So England has almost 10 times as many hospital beds as the US with about one sixth the population? This would mean there is (roughly) 1 bed for every 556 people in England and 1 bed for every 25,460 people in the US. Surely this cannot be right? — Janus
Sure. Take the 72.2% figure from the first study (which didn't include obesity) and add to it the OR (as a factor of case admissions) in the Lancet study. I get 91.4% — Isaac
Either way, if you're happy with the data from the CDC showing over 90% of hospital admissions have underlying comorbidity, and the data (again CDC) showing over 90% of mortality with underlying comorbidity, then why would you be suspicious of ICU admission rates which match. It'd be odd if the didn't match wouldn't it? A lower ICU rate than admission rate would mean that hospitals were actually increasing the general risk for healthy patients. Possible, I suppose, but seems unlikely. — Isaac
72.2 percent... of what? The first article was about identifying risk factors for ICU admission if COVID19+ with underlying CVD. — frank
Patients treated in the ICU ... were more likely to have underlying comorbidities (26 [72.2%] — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7042881/?report=reader
You've lost me. Are you thinking that all COVID19 patients are admitted to ICU? — frank
Patients treated in the ICU ... were more likely to have underlying comorbidities (26 [72.2%] — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7042881/?report=reader
Are you suggesting there's a factor which might bias the selection of patient to transfer to ICU that favours those without underlying comorbidity? — Isaac
using that data, how do you determine the percentage of patients who would be free of comorbidities with better preventative care? — frank
Are you suggesting there's a factor which might bias the selection of patient to transfer to ICU that favours those without underlying comorbidity? — Isaac
No. It's the reverse. — frank
You don't (not using that data) The data linking preventative care with lower rates of comorbidity is huge. I can present a sample, but I'm assuming that's not the point - or are you really questioning whether preventative medicine even works? — Isaac
You don't even know what the comorbidities were. Some of it was diabetes, some hypertension. What about cancer, asthma, MS. etc? — frank
Plus you said that with preventative medicine, 50% of ICU beds in use would be empty, didn't you? How did you get that figure? — frank
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimates that eliminating three risk factors
– poor diet, inactivity, and smoking – would prevent:
80% of heart disease and stroke;
80% of type 2 diabetes; and,
40% of cancer — Mensah G. Global and Domestic Health Priorities: Spotlight on Chronic Disease. National Business Group on Health
Hypertension — frank
These can all increase your risk of getting high blood pressure:
Drinking too much alcohol
Smoking
Being overweight
Not doing enough exercise
Eating too much salt — https://www.bhf.org.uk/informationsupport/risk-factors/high-blood-pressure#Heading3
asthma — frank
Environmental pollution, including traffic fumes and chemicals from power plants, can make asthma symptoms worse and may play a part in causing asthma.
Studies suggest that children living near very busy roads are more likely to develop asthma. — https://www.asthma.org.uk/advice/understanding-asthma/causes/
MS — frank
There's more and more evidence that low levels of vitamin D, especially before you become an adult, could be a factor in why people get MS.
Our skin makes most of our vitamin D when we're out in the summer sun. We also get some from food like oily fish, eggs, spreads and breakfast cereals with added vitamin D in them. You can also get extra vitamin D from supplements (but too much can be harmful).
A blood test can show if your levels of vitamin D are low.
Smoking
Studies show you're more likely to get MS if you smoke. It might be because the chemicals in cigarette smoke affect your immune system. If you have MS in your family, your risk of getting it too could go up if you're exposed to passive smoking (breathing in other people's smoke).
If you have relapsing MS and you stop smoking it can slow down how fast your MS might change to secondary progressive MS.
Obesity
Studies show that getting MS could be linked to being very overweight (obese), especially when you were a child or young adult. This might be because obese people are often low in vitamin D. Obesity can also make your immune system overactive and cause inflammation in your body. There may be other reasons we don't understand yet.
Of course, not all people who are very overweight get MS, and having MS doesn't mean you are or were obese. But if your risk of getting MS is on your mind, perhaps because a close relative has it, then your weight is a risk factor you can change. — https://www.mssociety.org.uk/about-ms/what-is-ms/causes-of-ms
You were guessing, then. — frank
These can all increase your risk of getting high blood pressure:
Drinking too much alcohol
Smoking
Being overweight
Not doing enough exercise
Eating too much salt — https://www.bhf.org.uk/informationsupport/risk-factors/high-blood-pressure#Heading3
Environmental pollution, including traffic fumes and chemicals from power plants, can make asthma symptoms worse and may play a part in causing asthma. — https://www.asthma.org.uk/advice/understanding-asthma/causes/
There's more and more evidence that low levels of vitamin D, especially before you become an adult, could be a factor in why people get MS. — https://www.mssociety.org.uk/about-ms/what-is-ms/causes-of-ms
The CDC are guessing? — Isaac
It's mostly genetic. — frank
Asthma is mostly genetic. — frank
We don't know what causes MS, but you'd need to show a proven preventative strategy to stay consistent with your earlier claim — frank
know you well enough to see when the conversation is going nowhere. — frank
The figure I quoted was for one state in the US. I couldn't find any figures for the US as a whole - Cheshire was trying to claim (without any evidence) that the situation in the UK was not comparable in terms of the risk one took of putting pressure on hospital services compared to other lifestyle choices. — Isaac
I have a meeting to get to anyway so glad of the break...A meeting in which people will be discussing matters by presenting and interrogating evidence. Crazy, huh? — Isaac
I don't believe the data supporting your claims is publicly available. I don't believe it's privately available. I have my doubts about it being transcendently available too... — Isaac
then implies I'm the one arguing in bad faith. — Isaac
It's like, if Socrates hates you and has a database of unrelated facts.I think you do engage in a little bad faith argumentation becuse you just like arguing. Others on the forum do it. It's subtle Putinesque agression that rubs me the wrong way because of Trumpism. I realize I may be misunderstanding, tho. — frank
Yeah, I recall the auto-oppositional dynamic. It would be easier if he was just a loon. But, being able to produce complex arguments for bad ideas is dangerous. Too many people looking for confirmation bias for their fears and this seems like the El Dorado of misplaced intellectual weight.↪Cheshire Socrates had a rough life because his wife bossed him around all the time, so I guess we should have empathy? — frank
citing the conditions in England as evidence for conditions elsewhere is in principle a dubious approach to a data supported argument. — Cheshire
the increased marginal rate of patients is novel to a hyper transmittable virus making the argument that other conditions are equally as responsible for over loading a medical system misleading at best. — Cheshire
The area under the curve for a single event is zero by nature of the variable. — Cheshire
The inability to predict idiosyncratic outcomes doesn't inform the decision, but does make for plenty of illusionary doubt. — Cheshire
would you suggest that recommending others avoid a vaccine during a pandemic, because that is the decision made for oneself is morally responsible? — Cheshire
I agree that preventative medicine, a diet of whole grains and veggies for everyone, replacing cars with bikes, gun control, etc. would reduce the load on the healthcare system. Also if a frog had wings... — frank
Nope, that's what in principle means. So, I guess, yes?More dubious than rejecting it without citing any evidence from anywhere? — Isaac
You know exactly what I'm saying.How? This argument seems to be lacking any structure. How does the fact that it's transmissible alter the proportion by which it is responsible for occupying healthcare resources? — Isaac
Read back slowly the title of the thread.No. I don't think that would be morally responsible. Not sure what that has to do with the discussion. — Isaac
I think you do engage in a little bad faith argumentation becuse you just like arguing. — frank
being able to produce complex arguments for bad ideas is dangerous. Too many people looking for confirmation bias for their fears and this seems like the El Dorado of misplaced intellectual weight. — Cheshire
Guessing at the professional most suited to produce your argumentation. — Cheshire
That's so weird to me. Your job orbits around abstraction, mine around concretion, usually shattered in some way. — frank
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