Eh. We don't have the money for that. Makes no political or financial sense. I'll rather the money goes towards Vancouver getting an NBA team again. Besides....the moose will just chew right through it.I have to say if Canada ever builds a border wall I shall be terribly sad. Still pissed off at what the US did back in 2001, there was no need for it.
I did not expect that comment from you, because it is pretty selfish.Nobody cares because nothing that happens there has any effect on us here.
Stop derailing this thread with bullshit.
With testing being so sporadic/underutilized/unavailable (in the US, at least), the "reported cases" are probably a measure of "serious enough COVID19 symptoms to actually seek medical attention" and out of those, a certain percentage will be hospitalized.While each country is different, I’d suggest that hospitalisation rates are more closely tied to actual rates of infection assuming similar population demographics.
We’ve seen consistently low rates of mortality here (about 0.014% of known cases resulted in fatality) but the virus has spread very effectively and has resulted in larger numbers of hospitalisations and serious illness.
While each country is different, I’d suggest that hospitalisation rates are more closely tied to actual rates of infection assuming similar population demographics.
If that is accurate then in countries without universal healthcare I can see the problem with this. If people don’t want to go to hospital for fear of bankruptcy (they’ve lost their job and insurance for example), the chances of getting a handle on actual rates of infection would be slim to none.
I think one of the generally accepted better measures where testing and confirming of infection is not absolute is the number of deaths above average.With testing being so sporadic/underutilized/unavailable (in the US, at least), the "reported cases" are probably a measure of "serious enough COVID19 symptoms to actually seek medical attention" and out of those, a certain percentage will be hospitalized.
Again, it is a case of "garbage in, garbage out" in that it tells us something, but, who knows what, exactly?
The Gold Standard for measuring the impact of COVID19 here in the US will be looking at "excess mortality," i.e., looking at the number of death certificates issued on a weekly basis for the years preceeding this, and then during the current year. Right now, it is looking pretty bad.
On another note, I must be sadistic, these "I thought coronavirus was a hoax until I got it!" stories never get old!
He thought the coronavirus was 'a fake crisis.' Then he contracted it.
Brian Hitchens said he thought that the coronavirus "is a fake crisis" that was "blown out of proportion" and "wasn't that serious."www.nbcnews.com
Yep, simply put, without 100% testing, you are sampling and estimating...but you won't have an actual answer. Since everybody who dies for any reason has to have a death certificate, deaths will get recorded, and you can get a better estimate (likely, the *best* estimate) of how many have died from the "excess deaths" during this time period.I can't think of any other way of getting an overview without having a 100% testing capacity?
It's just getting hold of that deaths over average data, I've been searching for it for Colorado for a few days now and I just can't find it anywhere. I can find the average for last year, the last five years, but I can't find weekly/monthly registered deaths for 2020 anywhere. I don't think they do them...?Yep, simply put, without 100% testing, you are sampling and estimating...but you won't have an actual answer. Since everybody who dies for any reason has to have a death certificate, deaths will get recorded, and you can get a better estimate (likely, the *best* estimate) of how many have died from the "excess deaths" during this time period.
Based on that, we can then get a better estimate of exposure rates, etc.
For most states, I don't think that death certificate data like that is posted on line. I think that university researchers/epidemiologists will be getting that data within the next 6 monts. If you find it, let me know!It's just getting hold of that deaths over average data, I've been searching for it for Colorado for a few days now and I just can't find it anywhere. I can find the average for last year, the last five years, but I can't find weekly/monthly registered deaths for 2020 anywhere. I don't think they do them...?
I've also temporarily stopped bothering looking at Colorado info as they changed the count from "Died with COVID" to "Died from COVID" last friday which makes it farly irrelevant until they lock down that metric and decide how they are going to analyse it going forward.
If you counted deaths from HIV/AIDS the same way, the total death rate would be 0% as it weakens the immune system to the point it can't counter other conditions which then kill the victim, such as pneumonia etc.