User:Dan Polansky/COVID-19
What follows is to supplement other Wikimedia sources on the current COVID-19 pandemic. Another page is Wikiversity:COVID-19/Dan Polansky.
Featured sections: #Deaths per capita, #Deaths in context.
Extent of spread
edit
Links:
- Coronavirus maps and charts: A visual guide to the outbreak, bbc.com
- Coronavirus disease (COVID-2019) situation reports, who.int
- Coronavirus Update (Live), worldometers.info - section "Confirmed Cases and Deaths by Country, Territory, or Conveyance", which includes green rows for recovered countries
- W:2019–20 coronavirus outbreak by country and territory, wikipedia.org
- W:2020 coronavirus outbreak in Europe, wikipedia.org
Flatten the curve
editDiscussion:
- A: Containment is probably impossible. We would be better off without all the restrictive measures that cause economic harm and psychological harm.
- B: Even if containment is impossible (an if), significant delay of spread is very much possible and gains us time to develop a vaccine and faster testing, expand capacity in hospitals, ramp up manufacturing of medical aids and to better prepare for more extensive spread in other ways. The containment measures are the same as spread delay measures.
- C: Failure to delay infections and flatten the curve of infections is very likely to increase the death rate, in part by failure of the overflooded healthcare facilities to provide the intensive care required, e.g. breathing machines. The difference can be observed by comparing the nominal death rates of Italy and South Korea.
- D: We have to distinguish between regions with low quantities of healthcare capacities and regions with high quantities. We have to look at the number of ICU beds per 100 000 inhabitans and the number of ventilators per 100 000 inhabitants; these vary vastly between regions. Furthermore, we have to reckon with different levels of air pollution and the associated susceptibility to lung diseases. And we must not confuse the exponential growth of confirmed cases due to exponential growth of tests with the exponential growth of real cases. Extrapolating from one region to another without making due considerations of these factors leads to gross misestimates.
Quotes:
- “The people in our lives who are most at risk — seniors and those with underlying health conditions — are depending on all of us to make the right choice,” Newson said.[1]
Links:
- Coronavirus: South Korea's 'trace, test and treat' approach, bbc.com
- Flattening the Coronavirus Curve, Mar 11, nytimes.com - has a great graphic
- Coronavirus: Some scientists say UK virus strategy is 'risking lives', Mar 14, bbc.com
- Britain goes it alone over coronavirus. We can only hope the gamble pays off, Mar 15, theguardian.com
- Community Mitigation Guidelines to Prevent Pandemic Influenza — United States, 2017, April 21, 2017,cdc.gov - search for "FIGURE 1. Goals of community mitigation for pandemic influenza"
Refs:
Containment
editContainment:
- Some countries succeeded in containment so far.[1].
- High portion of experts says 60-70 procent of population becomes infected as long as there is no immunity against the virus, vaccination, and cure, says Merkel.[2][3]
Refs:
- ↑ How Taiwan and Singapore Have Contained the Coronavirus, Mar 11, slate.com
- ↑ Germany: Merkel says 60-70 per cent of population could become infected by coronavirus, Mar 11, Ruptly at youtube.com
- ↑ BPK: Angela Merkel, Jens Spahn & Lothar Wieler (RKI) zum Coronavirus, phoenix at youtube.com, 1:17:52 duration
Death rate
editDeath rate AKA case fatality rate:
- The case fatality rate (CFR) is reported to be estimated at about 2%, that is, the statistical tendency is that of 100 infected persons, 2 die[1][2], but calculating the figure is fraught with problems[3].
- "For comparison, the case fatality rate with seasonal flu in the United States is less than 0.1% (1 death per every 1,000 cases)."[3]
- The rate of deaths to number of cases is about 3.4% globally as of Mar 06[3].
- Breakdown: Age, Sex, Existing Conditions of COVID-19 Cases and Deaths, worldometers.info
- Pitfalls:
- The reported case counts are probably an order-of-magnitude wrong as an indication of real cases for most countries, or even more.[4].
- The case counts, even if they were accurate, are counts of cases yet to develop while the death count is part of the closed cases; therefore, one would have to take the current death count and past case count. This pitfall goes in the other direction than the first pitfall.
- The death rate depends on whether overload of healthcare system takes place, and therefore, a globally calculated death rate is too high for unoverloaded countries/regions and too low for overloaded countries/regions.
- Deaths by the covid (caused by covid) would properly need to be distinguished from deaths with covid (covid-positive deaths with little or no covid contribution), and that seems often not done.
Links:
- The Coronavirus’s Rampage Through a Suburban Nursing Home, Mar 21, nytimes.com
Refs:
- ↑ Coronavirus spreads faster outside China, stoking global fears, Feb 25, reuters.com
- ↑ What is coronavirus and what should I do if I have symptoms?, theguardian.com
- ↑ a b c Coronavirus (COVID-19) Mortality Rate, worldometers.info
- ↑ Coronavirus: Why You Must Act Now by Tomas Pueyo, Mar 10, medium.com
War comparison
editComparing COVID-19 to war:
- In World War II, total USSR sufferred 13.7% losses, in terms of per capita.[1]
- In World War II, the world sufferred about 3% losses.[2]
- In World War II, Czechoslovakia suffered 2.33% to 2.43% losses.[3]
- Compare that to 5% death rate that can arise in COVID-19 managed via overflooded healthcare system; if 50% of population gets infected, you get 2.5% losses across the whole population.
Discussion:
- A: Where do you have that 5% death rate from? You cannot trust the raw nominal CFR and you cannot trust the preliminary studies on CFR. The above is very tentative.
- B: What about other countries? What were the U.S. losses and the Polish losses in WWII?
- C: Various countries suffer 1% deaths in a year, per W:List of sovereign states and dependent territories by mortality rate; that is, 1 in 100 persons dies in a year. For instance, in the U.S. there were 8.15 deaths per 1000 people per year in 2017, per the same source.
Spread rate
editSpread rate AKA transmission rate:
- The Ro is 1.5 - 3.5; it is the mean count of people that will be infected by a single infected person.[1]
- "The Ro for the common flu is 1.3 [...]"[1]
The growth curve of the current COVID-19 epidemic:
- The curve showing the number of active cases starts exponential, bd, where b is a base and d is the number of days elapsed. What limits the exponential growth is the increasing immunization of past cases and running out of population to infect further. What further limits the exponential growth are containment interventions.
- The curve starting exponential can be verified by showing the time development on a logarithmic y-axis (e.g. for Italy, worldometers.info, click on "logarithmic") and seeing a straight line; any straight-line portion of such a graph that is not horizontal shows exponential growth with a fixed base, where different slopes of straight-line portions correspond to different base of the exponential growth.
- Since the rate of change of an exponential function is again an exponential function (with the same base, but, in general, multiplied by a different constant factor), also the curve showing daily increases rather than daily totals is going to be exponential. Furthermore, for a death rate not changing in time, the daily deaths are going to be exponential as well; for increasing death rate, even worse.
- If b is 1.2 and we follow 90 days, we get the following development of case totals, rounded to integers:
- 1st 30 days: 1; 1; 1; 2; 2; 2; 3; 4; 5; 6; 7; 8; 10; 12; 15; 18; 22; 26; 31; 38; 46; 55; 66; 79; 95; 114; 137; 164; 197; 237
- 2nd 30 days: 284; 341; 410; 492; 590; 708; 850; 1,020; 1,224; 1,469; 1,763; 2,116; 2,539; 3,047; 3,657; 4,388; 5,266; 6,319; 7,583; 9,100; 10,920; 13,104; 15,725; 18,870; 22,644; 27,173; 32,608; 39,130; 46,956; 56,347
- 3rd 30 days: 67,617; 81,140; 97,368; 116,842; 140,210; 168,252; 201,903; 242,283; 290,740; 348,888; 418,666; 502,400; 602,880; 723,456; 868,147; 1,041,776; 1,250,132; 1,500,158; 1,800,190; 2,160,228; 2,592,274; 3,110,728; 3,732,874; 4,479,449; 5,375,339; 6,450,407; 7,740,489; 9,288,586; 11,146,304; 13,375,565.
- That is, we end up with 13 million infected in 90 days.
- The day on which the 1st case is confirmed in a region is the day on which to take drastic measures to contain the spread: the 1st confirmed case indicates very likely multiple real cases, and these are already too many to contain completely.
- Late note: Wrong. Drastic measures are not necessarily the best option; one has to weigh their consequences in terms of health and lost lives, and in terms of impact of the economic consequences on the quality of life of the population at large in the years to come.
- Late objection: The b of 1.2 is realistic for confirmed cases but not necessarily for true cases since we need to account for exponential growth of tests. Once the exponential growth of tests slows down, the growth of confirmed cases slows down as well.
- Late objection 2: It is dangerous to present the lay reader with an example of an unlimited exponential growth, implying that it can last 90 days. The limitations were stated in the notes above, but that is not good enough. The above presentation was a mistaken idea.
Refs:
- ↑ a b How contagious is the Wuhan Coronavirus? (Ro) in Coronavirus Update (Live), worldometers.info
Links:
- W:de:COVID-19-Pandemie, de.wikipedia.org - great bar charts near the top showing development of counts in time
Means of spread
edit- Thought to be primarily via droplets caughed out or sneezed out.
- Spread via surfaces is also considered[1].
Refs:
- ↑ Covid-19: How long does the coronavirus last on surfaces?, Mar 17, bbc.com
Pandemic potential
editPandemic potential:
- Declared to be a pandemic by WHO.
- OLD: Some authorities/experts indicate there is a pandemic potential, other authorities/experts there is already a pandemic.[1][2]
Refs:
- ↑ Analysis: How close are we to a pandemic?, Feb 25, bbc.com
- ↑ Australia declares coronavirus will become a pandemic as it extends China travel ban, Feb 27, theguardian.com.
Test count
editCount of tests performed per worldometers.info, Mar 9[1], top 5 from available data:
- South Korea: 210,144 = 4,099 per million people
- Italy: 60,761 = 1,005 per million people
- UK: 26,261 = 387 per million people
- Hong Kong: 16,000 = 2,134 per million people
- France: 11,895 = 182 per million people
Czechia:
- Czechia, Mar 12: 1816[2] = 170 per million people
Refs:
- ↑ Coronavirus Testing: Criteria and Numbers by Country, worldometers.info
- ↑ COVID-19: Aktuální počty onemocnění koronavirem v ČR, mzcr.cz
Test ease
editEase with which citizens can get tested:
- South Korea makes it super easy for people to get tested.[1].
Refs:
- ↑ South Korea's Drive-Through Testing For Coronavirus Is Fast — And Free, Mar 13, npr.org
Test coverage
editTest coverage and the relationship between the official case count and real case count:
- In many countries, there are huge discrepancies between reported cases and true cases.[1].
- High test coverage may help combat the virus by keeing in check asymptomatic cases[2].
Refs:
- ↑ Coronavirus: Why You Must Act Now, Mar 10, medium.com
- ↑ Scientists say mass tests in Italian town have halted Covid-19 there, Mar 18, theguardian.com
Links:
- Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19), ourworldindata.org - search for "Current COVID-19 test coverage estimates"
Confirmed cases per capita
editTop 100 confirmed cases per million people (cumulative, active or not), calculated from W:List of countries and dependencies by population and W:Template:2019–20 coronavirus pandemic data on 2020-09-20 17:34 UTC:
Qatar 44876 Bahrain 39248 Aruba 30818 Maldives 24972 Panama 24681 Peru 23382 Chile 22934 Kuwait 22272 San Marino 21498 Brazil 21350 United States 20778 Oman 20263 Israel 19349 Andorra 18544 Moldova 17647 Armenia 15751 Turks and Caicos Islands 15551 Colombia 15055 Vatican City 14545 Sint Maarten 14379 Argentina 13727 Spain 13522 Costa Rica 12465 Montenegro 12065 U.S. Virgin Islands 11780 Guam 11676 Luxembourg 11633 Bolivia 11215 South Africa 11063 Gibraltar 10388 Dominican Republic 10314 Singapore 10086 Saudi Arabia 9622 Cape Verde 9232 Sweden 8518 United Arab Emirates 8517 Belgium 8496 Kosovo 8326 Bahamas 8158 Faroe Islands 8141 Belarus 8043 Suriname 8022 North Macedonia 7974 Iraq 7860 Honduras 7646 Bosnia and Herzegovina 7588 Russia 7518 Ecuador 7063 Kyrgyzstan 6863 Palestine 6634 Ireland 6616 Portugal 6606 France 6588 Iceland 6291 United Kingdom 5902 Romania 5838 Puerto Rico 5715 Kazakhstan 5704 Switzerland 5661 Mexico 5431 Netherlands 5142 Malta 5118 Guatemala 5051 Iran 5037 Italy 4934 Djibouti 4867 Serbia 4750 Eswatini 4748 Paraguay 4552 Monaco 4488 Czech Republic 4419 Albania 4351 French Polynesia 4342 Sao Tome and Principe 4318 Austria 4272 Ukraine 4208 Lebanon 4145 Namibia 4143 El Salvador 4072 Isle of Man 4068 Falkland Islands 4065 Guernsey 4014 Libya 3963 India 3949 Gabon 3887 Azerbaijan 3867 Denmark 3750 Canada 3739 Croatia 3677 Belize 3664 Jersey 3645 Turkey 3642 Equatorial Guinea 3436 Germany 3261 Cayman Islands 2975 Liechtenstein 2890 Trinidad and Tobago 2824 Bermuda 2778 Morocco 2771 Guyana 2754
Disclaimer: The script doing the calculation, at W:User talk:Dan Polansky, is not peer reviewed. One source of error may be that a country or region is skipped altogether during the data extraction.
Data quality: The confirmed cases are very likely to have hugely varying relation to actual cases, depending on test coverage.
Deaths per capita
editTop 100 covid-positive (maybe covid-caused in some countries) deaths per million inhabitants, calculated from W:List of countries and dependencies by population and W:Template:2019–20 coronavirus pandemic data on 2020-09-20 17:34 UTC:
San Marino 1248 Peru 961 Belgium 862 Andorra 683 Bolivia 652 Spain 644 Brazil 644 Chile 631 Ecuador 628 United Kingdom 625 United States 613 Italy 594 Mexico 573 Sweden 566 Panama 525 Sint Maarten 492 Colombia 477 France 466 Moldova 456 Ireland 360 Netherlands 358 Kosovo 337 North Macedonia 332 Armenia 312 Jersey 297 Iran 290 Isle of Man 288 Argentina 282 South Africa 267 Canada 241 Honduras 233 Romania 230 Bosnia and Herzegovina 229 Iraq 211 Montenegro 207 Guernsey 205 Aruba 205 Switzerland 204 Montserrat 200 Luxembourg 198 Dominican Republic 196 Portugal 184 Guatemala 184 U.S. Virgin Islands 182 Oman 181 Puerto Rico 178 Bahamas 177 Guam 168 Suriname 165 Kyrgyzstan 162 Bermuda 141 Costa Rica 138 Bahrain 136 Russia 132 Kuwait 131 Saudi Arabia 130 Israel 129 Albania 127 El Salvador 120 Turks and Caicos Islands 116 Germany 114 Denmark 109 Serbia 107 Bulgaria 106 Eswatini 94.2 Turkey 90.3 Cape Verde 89.8 Kazakhstan 89 Paraguay 87.7 Maldives 86.1 Austria 85.9 Ukraine 85.2 Belarus 82.9 Guyana 81.3 Qatar 76.4 Sao Tome and Principe 71.3 Hungary 69.9 Slovenia 64.4 India 63.4 Libya 62.6 Finland 61.6 Croatia 61.1 Poland 59.8 Equatorial Guinea 57.1 Egypt 57 Azerbaijan 56.9 Djibouti 55 Morocco 49.8 Norway 49.7 Estonia 48.2 Palestine 47.8 Czech Republic 46.6 Philippines 45.6 Belize 45.3 Trinidad and Tobago 44.7 Namibia 44.7 Gambia 44.7 Afghanistan 43.7 Lebanon 41.9 United Arab Emirates 40.8
Disclaimer: The script doing the calculation, at W:User talk:Dan Polansky, is not peer reviewed. One source of error may be that a country or region is skipped altogether during the data extraction.
As an additional data set, deaths per million inhabitants in Chinese provinces calculated from W:Template:2019–20 coronavirus pandemic data/China medical cases by province, where the template was last updated on 2020-03-18:
Hubei 52.9 Hainan 0.6 Beijing 0.364 Heilongjiang 0.342 Henan 0.229 Chongqing 0.2 Tianjin 0.188 Shanghai 0.125 Xinjiang 0.12 Anhui 0.0952 Hebei 0.08 Shaanxi 0.0789 Gansu 0.0769 Guangdong 0.0714 Shandong 0.07 Hunan 0.058 Guizhou 0.0556 Yunnan 0.0417 Guangxi 0.0408 Inner Mongolia 0.04 Jilin 0.037 Sichuan 0.0361 Fujian 0.0256 Liaoning 0.0227 Jiangxi 0.0217 Zhejiang 0.0175 Jiangsu 0 Tibet 0 Qinghai 0 Ningxia 0 Shanxi 0
Deaths per million inhabitants for Wuhan calculated from W:Template:2020 coronavirus quarantines:
Wuhan 349
Deaths per million inhabitants for Italian regions calculated from W:it:Pandemia di COVID-19 del 2020 in Italia and W:it:Regione (Italia):
Lombardia 1683 Valle d'Aosta 1162 Liguria 1022 Emilia-Romagna 1002 Piemonte 953 Trentino-Alto Adige 650 Marche 648 Veneto 439 Abruzzo 361 Toscana 309 Friuli-Venezia Giulia 287 Lazio 151 Puglia 143 Umbria 93 Sardegna 86 Campania 78.4 Molise 75.3 Sicilia 59.2 Calabria 50.3 Basilicata 49.7
On breakdown into regions: If the objective is to get an impression of how bad things can get if the covid is let completely unchecked, it is key to look at the region level, e.g. Lombardia instead of the whole Italy, or Wuhan instead of the whole Hubei or even the whole China. In general, things can possibly get even worse in the unchecked scenario since Lombardia did not let covid completely unchecked, and nor did Wuhan.
Deaths in context
editTotal covid-positive (not covid-caused) deaths from W:Template:2019–20 coronavirus pandemic data alongside 2017 average daily deaths calculated from annual-number-of-deaths-by-cause.csv obtained from ourworldindata.org, 2020-09-20 17:34 UTC:
Region Covid-Positive Deaths 2017 Avg Daily Deaths Ratio Abkhazia 7 N/A Afghanistan 1437 549 2.62 Albania 362 58 6.24 Algeria 1665 436 3.82 Andorra 53 1 53.00 Angola 147 470 0.31 Anguilla 0 N/A Antigua and Barbuda 3 1 3.00 Argentina 12799 881 14.53 Armenia 925 78 11.86 Artsakh 2 N/A Aruba 23 N/A Australia 849 445 1.91 Austria 766 217 3.53 Azerbaijan 574 207 2.77 Bahamas 69 7 9.86 Bahrain 216 9 24.00 Bangladesh 4939 2319 2.13 Barbados 7 7 1.00 Belarus 780 330 2.36 Belgium 9936 285 34.86 Belize 19 5 3.80 Benin 40 201 0.20 Bermuda 9 1 9.00 Bhutan 0 11 0.00 Bolivia 7586 175 43.35 Bonaire 1 N/A Bosnia and Herzegovina 752 101 7.45 Botswana 11 38 0.29 Brazil 136532 3528 38.70 British Virgin Islands 1 N/A Brunei 3 5 0.60 Bulgaria 734 295 2.49 Burkina Faso 55 444 0.12 Burundi 1 210 0.00 Cambodia 0 275 0.00 Cameroon 415 492 0.84 Canada 9211 730 12.62 Cape Verde 50 8 6.25 Cayman Islands 1 N/A Central African Republic 62 163 0.38 Chad 81 373 0.22 Charles de Gaulle 0 N/A Chile 12286 304 40.41 China 4634 28036 0.17 Colombia 24039 615 39.09 Comoros 7 11 0.64 Congo 88 99 0.89 Coral Princess 3 N/A Costa Atlantica 0 N/A Costa Rica 706 63 11.21 Croatia 248 137 1.81 Cuba 111 268 0.41 Curaçao 1 N/A Cyprus 22 20 1.10 Czech Republic 499 298 1.67 DR Congo 268 N/A Denmark 635 143 4.44 Diamond Princess 14 N/A Djibouti 61 16 3.81 Dominica 0 2 0.00 Dominican Republic 2044 178 11.48 Donetsk PR 163 N/A East Timor 0 N/A Ecuador 11044 234 47.20 Egypt 5750 1421 4.05 El Salvador 811 113 7.18 Equatorial Guinea 83 19 4.37 Eritrea 0 109 0.00 Estonia 64 42 1.52 Eswatini 103 N/A Ethiopia 1089 1352 0.81 Falkland Islands 0 N/A Faroe Islands 0 N/A Fiji 2 19 0.11 Finland 339 146 2.32 France 31274 1508 20.74 French Polynesia 2 N/A Gabon 53 29 1.83 Gambia 108 34 3.18 Georgia 19 139 0.14 Germany 9464 2528 3.74 Ghana 297 517 0.57 Gibraltar 0 N/A Greece 313 324 0.97 Greenland 0 1 0.00 Greg Mortimer 1 N/A Grenada 0 3 0.00 Guam 29 3 9.67 Guatemala 3105 243 12.78 Guernsey 13 N/A Guinea 63 272 0.23 Guinea-Bissau 39 37 1.05 Guyana 64 15 4.27 HNLMS Dolfijn 0 N/A Haiti 221 225 0.98 Honduras 2166 120 18.05 Hong Kong 103 N/A Hungary 683 332 2.06 Iceland 10 6 1.67 India 86752 25270 3.43 Indonesia 9553 4465 2.14 Iran 24301 993 24.47 Iraq 8491 393 21.61 Ireland 1792 81 22.12 Isle of Man 24 N/A Israel 1196 119 10.05 Italy 35692 1667 21.41 Ivory Coast 120 468 0.26 Jamaica 58 53 1.09 Japan 1500 3689 0.41 Jersey 32 N/A Jordan 30 69 0.43 Kazakhstan 1671 373 4.48 Kenya 642 752 0.85 Kosovo 601 0 nan Kuwait 584 20 29.20 Kyrgyzstan 1063 94 11.31 Laos 0 119 0.00 Latvia 36 76 0.47 Lebanon 286 90 3.18 Lesotho 33 67 0.49 Liberia 82 76 1.08 Libya 430 90 4.78 Liechtenstein 1 N/A Lithuania 87 111 0.78 Luhansk PR 17 N/A Luxembourg 124 12 10.33 MS Zaandam 4 N/A Macau 0 N/A Madagascar 215 490 0.44 Malawi 179 327 0.55 Malaysia 130 426 0.31 Maldives 33 3 11.00 Mali 128 453 0.28 Malta 17 10 1.70 Mauritania 160 51 3.14 Mauritius 10 28 0.36 Mexico 73258 1936 37.84 Moldova 1203 119 10.11 Monaco 1 N/A Mongolia 0 59 0.00 Montenegro 129 18 7.17 Montserrat 1 N/A Morocco 1795 583 3.08 Mozambique 39 648 0.06 Myanmar 89 1078 0.08 Namibia 112 46 2.43 Nepal 411 477 0.86 Netherlands 6273 393 15.96 New Caledonia 0 N/A New Zealand 25 85 0.29 Nicaragua 147 63 2.33 Niger 69 426 0.16 Nigeria 1094 4044 0.27 North Macedonia 689 N/A Northern Cyprus 4 N/A Northern Mariana Islands 2 1 2.00 Norway 267 107 2.50 Oman 818 29 28.21 Pakistan 6416 3694 1.74 Palestine 244 37 6.59 Panama 2247 50 44.94 Papua New Guinea 6 216 0.03 Paraguay 636 86 7.40 Peru 31369 376 83.43 Philippines 4984 1747 2.85 Poland 2293 1064 2.16 Portugal 1899 304 6.25 Puerto Rico 570 92 6.20 Qatar 210 9 23.33 Romania 4435 728 6.09 Russia 19418 5013 3.87 Rwanda 22 178 0.12 Saba 0 N/A Sahrawi Arab DR 2 N/A Saint Kitts and Nevis 0 N/A Saint Lucia 0 3 0.00 Saint Pierre and Miquelon 0 N/A Saint Vincent 0 N/A San Marino 42 N/A Sao Tome and Principe 15 3 5.00 Saudi Arabia 4458 242 18.42 Senegal 302 220 1.37 Serbia 741 336 2.21 Seychelles 0 2 0.00 Sierra Leone 72 182 0.40 Singapore 27 53 0.51 Sint Eustatius 0 N/A Sint Maarten 20 N/A Slovakia 39 143 0.27 Slovenia 135 53 2.55 Somalia 98 342 0.29 Somaliland 31 N/A South Africa 15940 1263 12.62 South Korea 383 811 0.47 South Ossetia 0 N/A South Sudan 49 243 0.20 Spain 30495 1107 27.55 Sri Lanka 13 333 0.04 Sudan 836 506 1.65 Suriname 97 11 8.82 Sweden 5865 241 24.34 Switzerland 1762 168 10.49 Syria 170 312 0.54 Taiwan 7 485 0.01 Tajikistan 73 126 0.58 Thailand 59 1244 0.05 Togo 41 127 0.32 Trinidad and Tobago 61 30 2.03 Tunisia 133 178 0.75 Turkey 7506 1053 7.13 Turks and Caicos Islands 5 N/A U.S. Virgin Islands 19 N/A USS Theodore Roosevelt 1 N/A Uganda 58 582 0.10 Ukraine 3557 1903 1.87 United Arab Emirates 404 66 6.12 United Kingdom 41777 1597 26.16 United States 202409 7564 26.76 Uruguay 46 87 0.53 Uzbekistan 429 570 0.75 Vatican City 0 N/A Venezuela 530 453 1.17 Vietnam 35 1598 0.02 Yemen 585 420 1.39 Zambia 324 310 1.05 Zimbabwe 224 314 0.71
Deaths per total confirmed cases
editTotal covid-positive deaths per total covid-confirmed cases, calculated from W:List of countries and dependencies by population on 2020-09-20 17:34 UTC, ignoring regions with less than 100 confirmed cases and regions with zero deaths (this is not the actual case fatality rate properly obtained by random sampling, and may differ 10 or even 100 times from it):
Yemen 0.29 Italy 0.12 United Kingdom 0.11 Mexico 0.11 Belgium 0.1 Ecuador 0.089 Jersey 0.081 Chad 0.075 Isle of Man 0.071 France 0.071 Netherlands 0.07 Sweden 0.066 Canada 0.065 Liberia 0.062 Sudan 0.062 Niger 0.058 Bolivia 0.058 San Marino 0.058 Iran 0.058 Donetsk PR 0.057 Egypt 0.056 Ireland 0.054 China 0.054 Guernsey 0.051 Bermuda 0.051 Spain 0.048 Syria 0.045 Mali 0.044 North Macedonia 0.042 Peru 0.041 Kosovo 0.041 Bulgaria 0.04 Romania 0.039 Indonesia 0.039 Barbados 0.038 Finland 0.038 Hungary 0.038 Burkina Faso 0.038 Angola 0.038 Afghanistan 0.037 Andorra 0.037 Guatemala 0.036 Switzerland 0.036 Slovenia 0.035 Germany 0.035 Somaliland 0.034 Sint Maarten 0.034 Algeria 0.034 Sierra Leone 0.033 Vietnam 0.033 Colombia 0.032 Australia 0.032 Malawi 0.031 Puerto Rico 0.031 Gambia 0.031 Honduras 0.03 Bosnia and Herzegovina 0.03 Brazil 0.03 Nicaragua 0.03 Zimbabwe 0.03 Guyana 0.03 United States 0.029 El Salvador 0.029 Albania 0.029 Denmark 0.029 Poland 0.029 Somalia 0.029 Mauritius 0.028 Portugal 0.028 Chile 0.028 Iraq 0.027 Lesotho 0.027 Moldova 0.026 Haiti 0.026 DR Congo 0.026 Togo 0.025 Turkey 0.025 South Africa 0.024 Uruguay 0.024 Latvia 0.024 Kyrgyzstan 0.024 Zambia 0.023 Lithuania 0.023 Luhansk PR 0.023 Greece 0.023 Serbia 0.023 Mauritania 0.022 Cuba 0.022 Estonia 0.022 Bahamas 0.022 Panama 0.021 Pakistan 0.021 Norway 0.021 Cameroon 0.021 Brunei 0.021 Suriname 0.021 Senegal 0.021 Hong Kong 0.021 Argentina 0.021 Ukraine 0.02 Austria 0.02 Eswatini 0.02 Armenia 0.02 Diamond Princess 0.02 Paraguay 0.019 Nigeria 0.019 Japan 0.019 Dominican Republic 0.019 South Sudan 0.019 Morocco 0.018 Congo 0.018 Russia 0.018 Kenya 0.018 Benin 0.018 Philippines 0.017 Montenegro 0.017 Guinea-Bissau 0.017 New Zealand 0.017 Luxembourg 0.017 Myanmar 0.017 Thailand 0.017 South Korea 0.017 Croatia 0.017 Equatorial Guinea 0.017 Sao Tome and Principe 0.017 India 0.016 Ethiopia 0.016 Trinidad and Tobago 0.016 Libya 0.016 Kazakhstan 0.016 Tunisia 0.016 U.S. Virgin Islands 0.015 Comoros 0.015 Azerbaijan 0.015 Cyprus 0.014 Guam 0.014 Bangladesh 0.014 Taiwan 0.014 Madagascar 0.014 Saudi Arabia 0.014 Central African Republic 0.013 Malaysia 0.013 Belize 0.012 Jamaica 0.012 Papua New Guinea 0.012 Uganda 0.011 Djibouti 0.011 Costa Rica 0.011 Namibia 0.011 Czech Republic 0.011 Abkhazia 0.01 Belarus 0.01 Lebanon 0.01 Cape Verde 0.0097 Botswana 0.0095 Liechtenstein 0.0089 Oman 0.0089 Uzbekistan 0.0084 Venezuela 0.0081 Tajikistan 0.008 Greg Mortimer 0.0078 Turks and Caicos Islands 0.0075 Palestine 0.0072 Israel 0.0067 Aruba 0.0066 Jordan 0.0066 Mozambique 0.0065 Ghana 0.0065 Malta 0.0065 Nepal 0.0064 Ivory Coast 0.0063 Guinea 0.0062 Gabon 0.0061 Slovakia 0.006 Artsakh 0.0059 Kuwait 0.0059 Monaco 0.0058 Northern Cyprus 0.0058 Georgia 0.0057 Cayman Islands 0.0048 United Arab Emirates 0.0048 Rwanda 0.0048 Iceland 0.0043 Curaçao 0.004 Sri Lanka 0.004 Bahrain 0.0035 Maldives 0.0034 Burundi 0.0021 Qatar 0.0017 French Polynesia 0.0017 USS Theodore Roosevelt 0.00091 Singapore 0.00047
Deaths per total confirmed cases in Lombardia and Emilia-Romagna calculated from W:it:Pandemia di COVID-19 del 2020 in Italia on 2020-05-01 17:17 UTC:
Lombardia 0.181 Emilia-Romagna 0.139
Data interpretation and caution: The above result stems from at least the following factors:
- 1) Incomplete detection via incomplete testing
- 2) Deaths due to covid vs. deaths with covid (covid-positive in both cases)
- 3) True covid case fatality rate.
Incomplete detection impacts both confirmed cases and deaths, but arguably, it impacts much more the confirmed cases (in general) since deaths are preceded by health problems and these give impulse for testing. Since different countries have different degree of case testing and post-mortem testing, the calculated ratios listed above are not directly comparable between countries and are given only to provide a very first rough idea.
Healthcare system overload
editToo many active cases per million people can overload the healthcare system, as happened in Wuhan and Italy, leading to drastically increased deaths per one thousand infected. Furthermore, there are second-order phenonema: the capacity of the system is further reduced by doctors and nurses becoming sick themselves and no longer supporting the patients.
Alas, see also Wikiversity:COVID-19/Dan Polansky#Healthcare overload in media in recent years.
Links:
- The end of China’s epidemic may be in sight, but Italy’s is surging, Mar 19, nytimes.com
- The Extraordinary Decisions Facing Italian Doctors, March 11, theatlantic.com
- The demand for inpatient and ICU beds for COVID-19 in the US: lessons from Chinese cities, 2020, medrxiv.org
- Italy, Pandemic’s New Epicenter, Has Lessons for the World, Mar 21, nytimes.com
ICU beds and ventilators
editThe number of ICU beds and ventilators (artificial ventilation machines) per inhabitant varies between countries.
ICU beds per 100 000 capita:
- Czechia:
- Germany: 29.2 per a 2012 source[8]
- Italy: 12.5 per a 2012 source[9]
- Lombardy: 7 based on 720 pre-covid beds at "85% to 90% occupancy during the winter months"[1]
- China: 3.6 per forbes article
- New York City: 19 based on 1,600 ICU beds[10] and 8,4 million inhabitants.
Some ventilator counts:
- Germany has 25,000 ventilators and ordered additional 10,000 ones[2].
- Israel has 4000 ventilators[3].
- UK ordered 10,000 ventilators[4]; UK has 5000 or 8000 ventilators per the two sources used by the Wikipedia template.
- Czechia has about 3500 ventilators[5]; or 2080 ICU beds with ventilators[11]
- South Korea has about 9800 ventilators per W:Template:Hospital beds by country.
- Italy has 3000 ventilators per the source used by the Wikipedia template.
Ventilator counts per 100 000 capita using the above and W:List of countries and dependencies by population:
- Czechia:
- 32; but it has 11.6 ICU-CCB beds per 100 000 capita: is this combination of numbers possible?
- 19; per different source[12][13], there are 4450 ICU beds, of which 2080 have ventilators. That yields 19 vents per 1E5 capita and 42 ICU beds per 1E5 capita.
- Israel: 44
- Italy: 5
- South Korea: 19
- UK: 10[6]
- Germany: 30
The ratio of confirmed cases needing an ICU bed to those needing hospitalization:
- Czechia: less than 20% of covid-hospitalized need an ICU bed, per an aggregate of a table in mzcr.cz source.
- Lombardy: about 16% of covid-hospitalized patients needed an ICU bed[1].
Links:
- W:Template:Hospital beds by country -- has ICU bed counts per capita, per country; has ventilator total counts per country but incomplete
Refs:
- ↑ a b Critical Care Utilization for the COVID-19 Outbreak in Lombardy, Italy, Mar 13, jamanetwork.com
- ↑ Europe scrambles for beds and supplies amid coronavirus surge, Mar 22, washingtonpost.com
- ↑ Anxious Israelis count ventilators, or try to build their own, Mar 27, timesofisrael.com
- ↑ Coronavirus: Government orders 10,000 ventilators from Dyson, Mar 26, bbc.com
- ↑ https://www.lupa.cz/aktuality/cesky-open-source-plicni-ventilator-corovent-shani-penize-na-vyrobu-pro-nemocnice/
- ↑ Taking 6500 to be the number of ventilators, the average of the two available numbers 5000 and 8000.
Protection
editProtection of self and others per BBC[14][15]:
- Wash your hands for about 20 s with soap and hot water or use sanitizer gel.
- Use a tissue for caughs; if you don't have tissue, use your sleeve.
- Avoid touching face.
- Avoid close contact with people who are unwell.
Protection of self and others per Swiss BAG[16]:
- Keep distance from other people, especially elderly.
- Thoroughly wash your hands.
- Do not greet by shaking hands.
- When you caugh, do so into a handkerchief or the arm.
- If you have fever and caugh, stay at home.
- Personally visit a doctor or emergency department only after an agreement via phone.
Face masks
editSome countries order or recommend citizens to wear face masks.
Links:
- How to Make a Face Mask, Joann Fabric and Craft Stores at youtube.com -- sewing required
- Jak ušít roušku, která opravdu sedí - návod, Tvůrci v praxi at youtube.com -- sewing required
Teleworking
editHome office (work from home):
- Prague branch of Nestlé makes work from home mandatory for some employees[1]
- Google does something[2]
- Twitter does something[3]
- Microsoft does something[4]
- Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft do something[5]
- European parliament does something[6]
- China did a lot[7]
Refs:
- ↑ Pražská pobočka Nestlé preventivně nařídila kvůli koronaviru některým zaměstnancům práci z domu, Feb 27, irozhlas.cz
- ↑ Google tells staff to work at home due to coronavirus, Mar 11, bbc.com
- ↑ Coronavirus: Twitter tells staff to work from home, Mar 3, bbc.com
- ↑ Microsoft allows employees to work from home amid coronavirus outbreak, Mar 4, theverge.com
- ↑ Amazon, Google, Facebook, and Microsoft are asking Seattle-based staff to work from home because of coronavirus, Mar 6, theverge.com
- ↑ European Parliament moves to majority teleworking in response to COVID-19, techcrunch.com
- ↑ How Covid-19 led to a nationwide work-from-home experiment, Mar 9, bbc.com
Travel restrictions
editTravel bans:
- U.S. banned entry for U.S. non-citizens who have been recently in China[17]
- Czechia banned all direct flights from China to all international airports in Czechia[18].
- Australia banned travel from China[1] on 1 February[2].
- "Israel is banning the entry of foreign nationals who have been in China, Thailand, Singapore, Japan and South Korea over the last two weeks."[3]
- Israel banned entry from Italy to Israeli non-citizens[4].
Flight bans:
- Lufthansa canceled flights to mainland China until Mar 28[5].
- Over 20 airlines cancelled all China flights[6]; many other airlines cancelled some China flights[6].
Links:
- Travel Restrictions on China due to COVID-19, thinkglobalhealth.org - shows travel restrictions as a map and as a list
- Which countries currently have coronavirus travel restrictions in place?, theguardian.com
Refs:
- ↑ Australia declares coronavirus will become a pandemic as it extends China travel ban, Feb 27 2020, theguardian.com
- ↑ Australia should not relax its China travel ban, timeshighereducation.com
- ↑ Israel Takes Strict Approach To Control The Spread Of Coronavirus, Feb 26 2020, npr.org
- ↑ Italy and South Korea join China as coronavirus pariahs as countries close borders, Feb 27 2020, fortune.com
- ↑ German airline Lufthansa extends China flight ban over coronavirus, Feb 14 2020, thelocal.de
- ↑ a b Airlines Suspend China Flights Due to Coronavirus Outbreak, Feb 18 2020, nytimes.com
Shutting schools
editShutting schools at some level of education:
Links:
- COVID-19 Educational Disruption and Response, unesco.org
Refs:
- ↑ Czech Republic Shutting Schools, Events Over Coronavirus, Mar 10, usnews.com
- ↑ Coronavirus: Many schools in Slovakia have been closed (overview), Mar 11, spectator.sme.sk
- ↑ Italy is shutting down schools nationwide to help curb its growing coronavirus outbreak, Mar 4, vox.com
- ↑ Ireland announces sweeping measures to combat coronavirus, schools to close for 2 weeks, Mar 12, foxnews.com/
Other shutdowns
editShutdowns other than travel and schools:
- Czech government issued nationwide quarantine on Mar 16.[19].
- Czechia closed all shops except for food stores, pharmacies, and some other exceptions.[1]
- Bavaria ordered a partial lockdown[2].
- France ordered a shutdown[3].
- "Italy is to close all shops except food stores and pharmacies in Europe's toughest lockdown yet as virus deaths and cases continue to mount. [...] bars, restaurants, hairdressers and non-essential company departments would also close."[4]
- Spain ordered a shutdown[5].
- Multiple U.S. states ordered a shutdown[6].
Refs:
- ↑ Czech government closes shops, restaurants, casinos , Mar 14, radio.cz
- ↑ German state of Bavaria heads for full coronavirus lockdown, Mar 20, politico.eu
- ↑ Coronavirus In Europe: Several Countries, Now Including France, Order Shutdown, Mar 16, npr.org
- ↑ Coronavirus: Italy shuts nearly all shops as WHO declares pandemic, Mar 12, bbc.com
- ↑ Spain, Hard Hit By Coronavirus Pandemic, Shuts Down, Mar 17, npr.org
- ↑ Coronavirus: One in five Americans ordered to stay at home, Mar 21, bbc.com
Shutdown effect delay
editAccording to a chart from Journal of the American Medical Association, China made shutdown of Wuhan on Jan 23 and daily confirmed cases peaked on Feb 4; source found via a Tomas Pueyo article
- Point: That is 12 days later. The effect on real daily new cases was pretty immediate but it showed up as a peak in the measured daily new cases with about 12 day delay.
Discussion
editDiscussion 1:
- A: More people die from common flu than from covid-19. What's the deal about covid-19?
- B: If covid-19 becomes as widespread as common flu, many more people will be dying from it than from common flu, as per #Death rate. Attempted containment is very much worthwhile
- C: As for "Attempted containment is very much worthwhile", that statement is so vague as to be nearly meaningless. What kind of containment are we talking about and what is the price we are considering to pay? Zero intervention fails to prevent deaths; strong intervention may prevent some deaths while causing other deaths. Proper quantitative analysis is required.
Czechia
editCzechia, aka Czech Republic, implemented multiple measures against the covid.
Links:
- Pandemie COVID-19 v Česku, wikipedia.org
- COVID-19: Přehled aktuální situace v ČR, mzcr.cz
- Czech Republic goes into quarantine to slow down coronavirus spread, Mar 16, radio.cz
- Shrnuto: jaká opatření nařídila česká vláda v boji proti šíření nákazy koronaviru?, ihned.cz
Videos
editVideos:
- Coronavirus: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver (HBO), Mar 1, 2020, youtube.com
- Coronavirus outbreak: Canadian WHO doctor returns from China with critical COVID-19 lessons, Mar 5, 2020, youtube.com
Posters
editLinks
editFeatured links:
- Coronavirus Update (Live), worldometers.info - great graphs and other goodies; later: the graphs show exponentially growing cases and deaths without at the same time showing exponentially growing test counts: defect
- Coronavirus: Why You Must Act Now by Tomas Pueyo, Mar 10, medium.com - Later: Pueyo lacks the expertise, but more importantly, he does not account for test count growth, and confuses the confirmed case growth with real case growth. He has fooled many.
- Facts about Covid-19 - Swiss Propaganda Research, swprs.org
More links:
- Coronavirus maps and charts: A visual guide to the outbreak, bbc.com
- W:2019–20 coronavirus outbreak, wikipedia.org
- W:Timeline of the 2019–20 coronavirus outbreak in February 2020, wikipedia.org
- Commons:Category:Maps about the 2019–20 coronavirus outbreak, commons.wikimedia.org
- COVID-19: informace pro občany, mzcr.cz
- Coronavirus disease (COVID-2019) situation reports, who.int
- Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19), ourworldindata.org
- Roušky a kritické myšlení #RouškyVšem (Petr Ludwig), youtube.com
- Velký manuál ke koronaviru od expertů z Bulovky: co víme, proč zůstat doma a jak se ochránit, Mar 17, lidovky.cz
- Which Country Has Flattened the Curve for the Coronavirus?, Mar 19, nytimes.com - a huge number of graphs for many countries next to each other