Question Author
bednobs, I have no hope of asking government ministers, heads of ONS, etc. and getting an answer - has their reasoning been published ?
ff, As I said, yes, of course it is reasonable to expect higher transmission rates among closely packed people (although it is not necessarily inevitable).
Once people are ill, whether on a remote island or in a dense urban location in London, what reverses the intuitive chances - the islander (who went on a day visit to London to receive an award from the Queen) may be nowhere near a helpful medical facility whereas the Londoner is within a matter of minutes from a(n) (assumed) world leading health facility. Why is the Londoner more likely to die (because he lives in a crowded council block of flats) than the islander (who lives in blissful isolation) ?