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rankam | 5 years ago

Based on what? Nothing points to a higher mortality rate - but some countries are admittedly not testing a lot. Even if you quadruple the estimated mortality rate, the UK numbers would still be under-represented.

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woofie11|5 years ago

The virus takes a while to run its course. We don't know how many people die in the end. There's a huge number of people who have neither recovered not died yet. A lot of people focus on Diamond Princess, which was at <1% fatality late March. It's already up to 1.6% (the 12th passenger just died). 82 are still sick, of whom 9 are in severe condition. That's one of the first set of cases, so that's a lower bound with perfect medical care. Those 9 who are still in sever condition will almost certainly have permanent lung scarring. I'm not sure the status on the 82, but they've sick a long, long time -- we're now something like two months in.

Lower bound: Deaths/(total cases)

Upper bound: Deaths/(deaths + recovered)

Some media in France tend to focus on the upper bound, and reports numbers in the 10-30% range, so the country is very open to very severe measures. The US tends to be optimistic, and everyone plays it down, so the virus is spreading like wildfire.

cjbprime|5 years ago

On the other hand, I don't think "perfect medical care" is an accurate description of being quarantined on a boat with limited diagnostics and an illness your doctors have never seen before, and I also think the cruisegoing cohort skews much, much older than a general population.