirus (which we do not know for sure) they die because they cannot get medical treatment after cutting their finger on a rusty table edge, or get into a car accident and cannot get medical help, etc.
Please just go look at the fucking videos I've already posted, which show hospitals overwhelmed by people under 60 who need a variety of beds, including high dependency ITU beds with intubation, but also less intensive beds with ventilators and oxygen.
Young folks can still get the disease and end up in the hospital ward or even the ICU. The only ones who might be safe from significant consequences are small kids, who by definition are sharing their household with someone who might be at risk.
Let's assume the infected population grows as s(x)=1/(1+e^-x). About 99% of the curve lies from -5 to 5, so let's ignore the rest to simplify the math. Let's then assume that 99% of the people are infected over the course of 180 days, so 1 day is h=10/180=0.055 on s(x). That's a decent attempt at "flattening the curve".
The curve goes from 0 to 1, so if for example s(h/2)-s(-h/2)=0.014, this tells you that around the peak of the infection, 1.4% of the infected population will get the disease in a single day. With 70% of the population getting infected, that's a lot of people (about a million in a single day).
Let's be super optimistic and say that 70% of people getting it means 7% having symptoms and 0.7% needing an ICU bed (younger people also get bad cases, even though the median age of death is high; they just survive thanks to the treatment). Problem is they will need it for 3 weeks (~20 days) so you need a lot of beds.
Specifically s(10h)-s(-10h) = 0.27, that is, 27% of the infected population will get the disease in the 3 weeks around the peak. At this point 27% * 70% * 0.7% of the UK population needs ICU beds at the same time.
That's 80000 people, but the country has just 4000 ICU beds. Those that couldn't be treated would die, and that's just in the 3 weeks around the peak.
It's safe to say that for most of those 6 months the NHS would be so overwhelmed that close to 0.7% * 70% of the UK population would die. It's a back of the envelope calculation, only the order of magnitude makes sense. But still, it's in the hundreds of thousands.
So yes, unless Johnson could find tens of thousands of ICU beds in the next few weeks (because the numbers would reach 10000 or so long before that peak point) those many people would die from lack of treatment. And the NHS would be completely clogged, so more people would die preventable deaths due to lack of room for treating non-COVID-related patients.
> The other (small) problem with herd immunity is that it assumes immunity for a long period, which has no evidence to support it.
True that we don’t know that conclusively here yet, although I wonder if we could base it off other similar viruses. Nobody to my knowledge has been reinfected.
Speaking of no evidence...
> Another (small) problem is that there is permanent tissue damage in the lungs in those that recover.
There is no evidence of that in COVID-19 yet. That doesn’t mean it won’t show up, but it doesn’t mean it will. You’re referencing something that happened in related SARS and MERS diseases which killed over 35%, not 0.35%, of those infected. It’s easily a 2 orders of magnitude worse disease.
If you have data or studies share them. Otherwise, stop fearmongering.
On a more personal note: "fearmongering" is preferred over loss of life here. We will never know if we did too much to prevent this. But we will definitely know if we did too little.
Obviously I'm not asking people to panic, in fact, the opposite. Calm, reasonable and responsible actions do not preclude worry and having a healthy amount of fear for you and your loved ones.
> Obviously I'm not asking people to panic, in fact, the opposite. Calm, reasonable and responsible actions do not preclude worry and having a healthy amount of fear for you and your loved ones.
Out of the 4 links, I skimmed the YouTube video, read the citations, and both of your links. Neither of your links refer to permanent effects after recovery. The only thing in the citations they're referencing to back up their claim is a one-line exerpt from the WHO report:
'Quote: “Lung tissue also displayed cellular and fibromyxoid exudation,desquamation of pneumocytes and pulmonary oedema.”' This appears to describe the actual condition of people with the disease as they have the disease, not after.
They they go on to cite a study about the much more dangerous SARS-COV-1.
As I said, nothing so far indicates that we will see permanent lung damage, certainly not in the vast majority of cases. It may happen, it may not, but it remains too soon to know for sure.
> On a more personal note: "fearmongering" is preferred over loss of life here.
As you may have noticed people tend not to react well in panic/fear situations, saturate very quickly and become very much irrational. It isn't always true IMO that fearmongering should be the go-to in difficult times when we have to make life or death decisions with limited data.
To your last point specifically: You might not have noticed, but while some people bought toilet paper in the UK, the majority treated this as some kind of holiday, taking kids out to holiday destinations and playing on the beach and crowded parks.
Businesses were doing everything they could to remain open, even if they were non-essential, forcing employee's to come into the office (often on even more crowded public transportation)
It was so bad that the UK government had to forcefully lock everyone in.
That is not a reasonable approach to a virus of which we don't know the full effects and whos' closest brothers (SARS-1, MERS, Cold) are incredibly dangerous, incredibly re-infectious and whos' current infection rate is more than double or even triple that of flu.
Except those people followed strict lockdown policies that are even greater than this.
You're talking about rationality and completely ignoring the fact that your numbers are based on areas where people have already taken the policies that you're saying are irrational.
Depends where you slice the group to go out as normal. If it's under-40s, then 0-0.1%, which is likely a blip compared to things like smoking, driving, heart disease, obesity, diabetes, etc.
Well, based on this chart aggregating data from South Korea, China, Spain and Italy [1] (and while from Twitter, I have verified the data points line up)
People under 10, nobody has died yet. In the 10-19 category, the CFR is between 0 and 0.45% In the 20-29 category, the CFR is between 0 and 0.31% In the 30-39 category, it's between 0.1 and 0.3%.
So let's say they decide anyone under 40 with no co-morbid conditions should go out while the rest remain indoors. I'd say we're looking at a CFR of 0 to 0.1% so in terms of numbers, that would be between 0 and (33% of the population * 0.1% * 66M) ~20K people, max. That's in line with the ~15K flu deaths per year in a bad flu season in the UK. And that's assuming young people with co-morbidities do a bad job of staying inside.
It is not rational to ignore entirely predictable parts of human crowd dynamics.
Even if you could override human behaviour, there is still concern that the virus will mutate to fast for anything remotely similar to herd immunity to be possible.
I was supposed to purchase a house on Thursday, and had exchanged missives for this. Now I can't legally leave the house to do something so trivial as to sign the security. Worse, a month ago I had paid thousands for flooring, appliances, furniture etc from various suppliers all of whom I'm now worried could declare bankruptcy.
From watching all the episodes of "If you don't pay, we'll take it away", I think you can safely stay put...
Here in Ontario all evictions have been put on hold and landlords were asked to be lenient if tenants get behind on paying rent.
Good. This was expected and also unprecedented by the prime minister. The people who tested him on the weekends, by having a non-essential stroll-about in the park and treating this as a joke now can't do that again for the next 3 weeks or else they will get fined.
Nobody wanted this but since it is for the urgency for the country to protect others then, such measures are needed to stop the spread somehow.
Exactly true. But I didn't mention or say 'exercise' anywhere. But even with that being allowed, it has to be on your own and not with others, which the latter had happened over the weekend in the UK with mass gatherings and ignoring the previous measures. [0]
Whats all this with people who think walking outside is somehow what causes the spread?
And related to that: Have experts in countries with dont-go-out-even-for-a-walk really come out and said that's "it's important that everyone stays indoors in the entire country"? I mean for such a measure you'd expect some good evidence that it works...
> Whats all this with people who think walking outside is somehow what causes the spread?
People also use "walking outside" as an excuse to gather and congregate - or they choose crowded places for their walks, which is just as problematic. It's just easier to forbid it altogether, and then use discretion to forgo punishment for those who are actually taking sensible precautions.
Germany banned gatherings of more than two people. That's way more sensible than a dont-go-outside ban.
If the stroll outside isn't the problem then don't ban it. Don't ban outside walks because people walk outside to a 50 person gathering. Ban the gathering.
As you say, they probably don't fine people who go outside and don't go near anyone. But the thing with bans you don't enforce equally is that people tend to ignore them eventually.
And you also only have a fixed "budget" of restrictions. You don't want to waste any of it on measures that don't have an effect. House arrest for a population for 3 weeks is a large chunk of that "budget".
I believe the UK has also banned gatherings of more than two people.
There’s probably a good reason for limiting people being outside - maybe to limit congestion on public transport which isn’t technically a gathering but was a major problem over the past few days?
> by having a non-essential stroll-about in the park
Which is still allowed:
> That is why people will only be allowed to leave their home for the following very limited purposes: [...] one form of exercise a day - for example a run, walk, or cycle - alone or with members of your household
True, But I'm specifically referring to the mass gatherings and stroll-abouts with more than two people over the weekend in the UK and not about today, which is still allowed unless it is by yourself [0].
It's unlikely that you would catch coronavirus outdoors. The media has worked itself into quite a hysteria by assuming that the radius you would need to stay away from other people when outdoors is the same as the radius you would need to stay away from other people in a confined space.
What about walking pets (dogs and horses mainly I assume)?
California's rules are interesting (well Santa Clara but I believe they are mostly the same). Some points that caught my attention:
- explicit exceptions for visiting elderly or other relatives who need help
- explicit permission to exercise pets including visiting homes where pets are alone
- home construction is exempt, with a meaningless request for low income housing. While SC has a serious housing shortage and low income housing is crucial, the latter is not going to change in a few weeks while its mention might piss off (ahem) certain people unnecessarily. Also I notice Palo Alto's building permit office is shut.
- you're encouraged to go hiking but not to ride a bike, scooter etc in case you end up in the hospital. As there are hardly any cars on the road I'm not sure if this restriction is really worth it.
When I walk the dog in the middle of the day I see more people than usual as they are stuck at home. Dogs seem pretty happy. Driveways are full of course.
It's frustrating because we would have been fine without this if people weren't choosing to be selfish jerks. Honestly I feel the people taking holidays by the seaside and congregating in parks should have been arrested for reckless endangerment.
Unless you’re in an essential job that can’t be done remotely, no, you shouldn’t. Good luck to anyone trying to fire an employee for refusing to break the law.
Tooling/services/maintenance/engineering services for construction/building/printers etc (very little for the food industry, but some small things). Also, boss is a dick.
Worst thing is. I have to move flat in two weeks. Don't know if will be able to move? or even get the keys? or get the inventory done?
Out of all the government measures, in any country. There is nothing about extending letting contracts or freezing rents.