Some afternoon beer thoughts:
One interesting thing is how poorly recoveries have been tracked. Some of that is undoubtedly due to limitations with testing, but there have been some strange occurrences. For example, the Bing tracker no longer tracks recovered cases in CA. It would seem to no longer be a priority to track recovered cases, just
total cases. Someone who got sick in February, tested positive, and recovered by March 1 is still counted as "sick". This raises interesting questions surrounding the utility of the data being provided to the general public.
Using
@Spekkio 's reported 1:50 assumption of confirmed to real cases (which to me seems high, I'd guess it's more like 1:20), today's numbers would indicate that 50 million people have
had COVID 19. Very different than assuming 1 in 6 Americans
currently have it. Some proportion of them undoubtedly have recovered, and we could be well on our way to herd immunity. The implication would be that future waves will be much less pronounced.
It would be nice to see some front line, mainstream effort to collect and report on that data. No testing required, just add in a reasonably safe assumption that every case >5 weeks old where the patient survived is "recovered". We could at least get some working numbers that way. Since the desired end state would appear to be either a.) herd immunity or b.) a vaccine, we could really measure our progress toward the former, while the latter is being developed.
I'm just having a harder and harder time buying the narrative of staying shut down to not overwhelm the healthcare system. An initial shutdown was not a bad idea to ensure this didn't happen and allow us to evaluate the severity of the situation. Having mitigations in place, absolutely! But with proper hygene and appropriate measures, it's time to...