This has been linked a few times here, but just in case people haven't seen the report. I'll be using the "Current Best Estimate" numbers. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/hcp/planning-scenarios.html
IFR of 0.4% all ages if symptomatic
35% of cases asymptomatic
IFR of 0.26% for all ages
Now we have a little over 100k deaths attributed in the US, so I'll round. 100k deaths with an IFR of 0.26% would work out to having 40,000,000, 26M being symptomatic, positive cases in the US. We have ~1.7M confirmed positives.
I realize there was a lack of testing in the beginning, but I'm having a hard time thinking we've had 26M with symptoms and so little activity in hospitals. I'm not sure where numbers may be wrong or why, but interested in discussion. A few thoughts:
IFR of 0.4% all ages if symptomatic
35% of cases asymptomatic
IFR of 0.26% for all ages
Now we have a little over 100k deaths attributed in the US, so I'll round. 100k deaths with an IFR of 0.26% would work out to having 40,000,000, 26M being symptomatic, positive cases in the US. We have ~1.7M confirmed positives.
I realize there was a lack of testing in the beginning, but I'm having a hard time thinking we've had 26M with symptoms and so little activity in hospitals. I'm not sure where numbers may be wrong or why, but interested in discussion. A few thoughts:
- They estimate 3.4% of symptomatic cases result in hospitalization. Have we really had 800k hospitalized? According to the IHME model we peaked with about 60k hospital beds needed in a single day. I'm struggling to find numbers nationally on total hospitalized.
- ~25 million symptomatic cases wouldn't have required hospitalization. That's pretty massive and makes me wonder how mild the symptomatic yet no hospital cases are and how many are going untested.
- 40M just seems so massively higher than we've thought about I'm not sure what to make of it. That is about 12% of our population.
- Do number of positives matter at all when they account for such a tiny percent of those who have had it? Even if we have massive spikes
- We are saying about 12% has it, but most states are only having 3-5% positive rates on testing. That would imply that a number of people being tested already have the antibody but yet are likely sick enough to warrant a test. Seems strange.