Vaclac wrote:It would also reduce hospitalization rates by the same factor. Other studies put the undercounting factor lower, around 20x, so I think it depends on the location, but everywhere there has been significant undercounting, and it matters.
Whether the hospitalization rate is 10% or 20% (because of undetected cases) doesn't matter when you have a fixed number of beds/ICU staff in the hospitals that get filled up with either of those percentages after a set number of days of uncontrolled Covid19 spread.
Vaclac wrote:For example, NYC has been pushed to the brink but has actually had enough capacity to deal with every patient during this wave.
Enough capacity is a bit of a misrepresentation. They needed to turn central park into a field hospital, bring in a military hospital boat with 1000 beds and have 1000 ventilators donated by China to just deal with Covid19 cases. And what quality of care do think they have been able to deliver to their usual heart attack, stroke, surgical and trauma patients in this time?
Vaclac wrote:It's rather critical to understand will the next wave be smaller or bigger than the current one? If smaller and the justification for measures is to avoid overwhelming the healthcare system, then in NYC at least we should stop the measures and let the second smaller wave happen sooner rather than later.
Yes, being able to predict the future would be nice. But our best models are full of uncertainties and if you just take the most optimistic projections and plan as if they will be guaranteed to be true, you are basically a gambler putting your life savings on the knicks winning the championship.
Vaclac wrote:If our case counts were actually close to accurate then one would assume the next wave would be many times larger, but thankfully the data are starting to come in showing that not to be the case.
The data you want is impossible to get. It would involve testing the entire population (or a random representative sample of the population) on a regular basis. When a country has difficulty testing just symptomatic patients, getting enough testing to get an accurate case count on the upswing of the 1st wave is an unrealistic ask.
But here in Australia where I am, where the case numbers have been kept low and have been dropping for weeks because of early lockdowns and social distancing, we will soon be able to open up the lockdown and have the capacity to test the general population to get a more accurate count.















