malchior wrote: Mon Oct 19, 2020 9:55 am
That's an understandable feeling, but I don't think it's fair. The numbers were always going to get bad again in the fall. The Smooves of the world have been saying that all summer. The not-lockdown slowed COVID down, but it was never going to get rid of it. Not here, and not in Europe.
I'll wait to see if Smoove_B weighs in on this but I have a suspicion that putting too much weight on seasonality is potentially misleading.
Geez, got a little busy in here on a Monday morning...
I think the seasonality discussion was an "evolving topic", changing and updating as we moved from April/May into July/August and we didn't know much about the virus and were guessing. Remember, originally there was a belief (based on what we know about respiratory illnesses in general) that it would "re-emerge" in areas that hadn't been seeing cases and then rapidly spread. Considering that it never went away, it's a pointless exercise at this point. What remains is whether or not it will becomes seasonal (like influenza) in 2022 and beyond - presumably after we have a vaccination readily available. Short answer - no one knows.
Getting back to the flattening of the curve - yes, that was initially designed to help save the hospitals. However, the true reason we went on lockdown (broadly) was to buy
time. Time to come up with a plan for how to test, trace and isolate people with the virus and to time to figure out how to come up with policies and rules (like mask wearing and limiting crowds) to minimize spread. For NY/NJ, that's what we did, and at least in NJ we had mixed success (IMHO). I have no idea what other states were doing, but my sense is (broadly), suggest that time wasn't spent coming up with plans or regulations. Or if they were, the plans or orders were very short term (because the virus respects calendars).
At no point did anyone believe we were going to get rid of the virus by locking down. However, we could have (and could have all summer) stamped it down to levels so low (using test, trace and isolate, masks, limit gatherings) that middle America might not be imploding right now. It's hard to say. NJ cases are increasing and we did (mostly) all the right stuff. Though unofficially I'm going to tell you that ~50% of the contacts refuse to cooperate in our state (fully or partially). When you can't trace contacts and get ahead of that period of communicability, the system falls to pieces. For a long time, testing was slowing everything down. Now it's the people and their refusal to share information.
Regardless, this Fall/Winter season is now going to be bad. Very bad. I guess it might depend on where you live (state, region), but the reports I'm seeing this morning are suggesting trouble is brewing. In short, an inability to address this at a federal level + strong belief that individual rights trump (yes) community rights = more infections, more death and more suffering. It's going to be bad because circulating virus levels were high enough all summer to tee us up for a bad Fall/Winter. Now that we know more about how the virus spreads, it's potentially much worse. Again, it's those casual/informal prolonged indoor contacts - families and friends hanging out. Holidays, birthday parties, social gatherings...whatever. And I already have heard from plenty of people (family, extended family, etc...) that they're not changing any plans for the holidays. And why should they? In their mind they did everything they wanted all summer and nothing happened. Why should the next 6 months be any different?
I mean...this is not good.
https://twitter.com/EricTopol/status/13 ... 1691402240
Almost the whole country is in the "Uncontrolled Spread" category
While it's not perfect, the analogy of people like me (staying home, limited contact, mask wearing, etc...) is that we're currently the ones holding the umbrella during an insane downpour - and we've been doing it for almost 8 months now. Meanwhile, those around me that aren't doing anything but standing under my umbrella, wondering what the problem is - they're not getting wet. I'm getting tired.