Originally posted by Kung Wu
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I was curious so I looked up flu testing in the US. According to the link above we did about 900,000 tests in the US in 2016. That is the entire year. The 2017 pandemic plan though this was sufficient. We are currently doing that many in a week now. That is an incredible jump in such a short amount of time.
Maybe there was something to the fact the previous system was inadequate for the current pandemic.
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The Way the U.S. Is Counting Wuhan Coronavirus Deaths Seems Problematic
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiep...matic-n2566543
"The intent is right now if someone dies with COVID-19, we're counting that as a COVID-19 death," Birx said. "There are other countries that if you had a pre-existing condition and let's say the virus caused you to go to the ICU and then have a heart or kidney problem. Some countries are recording that as a heart issue or a kidney issue and not a COVID-19 death."
There is a difference between dying from something and dying with something.
According to Mark Levin he found a March 24th directive given to doctors that emphatically provides that doctors are to enter the COVID-19 code when recording the cause of death even if it may not be the main cause of death or is the suspected cause of death. It is the default code to be used.
How much this has inflated numbers in the U.S, if much at all, is impossible to know. I suppose it is an error on the side of caution approach but life changing decisions are being made based on this date.
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Originally posted by 1972Shocker View PostThe Way the U.S. Is Counting Wuhan Coronavirus Deaths Seems Problematic
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiep...matic-n2566543
"The intent is right now if someone dies with COVID-19, we're counting that as a COVID-19 death," Birx said. "There are other countries that if you had a pre-existing condition and let's say the virus caused you to go to the ICU and then have a heart or kidney problem. Some countries are recording that as a heart issue or a kidney issue and not a COVID-19 death."
There is a difference between dying from something and dying with something.
According to Mark Levin he found a March 24th directive given to doctors that emphatically provides that doctors are to enter the COVID-19 code when recording the cause of death even if it may not be the main cause of death or is the suspected cause of death. It is the default code to be used.
How much this has inflated numbers in the U.S, if much at all, is impossible to know. I suppose it is an error on the side of caution approach but life changing decisions are being made based on this date.
I think there are obvious reasons to want to code these deaths as something besides COVID-19.
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Originally posted by 1972Shocker View PostThe Way the U.S. Is Counting Wuhan Coronavirus Deaths Seems Problematic
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/katiep...matic-n2566543
"The intent is right now if someone dies with COVID-19, we're counting that as a COVID-19 death," Birx said. "There are other countries that if you had a pre-existing condition and let's say the virus caused you to go to the ICU and then have a heart or kidney problem. Some countries are recording that as a heart issue or a kidney issue and not a COVID-19 death."
There is a difference between dying from something and dying with something.
According to Mark Levin he found a March 24th directive given to doctors that emphatically provides that doctors are to enter the COVID-19 code when recording the cause of death even if it may not be the main cause of death or is the suspected cause of death. It is the default code to be used.
How much this has inflated numbers in the U.S, if much at all, is impossible to know. I suppose it is an error on the side of caution approach but life changing decisions are being made based on this date.
was only a matter of time lol. This take is pretty reprehensible.
We are likely undercounting deaths because only those with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnoses are coded as that. Please se the article in the previous page about the hundreds of unexpected cardiac arrests happening in homes in NYC and get back to me.
If someone dies of kidney failure because their kidneys failed while fighting the virus that’s a death attributable to COVID that otherwise would not have happened at that point in time.
im not rooting for a higher death count, but history shows we almost always under account the true effects of a catastrophe - whether that’s number of unemployed in an economic recession or the number of people in a humanitarian crisis.The mountains are calling, and I must go.
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Originally posted by Downtown Shocker Brown View Post
Are we inflating? Are other countries downplaying theirs ?
I think there are obvious reasons to want to code these deaths as something besides COVID-19.
I don't know how true this is, but I have seen references to hospitals having a financial incentive from the federal gov't to label cases of people without insurance as Covid-19.
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Originally posted by wsushox1 View Post
was only a matter of time lol. This take is pretty reprehensible.
We are likely undercounting deaths because only those with a confirmed COVID-19 diagnoses are coded as that. Please se the article in the previous page about the hundreds of unexpected cardiac arrests happening in homes in NYC and get back to me.
If someone dies of kidney failure because their kidneys failed while fighting the virus that’s a death attributable to COVID that otherwise would not have happened at that point in time.
im not rooting for a higher death count, but history shows we almost always under account the true effects of a catastrophe - whether that’s number of unemployed in an economic recession or the number of people in a humanitarian crisis.
Clearly their are many, many more deaths to come either directly attributable to this pandemic or indirectly related to it or relating to the response to it. Of course, who knows how high the death count would be if the response was adjusted one way or the other..
I would think miscounting deaths is a problem whether they are over-counting or under-counting.Last edited by 1972Shocker; April 8, 2020, 12:21 PM.
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But if we don't have actual numbers of infected how can a mortality rate/model be trusted? Serious replies only...
total-deaths-60-k.jpg
Here is a projection from the university of Washington's Metrics board.
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Isn't it the ONLY sane thing to do in a crisis?
Morgues and crematories in New York metro area and New Orleans are literally overflowing with dead bodies. My gosh, they are storing bodies in refrigerator trucks in New Orleans. These aren't the only two locations in the US having this problem.
So far, in the first 3 months of the virus being in the US, we have lost about 21% of the total number of Americans killed in action in Viet Nam. And that war spanned many, many years.
I just don't think we have the luxury of full blown autopsies in the vast majority of these situations.Kung Wu say, man who read woman like book, prefer braille!
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Originally posted by ShockingButTrue View PostBut if we don't have actual numbers of infected how can a mortality rate/model be trusted? Serious replies only...
total-deaths-60-k.jpg
Here is a projection from the university of Washington's Metrics board.
All models are built on assumptions and have a range of error (some larger than others). Short range weather models, on the whole, have a relatively small range of error and poor verification. A viral spread model does not rely on laws of thermodynamics, fluid dynamics, and easy hydrostatic assumptions like Numerical Weather Prediction does - so its range of error is going to be considerably larger.
If you're interested in learning more about the UW model, their documentation is being updated and enhanced each day here: https://ihmeuw-msca.github.io/CurveFit/Last edited by wsushox1; April 8, 2020, 01:40 PM.The mountains are calling, and I must go.
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