The death rate clearly spiked in the last reported week. I guess it could be argued that this is due to other causes but they’ve clearly marked respiratory problems and Covid. — I like sushi
Anecdotally, I look at respiratory viral panels all the time and it's rare to see more than one virus at a time. — frank
3) 2000 cases from respiratory conditions is not far off normal. It's the amount of cases with underlying health problems being pushed over the edge that is the real problem here. The key thing there being that we don't know how many of them would have died anyway, nor will we until the year's figures are out. — Isaac
(1) No idea what that means or how it counters anything I said? The figures give are for week ending April 3. Clearly there is a spike in deaths. — I like sushi
An overlooked super spreader. Cool. — frank
We're going to have to social distance until we get a vaccine. The virus is not going to put up the white flag and leave us alone. That shouldn't be news to anyone at this point. Lockdowns are just one form of enforced social distancing and they'll be ending well before social distancing does. I don't think anyone is arguing we should continue those indefinitely. — Baden
All these final decisions are being made by our executive branches (President, governors, and mayors) without legislative act and so far with no judicial oversight — Hanover
For instance, if there is a risk group with 10% chance of respiratory death this year, and getting the virus increases those chances by double, then there is a of collision between Covid deaths and other respiratory deaths. But if those diseases are distributed randomly the collision is not much. E.i. if this group is 100 people, then the odds that the 10 people expected to die from Covid would happen to be the 10 people expected to die from influenza, is extremely low. — boethius
The rest of your argument falls flat on anyone who doesn't believe in this Creator if that's how you intend to justify it. — Michael
The latter odds of the two coinciding likely depend on comorbidity to begin with though. I think if you stratified based on comorbidity the reasoning holds though. — fdrake
Edit: also notice the transition between discussing death probability and infection probability. — fdrake
You aren't objecting to the way NY arrived at its decisions are you? Just smaller communities where the lockdown is presently causing hardship? — frank
I was purposefully vague enough not to specify what I was objecting to, but more concerned with the lack of oversight and what appears to be a naive assumption that these experts wouldn't steer us wrong because they are somehow the world's only neutral, objective people, devoid of any political gain in the situation. — Hanover
I think "comorbidities" has given a lot of people on the internet the impression that most people who die from Covid are essentially on deaths doorstep and the virus was a, perhaps even in their minds a merciful, coup de grace. However, these underlying conditions that increase the probability of death are very large, fairly banal groups; people with heart disease, diabetics and cancer survivors that have relatively long life expectancies. Large groups where there's no reason to believe those that would die of some respiratory disease anyways, not to mention just any cause of death, are significantly more likely to get Covid fist. — boethius
That wasn't my intention. — fdrake
I was just talking about whether partitioning the data based upon risk group removes the collider bias you mentioned, and giving some justifying statements that comorbidity complicates the attribution of the deaths to coronavirus, seeing as it also contributes to deaths from influenza. — fdrake
This applies especially if we're analysing only people who have died, will die, or would die, that group's going to have corona virus presence collided with other virus presence because it's already known that health outcome severity is influenced by comorbidity presence and severity. — fdrake
it's rare to see more than one virus at a time. — frank
No idea what that means or how it counters anything I said? The figures give are for week ending April 3. Clearly there is a spike in deaths. — I like sushi
The figures for deaths (ALL deaths) are not ‘crude’. The deaths for last week ARE crude - meaning they are not official figures because it takes time to account for all deaths. — I like sushi
An extra 500 cases is a significant rise though. — I like sushi
Maybe you’re comparing April to Dec and Jan. That is faulty because the death toll during the winter months in the UK is always significantly higher — I like sushi
From what I understand, there's no other way to do it, as there's no way to "know" who really will die absent Covid. We can only put people into risk groups and then calculate the probability of death from Covid of people in their respective risk group. — boethius
there is simply a large number of additional deaths from Covid and the risk profiles going forward remain constant — boethius
The statistical analysis of this general issue I've seen so far, is that getting the virus doubles your chances of death of the year compared to your risk group. — boethius
I think "comorbidities" has given a lot of people on the internet the impression that most people who die from Covid are essentially on deaths doorstep and the virus was a, perhaps even in their minds a merciful, coup de grace. However, these underlying conditions that increase the probability of death are very large, fairly banal groups; people with heart disease, diabetics and cancer survivors that have relatively long life expectancies. Large groups where there's no reason to believe those that would die of some respiratory disease anyways, — boethius
Where's this? Just on the face of it if this were true then we'd expect to see a doubling of the death rate in all age groups, yet we see absolutely no impact whatsoever in age groups below about 65 (decreasing in statistical significance of course, rather than a single cut-off point). — Isaac
500,000 people die every year - from which group do you think these deaths are drawn? If these groups do not form the ones who would have "died anyway", then from which group are the 500,000 people who do "die anyway" drawn? Are you suggesting that chance of death is essentially random and not related to underlying health conditions? — Isaac
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.