Most countries saw a 12-14 week bell curve, New York saw a 5-7. Texas is nowhere near the levels required right now.cone said:
still don't think we're hitting the prevalence here that they hit there
cone said:
still don't think we're hitting the prevalence here that they hit there
Lester Freamon said:
Hopefully this trend strengthens quickly. It's obvious it's turning already and I hate the idea that lockdown 2.0 will get credit for it.
I would say 12-14 week would be right for us, because we are spiking still at a much, much lower rate than NY did.P.U.T.U said:Most countries saw a 12-14 week bell curve, New York saw a 5-7. Texas is nowhere near the levels required right now.cone said:
still don't think we're hitting the prevalence here that they hit there
Because it would lead to more and longer lockdowns. Wouldn't you rather the 20% burnout theory be the biggest reason places like NY started to trend down rather than having to lockdown and continue to have excess rules/regulations?Cloud said:Lester Freamon said:
Hopefully this trend strengthens quickly. It's obvious it's turning already and I hate the idea that lockdown 2.0 will get credit for it.
Why?
RandyAg98 said:
This seems like the start of a positive trend hopefully
LINK
beerad12man said:Because it would lead to more and longer lockdowns. Wouldn't you rather the 20% burnout theory be the biggest reason places like NY started to trend down rather than having to lockdown and continue to have excess rules/regulations?Cloud said:Lester Freamon said:
Hopefully this trend strengthens quickly. It's obvious it's turning already and I hate the idea that lockdown 2.0 will get credit for it.
Why?
Bert315 said:RandyAg98 said:
This seems like the start of a positive trend hopefully
LINK
Our hospital system in the TMC is cautiously optimistic with the last week and a half's trends. Hopefully we can maintain this decline this week and going forward.
I seriously doubt it.dragmagpuff said:
I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer, but is it possible that stricter admission criteria due to less available space would result in lower reported TMC hospitalizations?
Does it count as a TMC hospitalization if they get send to a different hospital? Or is that an admit then transfer.
What if they are just getting sent home with O2, when in the past they would have been admitted?
I'm not claiming that the curve hasn't been flattened, just wondering if it is exaggerated due to rationing.
Quote:
I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer, but is it possible that stricter admission criteria due to less available space would result in lower reported TMC hospitalizations?
Does it count as a TMC hospitalization if they get send to a different hospital? Or is that an admit then transfer.
What if they are just getting sent home with O2, when in the past they would have been admitted?
I'm not claiming that the curve hasn't been flattened, just wondering if it is exaggerated due to rationing.
You can't compare NY peak case numbers in March to case number now without some sort of adjustment to account for greatly expanded testing. At NYC's peak, their test positivity rate was 71%. TMC says we are currently at 13% positivity rating.Cheetah01 said:
Here is my thinking.
-Texas spiked to 11,400, NY at 11,500
-Texas population 30M, NY 20M
If you assume a similar case / population ratio, we would either top out at ~17,000 cases in a day OR have an extended bell curve that runs 8-9 weeks (50% longer).
oglaw said:Bert315 said:RandyAg98 said:
This seems like the start of a positive trend hopefully
LINK
Our hospital system in the TMC is cautiously optimistic with the last week and a half's trends. Hopefully we can maintain this decline this week and going forward.
Good info. Do you have any idea what the average length of stat is for a covid patient?
dragmagpuff said:
I'm not trying to be a Debbie Downer, but is it possible that stricter admission criteria due to less available space would result in lower reported TMC hospitalizations?
Does it count as a TMC hospitalization if they get send to a different hospital? Or is that an admit then transfer.
What if they are just getting sent home with O2, when in the past they would have been admitted?
I'm not claiming that the curve hasn't been flattened, just wondering if it is exaggerated due to rationing.
Was that a major swing factor in prior numbers?Quote:
My guess is this correlates directly with a reduction in elective surgeries. Which basically means less people through the doors being tested.
I'm pretty sure we have a lot more options than this... and I'm not sure #1 is even a genuine option. Seems like a straw-man argument.jeffdjohnson said:
This is promising data. There are really only two options here:
1. Extremely restrictive national lockdown for 1 month. Push cases to a minimum then contract tracing could theoretically work. Obviously this is a non-starter in the United States. However, in an ironic way I believe that we would end up destroying more lives in the long term than those we would save in the short term. Perhaps if the IFR was much higher than currently estimated (i.e. if it were 5% instead of 0.5%) then this would be the correct strategy.
2. Maintain social distancing, work from home (if applicable), mask wearing in public (efficacy unclear but worth a shot) and continue about our lives. Luckily this disease appears to spare the very young, not to mention that there is data suggesting herd immunity thresholds may be lower than previously assumed. In my opinion this is the correct approach at the macro level.
I think it is a major factor in the increase in "hospitalizations"Windy City Ag said:Was that a major swing factor in prior numbers?Quote:
My guess is this correlates directly with a reduction in elective surgeries. Which basically means less people through the doors being tested.