Exactly. Flattening the curve means that the same number of people get sick, just over a longer period of time so that the health system can handle It. https://www.nytimes.com/article/flatten-curve-coronavirus.html |
Real heartwarming. Wonder how much compassion you have for people your are not related to. |
omg my heard hurts, you're not getting it. it's not flat yet, it's still climbing! difference between verb (flattening) and noun (flat). as a pp said, it's "flattening" (increasing at a lower rate than it was, so closer to a horizontal line than a vertical one) as in but it's not yet there. it's not flat, not in maryland, and esp not in moco. |
The number of hospitalizations is starting to flatten, and the number of deaths per day isn’t rising much, which is why Hogan is talking about starting to open things up a bit. But the overall number of cases still show a very steep graph. |
If we don’t protect them now, I think there will be a lot fewer people willing to take on these jobs in the future. Who wants to take their life in their hands every day? We need to stay home as long as possible to lower their viral load. Or there will be no doctors or nurses left. But then on the flip side you have doctors who are anxious because they have been furloughed and still have massive student loan bills to pay off. I hope their loans will be forgiven. |
The overall number of cases is actually the overall number of confirmed cases, which is a function of the overall number of tests. We could bring the number of cases down to 0 just by stopping all tests. |
NP. Look at the site coronavirus.maryland.gov. Look at the hospitalization chart. You will see how it is flat for some time now. Look at the daily death rate chart. You will see that is actually decreasing. |
Certainly, we will be better at treating this in the fall. But the fall also brings cold & flu season and increases all cause mortality. The ICUs start to fill up with respiratory diseases unrelated to the current pandemic. The 1918 flu pandemic had a first wave in the spring but then the big deadly wave in the following fall/winter. It's not just the primary infectious disease but also the secondary infections (pneumonia) that will land people in the hospital. I wish schools would try to open early. Get the kids in 'classrooms' in outdoor tents and pavilions in parks and stadiums in July. By the time we get to November, we will nearly certainly be shut down again. The second wave is likely to be much worse than the first. Yea yea, start to open up now, but let's please prepare for the very predictable second wave. |
It has flattened in MD and now deaths, hospitalizations, and even new cases are approximately the same each day, with some variation. It’s not an expontential growth. It is painful that you don’t understand how this works. |
pp didn't say it was exponential now. no one has. |
thanks!! v helpful |
Well, with approximately the same numbers each day, it’s flat. |
It's not 1918, and coronavirus isn't influenza. Maybe this fall, people will actually go get their flu shots, though. |
I am so so tired of people comparing this to what happened in 1918. As if our medical care hasn't improved at all. As if we haven't had any advancement in medical treatments since then. Even general hygiene is at a totally different level. It is in no way compatible. |
I think it's comparable in many ways, actually. But "comparable" does not mean "the same." |