"South Dakota’s coronavirus cases have begun to soar after its governor steadfastly refused to mandate a quarantine.
The number of confirmed cases in the state has risen from 129 to 988 since April 1 — when Gov. Kristi Noem criticized the “draconian measures” of social distancing to stop the spread of the virus in her state.
Noem had criticized the quarantine idea as “herd mentality, not leadership” during a news conference, adding, “South Dakota is not New York.”"
Yall need to bring back public hanging of public officials. — StreetlightX
What's the right wing of the Repub party's excuse? — Baden
On Feb. 18, when Wex stock was trading above $220 per share, company President and CEO Melissa Smith exercised an option to buy 8,056 shares of Wex stock at a discounted price of $77.20, then immediately sold 15,556 shares at $223.19 per share for a total cash-out of just under $3.5 million, according to a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. — Portland Press Herald
What country/region are you in? — csalisbury
Introducing a new pattern that has no causal mechanism to significantly overlap (and thus displace) an existing pattern simply results in more deaths and no first-order reason to believe deaths will be lower when that pattern goes away. — boethius
Likewise, most people at risk of respiratory illness will also not die this year nor people suffering from heart disease. — boethius
People will continue to die of hear attacks for instance; there's no reason that Covid is killing people who really would die of a heart attack this year compared to people simply at risk of dying of a heart attack — boethius
maybe other second-order effects increase causal death mechanism, such as lung injury. — boethius
You have two interpretations: a) Melissa wanted the cash from the options immediately. Many who get into the options program don't have any incentive to actually hold on to the stock, but treat it just a bonus like cash. Of course, the other way is to think that b) Melissa knew that the company was totally lost and verge of collapse and has absolutely no faith in the company.Anyone have any insight to this, and whether it's as bad a thing as it looks? — csalisbury
Perhaps if folk post an image of where they isolate, it would be interesting to see how our experiences differ? — Punshhh
But it's not a pattern which has no causal mechanism to significantly overlap an existing pattern. — Isaac
1. Early days with low numbers and cause and effect is not clear, the disease could be simply correlated with the other comorbities but not causal.
2. A disease that has enormous bias towards killing the terminally ill, but essentially no one else -- such as a hospital disease.
3. A super high mortality rate and completely out of control epidemic that has large overlaps with other "would be causes of death" simply due to killing so many people. For instance, many people dying in an Ebola outbreak are genuinely people who would have died anyways in the short term; so there's lot's of overlap but the effect is now small because total deaths are so high anyways -- doesn't do much for lowering attribution of death to the disease. — boethius
No, and most people who get Covid-19 won't die this year either. That's not the point. The point is that of those people who will die, a disproportionate amount will be drawn from that small group of people who were going to die from respiratory illness or heart disease. — Isaac
Again, not comparing like with like. If you're including (in your risk analysis) for Covid-19 potentially related deaths, then when comparing it to risks we know already, you have to do the same. — Isaac
No, there's no causal mechanism that will cause significant overlap, unless by significant you mean measurable. — boethius
Being in an at-risk group increases your risk of dying if you get Covid, but the progression of Covid, in itself, does not significantly alter the nature of those risk groups going forward, such as culling the people that would actually die soon — boethius
Smoking, obesity, being old, are very large groups. Covid killing some people in those groups is just as random as other causal mechanisms that make these risk groups exist. — boethius
Covid-19 kills people either by the lungs filling with fluid as a result of a failure of the immune system (sometimes from comorbid bacterial infection) or by exacerbating the effects of other conditions, particularly heart disease. Every single one of those mechanisms relies on an underlying health problem. — Isaac
Nothing I have said contradicts this. — boethius
No it isn't. Even within a risk group, the least healthy members of that risk group are more likely to die than the most healthy. — Isaac
Then where is the random mechanism? — Isaac
For this to be true, the "less healthy members" within a risk group need to somehow be far more likely to get infected to begin with. — boethius
It could be random genetic differences that make a person in a risk group, such as smoking, particularly at risk of Covid. — boethius
The random mechanism is that we don't know who within a risk group is actually going to die this year, — boethius
No they don't, because if everyone is equally likely to be infected then the liklihood of infection can be removed from the equation. — Isaac
Unless you're suggesting that there's some gene specific to the defense against Covid-19, then the only genetic component which might be relevant is one which affects the immune system in general. Such as defect would put you in the cohort from which the 300,000 yearly deaths are drawn. — Isaac
Yes we do. It will (disproportionately) be the least healthy. Same as those most likely to die from Covid-19. — Isaac
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