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    Math geeks needed

    You all know i love math, but this is pretty real math.

    Ok, the numbers are this today. (roughly). The number of cases today are kind of irrelevant since they haven't had an outcome.

    There are 126,000 cases that have had an outcome. 108,000 recovered and 18,500 have died.

    That is around 15% of the cases resulted in someone dying. So, um, uh, if dying from Covid 19 on average is 15% and in order to make that 15% average with young people hardly affected, it would seem older people are at extreme risk.

    What am i missing other then conclude this thing is pretty dangerous for the majority of farmers given the average age.

    #2
    India has shut down for 21 days.They said if people do not comply the country will go backwards 21 years.

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      #3
      Further to that, the USA had 1000 cases with an outcome, 680 died and 370 lived.

      Does the death rate mean 66%? Holy crapperooni that is high. What am i missing?

      Edit: Source: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/ https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/
      Last edited by wd9; Mar 24, 2020, 14:51.

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        #4
        The biggest thing you’re missing is that most of the lower risk people never got sick enough to be tested and recovered at home without being accounted for in the numbers. I would guess that out of the total stats 70-80% of those are “at risk” people in the first place

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          #5
          Originally posted by dalek View Post
          The biggest thing you’re missing is that most of the lower risk people never got sick enough to be tested and recovered at home without being accounted for in the numbers. I would guess that out of the total stats 70-80% of those are “at risk” people in the first place
          Really good point, but do we know that number? I guess it would be really hard to determine even remotely accurate.

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            #6
            Originally posted by wd9 View Post
            Really good point, but do we know that number? I guess it would be really hard to determine even remotely accurate.
            No I don’t think we’ll ever know how many people get it. I know the local health unit here says they have 50-60 probable cases but only 3 have been tested and they don’t seem to be in a hurry to test anyone that doesn’t end up in a hospital. I would think that there are probably 10 people who didn’t get tested for every one that did

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              #7
              I suppose using numbers from the US would be even more complicated as some would rather almost die before going to the hospital then get stuck with a $50,000 medical bill.

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                #8
                Originally posted by wd9 View Post
                I suppose using numbers from the US would be even more complicated as some would rather almost die before going to the hospital then get stuck with a $50,000 medical bill.
                In some states it’s still $2-3000 just for the test so if you’d have to feel pretty rough to get tested if you don’t have coverage

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by wd9 View Post
                  Further to that, the USA had 1000 cases with an outcome, 680 died and 370 lived.

                  Does the death rate mean 66%? Holy crapperooni that is high. What am i missing?

                  Edit: Source: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/ https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/
                  A case isn't concluded or considered recovered until they are have tested negative, between recovery time and lag in testing. i heard that can take up to 30 days, so there is a lag. 3.5% death rate is most common assumption over 80 years of age is something like 18%. higher in North America because they are only testing people showing symptoms. Thousands go untested because they are not serious.

                  The numbers get real ugly once we run out of hospital capacity. Italy Death rate almost 10% and anyone over 65 doesn't get treatment because they don't have enough ventilators. up to 13% of all cases need oxegen or ventilators. last i heard is in Sask we have 180 ventilators. We get to over 3000 active cases here in Sask and doctors could have to start making tough decisions.

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                    #10
                    Webinar today for AHUS patients. Was pretty interesting to hear from Doctors all over the world discuss this subject in many areas of medicine. Currently they know of almost 300 mutations already, but fortunately the overall structure from the bat remains detectable with only about 20% of that structure changing. So so far one test catches them all, for now.

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