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clv101
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Post by clv101 »

Little John wrote:Well surprise surprise. The official daily death toll is about to be scrapped.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/20 ... 7ECa_XoR_k
"One expected recommendation would be to stop daily reporting altogether and move to a weekly official death toll instead,"

Which would be a good thing as there is a strong daily cycle in the time series caused by the weekend.
Little John

Post by Little John »

clv101 wrote:
Little John wrote:Well surprise surprise. The official daily death toll is about to be scrapped.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/20 ... 7ECa_XoR_k
"One expected recommendation would be to stop daily reporting altogether and move to a weekly official death toll instead,"

Which would be a good thing as there is a strong daily cycle in the time series caused by the weekend.
Yeah... right.... that'll be the reason they are scrapping it.... :lol:
vtsnowedin
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Post by vtsnowedin »

Meanwhile Johns-Hopkins University figures ,which are not under UK government management, has the UK death toll at 44,835 which comes from 166 deaths per day last week a 42% increase from the 117 D/D of the previous week.
Little John

Post by Little John »

vtsnowedin wrote:Meanwhile Johns-Hopkins University figures ,which are not under UK government management, has the UK death toll at 44,835 which comes from 166 deaths per day last week a 42% increase from the 117 D/D of the previous week.
Do you know how many people die per day, in total, at this time of year, in UK Hospitals.

If you don't, "166 deaths per day", in the absence of knowing the ordinary expected total deaths per day, is meaningless.

What matters is excess deaths.
vtsnowedin
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Post by vtsnowedin »

Little John wrote:
vtsnowedin wrote:Meanwhile Johns-Hopkins University figures ,which are not under UK government management, has the UK death toll at 44,835 which comes from 166 deaths per day last week a 42% increase from the 117 D/D of the previous week.
Do you know how many people die per day, in total, at this time of year, in UK Hospitals.

If you don't, "166 deaths per day", in the absence of knowing the ordinary expected total deaths per day, is meaningless.

What matters is excess deaths.
Using whole year figures somewhere between 1454 and 1483 per day based on the last two years experience. I could wade through some data to get the seasonal variation but I'm sure you have that in hand.
It is the 42% increase in just a week which is troubling.
Little John

Post by Little John »

It is the back end of October. The beginning of the influenza season where, every year, the death rate spikes and when the media busies itself telling us all the NHS is about to be "overwhelmed".
vtsnowedin
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Post by vtsnowedin »

In the US flue killed through it's five month November to March season about 145 people per day so a small fraction of the typical 7750 per day total deaths. The present 800/d covid deaths are 5.5 times that rate and the winter season is just beginning.
I find it interesting that both the UK and US reported Covid deaths are approximately ten percent of the normal daily deaths in spite of quite varied government efforts between the two countries and the various states.
Little John

Post by Little John »

vtsnowedin wrote:In the US flue killed through it's five month November to March season about 145 people per day so a small fraction of the typical 7750 per day total deaths. The present 800/d covid deaths are 5.5 times that rate and the winter season is just beginning.
I find it interesting that both the UK and US reported Covid deaths are approximately ten percent of the normal daily deaths in spite of quite varied government efforts between the two countries and the various states.
Again, I would urge you to look at the total deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of a year, for the USA going back, say, the last ten years. Then, directly compare that with the deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of this year since Covid19 was first identified in your country.

I am not saying the numbers wont be higher for this year. I fact, I would be amazed if they were not. But, it is not possible to say anything meaningful about how significant any increase in such numbers is until and unless you have those numbers for comparison. There is at least one other significant factor that then needs to then be considered and that is the age demographics of total deaths. But, an initial, bald comparison as I have outlined is a necessary starting point.
Little John

Post by Little John »

Telegraph journalist realising that the Covid narrative is false--lockdowns till we get a vaccine to keep us safe ... but wait ... we won't be safe even after a vaccine ... so ...

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/1 ... 3ZqfJcDFBc
Janet Daley:

What with all the excitements of last week – the rock star mayor of Manchester winning a moral war in spite of losing a tactical battle, the prison doors slamming shut on more swathes of the population, another Treasury rescue for desperate businesses – you might have missed what could have been the most significant development in the debate about this endless crisis.

Sir Patrick Vallance, who has until now been an avowed purveyor of the official Government doctrine that finding a vaccine will be the ultimate solution to the problem of Covid, made a statement to a Commons committee which blew that idea out of the water. Appearing before the Joint Committee on National Security Strategy, the Chief Scientific Officer asserted that the notion “of eliminating Covid is not right�. Even if a vaccine was available by the spring, it “would not wipe out the virus� which would, in fact, become endemic in Britain. We will simply have to live with this disease, he said, and learn to manage it in the best possible way.

Excuse me? What are we arguing about then? As I understood it, the experts who were demanding repeated lockdowns of varying degrees in ever more numerous locations were basing their entire case on the promise of eventual deliverance by a vaccine. When those of us who were protesting against these measures claimed that they were, in the literal sense of the word, inhuman, we were assured that they must persist Until We Have a Vaccine. Any case that was put forward for managing the virus in ways that did not involve the shutdown of life as we knew it was dismissed outright and, indeed, caricatured in outlandish terms, as if everyone opposed to lockdown was a callous fanatic.

The official doctrine occasionally tripped over its own feet when the experts, and even the Prime Minister, blurted out the terrible possibility that an effective vaccine might never be found. But those moments of doubt were always cancelled out as soon as any lockdown sceptic uttered the unanswerable questions: “So what happens then? How can we ever get out of this doom loop?� There would then follow a rapid scuttle back into the accepted dogma: we must continue with this self-inflicted destruction Until We Have a Vaccine.

To make it absolutely clear, the two opposing sides of this dispute were: on the one hand, on-and-off lockdowns are the only solution in the absence of a vaccine, and, on the other, we should learn to cope with the virus by protecting those who are most at risk for as long as necessary while allowing the rest of society to return to something like normal. But Sir Patrick’s devastating remarks change the parameters of this discussion entirely.

Let me put this as plainly as possible. If a vaccine is not going to put a definitive end to the virus, and we are still going to have to manage it in the most effective ways that can be found – why won’t Government ministers even engage with the possibility that we should be managing it in sensible, less destructive ways right now? Boris Johnson dismisses the idea that the vulnerable elderly could be given such special protection in half a sentence: it is “unrealistic�, he says, because so many of them live in multi-generational families. But that is surely not an insoluble problem – if you treat this as a serious possibility.

It is a pity that Andy Burnham’s spectacular campaign against the Government came down in the end to a rather squalid haggle about a (relatively speaking) small amount of money when there was a more interesting argument to be had over the suggestion by Sir Richard Leese, the leader of Manchester City Council, in favour of simply protecting the high-risk population. I would bet that at a fraction of the cost that the Treasury is spending to support zombie businesses, a full service of care, and even alternative accommodation, could be offered to those who are in real danger. If younger family members wish to care for them, special provision could be made for them too.

It cannot be beyond the wit of officials who are currently spending their time drawing up vastly complicated tier restrictions (and enormous amounts of money ameliorating the effects of them) to devise ways of managing the risks to specific groups with compassion and sensitivity. All it would take is a political decision to grant that such a proposition is acceptable. And Sir Patrick himself – the voice of “the science� – has just said that it is not only acceptable but inevitable.

But it has probably gone too far for that. The Government is in too deep, locked into a plan with devastating consequences that has no obvious endgame or criteria for escape, even though its experts and spokesmen contradict one another – and themselves. At last Thursday’s press conference, Sir Patrick did not reiterate his game-changing statement to the parliamentary committee.

He reverted to the status quo ante position of probably no proper vaccination programme until next spring (which is not quite never) and made no mention of the prospect that even that would not get rid of the virus. So which version of his opinion is the one he actually stands by? Does Boris Johnson secretly know the answer to this? He was visibly relieved at the press briefing by what he called Sir Patrick’s “optimism� about a vaccine. What is the Government’s actual view?

Do they condemn the “managing risk� option in defamatory terms just to make their own claim to be taking a middle way between extremes – national lockdown vs protection of the vulnerable – seem reasoned and sensible? Unfortunately, these questions are not being put into the mainstream debate, largely because the broadcast media journalists who dominate Downing Street press conferences are too busy scoring easy points about the failures of track and trace. So the same non-questions are asked, and the same non-answers are given. And Government ministers spew out more and more fatuous bluster. Matt Hancock said last week that “with science on our side� we will win this fight. Does he really believe that “science� (as opposed to particular scientists) can be on anybody’s side?

I despair.
vtsnowedin
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Post by vtsnowedin »

Little John wrote:Again, I would urge you to look at the total deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of a year, for the USA going back, say, the last ten years. Then, directly compare that with the deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of this year since Covid19 was first identified in your country.

I am not saying the numbers wont be higher for this year. I fact, I would be amazed if they were not. But, it is not possible to say anything meaningful about how significant any increase in such numbers is until and unless you have those numbers for comparison. There is at least one other significant factor that then needs to then be considered and that is the age demographics of total deaths. But, an initial, bald comparison as I have outlined is a necessary starting point.
I doubt if the totals for this year will be conclusive until you have next years numbers for comparison which will show the validity of your " you can only die once " rule. Then we will be able to see if Covid did create a significant rise in deaths or just moved up date of death by a few months or weeks.
From what I can see to date it will be an increase but not nearly as significant as the media are making it out to be at present.
The news on the vaccine front is good and I expect general availability by mid summer. But until then it is every man or woman to themselves to take what ever precautions they need to without being told what to do by the government.
Little John

Post by Little John »

vtsnowedin wrote:
Little John wrote:Again, I would urge you to look at the total deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of a year, for the USA going back, say, the last ten years. Then, directly compare that with the deaths per day, per week and per month, for each of the months of this year since Covid19 was first identified in your country.

I am not saying the numbers wont be higher for this year. I fact, I would be amazed if they were not. But, it is not possible to say anything meaningful about how significant any increase in such numbers is until and unless you have those numbers for comparison. There is at least one other significant factor that then needs to then be considered and that is the age demographics of total deaths. But, an initial, bald comparison as I have outlined is a necessary starting point.
I doubt if the totals for this year will be conclusive until you have next years numbers for comparison which will show the validity of your " you can only die once " rule. Then we will be able to see if Covid did create a significant rise in deaths or just moved up date of death by a few months or weeks.
From what I can see to date it will be an increase but not nearly as significant as the media are making it out to be at present.
The news on the vaccine front is good and I expect general availability by mid summer. But until then it is every man or woman to themselves to take what ever precautions they need to without being told what to do by the government.
Nope.

You need to look at the last ten years and compare them with this year. If the total deaths for this year are comparable with the previous ten, then whatever else is said, it may be entirely assumed that Covid19 has not produced excess deaths.

Assuming the above to be true, for the sake of argument, the next question that would need to be addressed would be the extent, if at all, this current year's deaths are demographically different in terms of spread of ages compared to previous years. Again, if they were the same, then it could equally be assumed that the people who have died are the people who would have died of something sometime this year in any event.

Only if there is an excess number of deaths this year as compared to previous years does your last point become relevant. At which point, the number of deaths this year should demographically show, in comparison to previous years, which age group was contributing the most to any excess. If, as I strongly suspect would be the case, any excess deaths would still be of the very oldest among your population it would be at least an entirely reasonable deduction to make that they would have been likely to have died sometime in the next year or so. It would only be at that point, that you would need to wait until net year to find out if that deduction was correct.
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Post by vtsnowedin »

You are fighting anything that does not agree with your preexisting conclusion. The death statistics have varied a few percent a year up or down pre Covid mostly driven by the aging of the Uk population and the results of policies of the NHS. We will need a variation above and beyond this pre existing variation to show a trend.
You are trying to say that covid is pretty much a nothing in the long term scheme of things. I very much doubt you will be correct in that when it is all said and done.
Little John

Post by Little John »

vtsnowedin wrote:You are fighting anything that does not agree with your preexisting conclusion. The death statistics have varied a few percent a year up or down pre Covid mostly driven by the aging of the Uk population and the results of policies of the NHS. We will need a variation above and beyond this pre existing variation to show a trend.
You are trying to say that covid is pretty much a nothing in the long term scheme of things. I very much doubt you will be correct in that when it is all said and done.
I am not fighting anything of the sort. I am explaining to you that you are not in a position to state whether or not the deaths from Covid19 in your country or, indeed, in this country this year are responsible for excess deaths overall, or excess deaths of any age group in particular unless you have previous years' total death rates to compare this year's death rate to including a breakdown of deaths by age.

Do you have in your possession previous years' total death rates, both in overall terms as well as broken down by age as well as the same for this year in order that the comparison I mentioned may be made? If you do, say so and state what the comparisons show. If you do not, then admit it and stop making pseudo-definitive statements in terms of the impact on total deaths this year by Covid19. Those impacts may turn out to be major or they may not. But, as things stand, there is significant evidence they may not.

If, on the other hand, you are not actually trying to suggest that you know that there is a significant excess of deaths this year compared to the average, either overall or in a particular age group. But, are, instead, simply arguing that the lock-downs that we are enduring here in the UK, resulting in the stripping away of civil liberties in a way not seen in any living person's lifetime and the biggest economic contraction in 300 years leading to a debt that my grandchildren's children will likely be still be paying back with all of the poverty that implies is a price worth paying "just to be on the safe side", then I find it difficult to respond other than to say that any who would argue such a thing are either a fools, cowards or hypocrites.
vtsnowedin
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Post by vtsnowedin »

I think I have been clear that I think the actual death rates are at present unknowable and will only be known for sure a year or two from now. Where I have stated where I think they will end up I made it clear that that was just my opinion based on incomplete data.
As to the enormous cost of the lockdowns and the probable outcome that the imposed cure was actually worse then the disease I agree with you.
You are trying to minimize the effects of Covid beyond the truth of the matter which is unnecessary considering the huge cost of the lockdown efforts.
Little John

Post by Little John »

vtsnowedin wrote:I think I have been clear that I think the actual death rates are at present unknowable and will only be known for sure a year or two from now. Where I have stated where I think they will end up I made it clear that that was just my opinion based on incomplete data.
As to the enormous cost of the lockdowns and the probable outcome that the imposed cure was actually worse then the disease I agree with you.
You are trying to minimize the effects of Covid beyond the truth of the matter which is unnecessary considering the huge cost of the lockdown efforts.
I will be clear here.

Firstly, I do indeed think that the biological impact of Covid19 is looking more and more to be less than we are being told by way of justification of the economic and political measures taken.

However, I also think that even if things were as bad as are being suggested, that still does not justify the measures that have been imposed. There have been certainly three pandemics over the course of the last 100 years, all of which were worse than the current pandemic, even if one accepts the dominant narrative being pushed by our governments - which I do not in any event. But, none of those pandemics were responded to in this way. And I do not think that any argument which may state this is becasue we did not have the technology to respond in this way in previous pandemics is a tenable argument. There is no indication that this level of shutdown of societies was ever considered as being a reasonable response in previous pandemics. Which begs the question of what has changed? It seems to me there can only be two explanations. Either the entire Western capitalist world - and it does seem to be the Western capitalist Axis of the world that is continuing down this particular rabbit hole (USA, EU, UK, NZ, Australia), has gone a little bit bonkers. Or, there is another reason.
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