The reason you aren't seeing higher mortality among younger people with no underlying health issues is the availability of oxygen, the ability to resuscitate with saline, antibiotics, pressor drugs, and so on. — frank
We're talking about deaths within 1 year, so talking about overlap with comorbidity in larger groups than "likely to die within 1 year" supports my position. — boethius
Most deaths within 1 year do not come from groups with 90% chance of death this year. — boethius
If statisticians put someone in a group of 1% risk of death due to heart disease this year, they are not saying that they were just too lazy to analyse further and see which of these people with heart disease have actually quite strong hearts (and so many 0.1% of dying) and which have "the weakest heart" (and so 90% of dying); they are saying "of 100 people in this group we expect 1 to be dead by the end of the year, but we don't know which one" — boethius
most deaths are from groups with small chance of death within the year, but they are large groups and so result in lot's of deaths. — boethius
things are no where close to predicting "who's going to die within 1 year". — boethius
assuming the people who would die from heart disease this year have "the weakest heart" and the people with heart disease who die from Covid too have "the weakest heart". This is not what statisticians believe. — boethius
If everyone, or most people, gets Covid, and most deaths arise within large risk-groups, then a very slight increase in chances of death due to surviving Covid can easily replenish all the risk groups to result in the same amount of deaths in absolute terms within the year. — boethius
I don't see how that gets around the overlap in prognostic factors. Those, presumably, cover all age groups, and those affect severity as well as death — Isaac
The fact that there's a 90% overlap with comorbidities serious enough to be listed as a cause of death is hugely significant for risk assessment. — Isaac
Those factors are also tied to a certain social setting. People will die in Honduras who wouldn't have died in the US. They'll die from dehydration, hypoxia, and septic shock. They could be in their 30s with no underlying health problems. — frank
We reduced the mortality rate of a pandemic by collective action. — frank
Some people work from a default position that disease is random until some factor is proven. I tend to work from the position that it is caused until the random factor is demonstrated. It's just a different axiom, I suppose. — Isaac
Personally, I'm more of a governments-too-concerned-about-public-image-to-act-in-a-calm-reassuring-and-timely-manner-could-well-have-killed-thousands kind of guy, but each to their own. — Isaac
Maybe you could flesh out how you're using "random" and "caused." Random stuff is usually understood to be caused. — frank
Things would have been worse if this happened 100 years ago. — frank
Things would have been worse without the lockdowns. In some places it was overkill, but that's no one's fault. — frank
Yes, but your premise is not true. Having a comorbidity of sufficient severity to class as a cause of death is not a "large risk-group" it is, as the country's leading expert in the field has said "people at the end of their lives". — Isaac
"End of their lives" as in over 60? — boethius
Or, "end of their lives" as in will die within 1 year? — boethius
show where this expert clarified their meaning of "end of their lives" as to mean "would have died within 1 year". Otherwise, again, you are citing evidence that supports my position, not yours. — boethius
As in, some as yet hidden factor, some non-measurable element of chance ( — Isaac
They should have been sooner and accompanied by testing and tracing. — Isaac
No! Who the hell thinks people over 60 are at the end of their lives. I bloody hope not. — Isaac
Yes. In the context (and supported by David Spiegelhalter, who specifically referred to 2020). I'm quite confident "end of their lives" meant they they were close enough to death to fit mostly in the year's mortality. — Isaac
What? If I can't cite evidence he meant within exactly one year then that somehow counts as evidence supporting your position? — Isaac
Some people become infected or colonized by this coronavirus and have no symptoms. Some become ill enough to die. I think there is a hidden factor involved. — frank
I believe in that sense, comorbidity presence and severity explain a lot of the variation between those cases (they are the common factor). In general, the closer something gets to being a mysterious hidden factor (patternless unstructured variation), the closer it gets to being noise (unstructured individual level variation). Signals tend to announce themselves. — fdrake
Some people become infected or colonized by this coronavirus and have no symptoms. Some become ill enough to die. I think there is a hidden factor involved.
From what I remember from the article I heard, some people might have a genetic predisposition which causes cells to repell, or become slippy to Covid.I've heard from 1/3 to 1/2 exposed show no symptoms. And then others, yes sometimes young with no medical history, come close to death. It's strange.
if we look at a group in the population who are ill with one of the comorbidity diseases who would be destined to die in 2020. Some of those will die prematurely due to a Covid infection. I would find it hard to believe that many of these patients would survive Covid, only to die later in the year, so the overlap will be large, say around 95% ( of those who become infected with Covid) — Punshhh
There is a second group who are ill with the same illnesses, but who are not destined to die in 2020. A proportion of thes patients will die in 2020 after contracting Covid. I would expect the overlap here to remain high, but not as high, say 60%.(of those infected with Covid) — Punshhh
There is a third group who were destined to die of a disease in 2020, but who presented as quite well, but who will die unexpectedly in 2020. Of this group there may, or may not be an overlap, if there is I expect it is quite low, say 10, or 20%.( of those infected with Covid) — Punshhh
So you are happy with there being a group (1), which is a small group, who are destined to die in 2020 due to another medical condition, comorbidity. With an overlap of 95% or more, who have contracted Covid, dying due to Covid. — Punshhh
You are happy with a group (2), who have an underlying medical condition, comorbidity, but who are not destined to die in 2020, they may die in 1, 2, or 10 years of these conditions. That this is a large group, and that a large proportion of these patients will die in 2020 if they contract Covid. I estimated that 60% of these who contract Covid will die. — Punshhh
So it looks like you're saying that not many in group 1 die in 2020 because only a small amount of them will become infected? — Punshhh
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