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Hmmm. It is interesting if people think that this will magically disappear by social distancing or stay at home. Yes it is to help to slow the spread and prevent those who do not have it to get it. The idea is to flatten the curve and spread the timing of those getting sick while decreasing risk to those who are most vulnerable to become severely ill. If they do become ill, then there is increased time that this happens. This will allow hospitals the time to acquire appropriate equipment and personnel and not overload them with severely sick people at the same time. Patient care is significantly compromised, and the mortality rate is unnecessarily increased in overcrowded hospitals and emergency departments. Overcrowding poses great risk to healthcare workers. Relaxing social distancing and stay at home mandates too early will result in exposing those who do not have the disease to the asymptomatic or mildly ill people thus resulting in another peak of the disease. The rate at which this is spreading speaks for itself if it is a good idea in the near future. We are also very lucky that this has not mutated.Earlier and widespread testing would have caught this much sooner. Appropriate action and preparation could have happened. It is hard to believe that more than half of this country has performed less than 500 tests in the entire state as of today. How does one know that there aren’t “hotspots” in those states?Stay well and be safe.
How does one know that there aren’t more “hotspots” in other places? IMO the rate of hospitalization, mortality, etc. If everyone’s got it in an area and the symptoms are mild enough that they just thought it was a slight cold, then what’s the overall harm? Or another way - if 80% of the population in the Dallas suburbs have it and no one needs medical attention, why do we really need to test them? It’s not really coming out the way I intend it though. My point is why do extensive testing in areas that don’t have much of an issue? How do we define “hotspot?” Is it solely based on the number of diagnoses or is it a combination of number and the impact it’s having?Like practically everything else associated with this virus, there’s no good answer IMO. Test where it’s knowingly concentrated and causing issues. Then start testing where they think the next places might be. With limited resources, one needs to prioritize. All IMO.
This is a very interesting article !! The graphs can be adjusted by the reader to show different possible Outcomes—https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/03/25/opinion/coronavirus-trump-reopen-america.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage
Well, if you aren't tested, you aren't counted as having it, proving the numbers are much lower than the statistics show.
My point of testing those with minimal symptoms is for data gathering. If one tests positive, then you can isolate that patient and contact trace. Testing those contacts gives you more information as to the spread. Hotspots can then accurately be identified and confined appropriately. Not testing misses potential areas of concern and individuals will continue to perpetuate the spread.Leaders may announce soon to label counties with high, medium or low positive testing. Based on this information, one county with high numbers testing positive (hotspot) will be locked down while the adjacent county that is low won’t have much restriction. Unfortunately the data is incomplete. Not identifying other areas due to low numbers of tests is inaccurate and poses risk. This will prolong the time to reach the plateau or result in multiple peaks.
Releasing restrictions by county seems a fools errand to me. Nothing prevents infected from an adjacent county traveling to unrestricted bars, restaurants, movie theaters, shopping malls, etc. in the uninfected county... Where I live it's a short walk to the next county and a 5 minute drive to two others, we often cross country lines to shop and work. The other counties are much more rural and have much lower rates of infection than the one I live in which contains a large American city.