Intr3pid
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2018
- Messages
- 1,763
I don't understand the purpose of the comparisons in the week of December 5.I'm not sure I agree. If you take recent death rates for the US and compare them to Europe, they are similar. For the week ended December 5, the comparisons are as follows:
US - 15,550 deaths/331.7 million population = 4.69 deaths/million population
Italy - 5,151 deaths/60.4 million population = 8.52 deaths/million population
Austria - 739 deaths/9.0 million population = 8.19 deaths/million population
Belgium - 803 deaths/11.6 million population = 6.92 deaths/million population
UK - 2,984 deaths/68.0 million population = 4.39 deaths/million population
France - 2,751 deaths/65.3 million population = 4.21 deaths/million population
Switzerland - 703 deaths/17.1 million population = 4.10 deaths/million population
Germany - 2,598 deaths/11.6 million population = 3.10 deaths/million population
Netherlands - 336 deaths/17.1 million population = 1.96 deaths/million population
Aggregate for the above 8 nations - 16,065 deaths/332.6 million population = 4.83 deaths/million
So, early mobilization issues in Italy do not explain the current comparisons.
Let's take Italy.
The virus today has reached most of Italy. Their new cases have peaked at about 35,000 in the current wave. In March/April, the virus was limited to just a few regions, with the new cases peaking at around 5,000. The number of deaths are roughly the same in the two wave peaks, so you have a CFR today which is just 5/35 = ~15% of what it was in March/April. In other words, you had the same number of people dying in March/April in Italy as today except they died in just a 15% portion of the population. Why? See the answer in my prior post.
And it's an apples-to-oranges comparison. You are comparing US - one country, one sovereign nation - with a continent that has 40 countries each of which can potentially make its own, even conflicting decision whether to lock down or not.