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Covid19 Death Rates Of 0.05% To 0.1%
Do the death rates of 0.05% and lower, to highs of 0.1% depending on the area, do they really warrant the draconian measures imposed upon the population of many countries.
Further to that, from my personal experience, which is a small town, although restrictions were imposed, it seemed as busy as any time when out and about in shops etc. yet no one in the area got the disease and the death rate is zero in the larger area.
That follows in line with the 0.05% and lower death rates worldwide.
Further to that, from my personal experience, which is a small town, although restrictions were imposed, it seemed as busy as any time when out and about in shops etc. yet no one in the area got the disease and the death rate is zero in the larger area.
That follows in line with the 0.05% and lower death rates worldwide.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.How are those figures calculate please flobadob? 0.05% of what and in what period? The deaths haven't stopped yet and may pick up again, and another wave is a strong possibility in winter.
What would the figures have been if left unchecked? We may never know but the consensus of scientists is that this is a really infection disease which would have spread quickly and grown exponentially.
But when the dust settles we may conclude that more targeted measures would have been better focussing on the most at risk groups and leaving schools, clubs, sports stadiums open for the under 50s say
What would the figures have been if left unchecked? We may never know but the consensus of scientists is that this is a really infection disease which would have spread quickly and grown exponentially.
But when the dust settles we may conclude that more targeted measures would have been better focussing on the most at risk groups and leaving schools, clubs, sports stadiums open for the under 50s say
// no one in the area got the disease and the death rate is zero in the larger area. //
Sounds unlikely. Do you live on a remote Scottish Island?
The R number should not be the basis for nationwide decisions. It is a measure of the whole country, and is an average. Which means there can be huge variations. So the R number in the North of England will be higher than London which is past corona peak.
Sounds unlikely. Do you live on a remote Scottish Island?
The R number should not be the basis for nationwide decisions. It is a measure of the whole country, and is an average. Which means there can be huge variations. So the R number in the North of England will be higher than London which is past corona peak.
I'm using figures based on deaths per population. For example worldwide 400,000 deaths out of 7 billion people would give a death rate of 0.006%
In America there's 108,000 deaths in a population of 350 million giving a rate of 0.03%
In UK 40,000 deaths out of 63 million giving a rate of 0.06%
The only country I know that didn't lock down as seriously is Sweden who kept schools and bars etc open. They have 4,500 deaths in a population of 10 million, giving a death rate of 0.05%.
I'm hoping my maths are correct. But to me these seem like low death rates and taking Sweden into account, did the lockdowns have any effect?
In America there's 108,000 deaths in a population of 350 million giving a rate of 0.03%
In UK 40,000 deaths out of 63 million giving a rate of 0.06%
The only country I know that didn't lock down as seriously is Sweden who kept schools and bars etc open. They have 4,500 deaths in a population of 10 million, giving a death rate of 0.05%.
I'm hoping my maths are correct. But to me these seem like low death rates and taking Sweden into account, did the lockdowns have any effect?
I think lockdown is more than about closing bars and schools. Your figures look about right although UK population is about 66 million. But of course deaths are still happening. Of course we'll never know for certain what deaths rates would have been (even though epidemiologists seem unanimous in the view that it would have been a lot more without lockdown). I think we'd need more than one small example (Sweden) of non -lockdown to conclude that outcomes are unaffected