Attention, Citizens! The #COVID19 Emergency Is Over!

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Around the world, both state and local governments looked at wildly exaggerated computer model projections of millions of virus deaths, declared a “State Of Emergency”, and foolishly pulled the wheels off of their own economies. This has caused pain, suffering, and loss that far exceeds anything that the virus might do. 

The virus hardly affects anyone—it has killed a maximum of 0.1% of the population in the very worst-hit locations. One-tenth of one measly percent.

Ah, I hear you saying, but that’s just deaths. What about hospitalizations? Glad you asked. Hospitalizations in the worst-hit areas have been about three times that, about a third of one percent of the population. Still not even one percent.

But on the other hand, more than thirty million workers in the US are unemployed. That’s about twenty percent of the number of full and part-time employees. And that job loss affects the entire household, not just the workers.

And that doesn’t count the loss of life from increased suicides and from delayed medical diagnosis and procedures. Nor does it count the fact that some 20% of the lost jobs are not expected to return. And we have calls to mental-health hotlines skyrocketing, and domestic violence through the roof. In a most ironic outcome, we have hospitals and doctors going bankrupt, and thousands of nurses being furloughed, because “non-essential” medical procedures are forbidden. Then there are the huge financial losses, both to the economy and to the government.

And in a beautifully circular process, we have trillions and trillions of dollars borrowed by the government to try to offset some of the damages that the government just caused … these lockdowns are far, far more destructive than the virus. The virus damage is short-lived, but we and our children will be paying for decades for our stupidity in killing the economy. 

It’s like … it’s like … well, about the only example I can think of which has equivalent idiocy is if a mosquito were to land on your head and you grabbed a sledgehammer to get rid of it …

So the first lesson of the emergency is, don’t kill your economy to try to delay or avoid a few deaths. It is possible to slow the spread of the virus without pulling the wheels off of the economy.

The next lesson of the emergency is, don’t put much trust in computer models.

The next lesson of the emergency is, don’t put doctors in charge of economic decisions. Especially Dr. Fauci. He’s been wrong about most aspects of this whole process. If you want someone to run a hospital, as a general rule you shouldn’t hire a doctor …

The next lesson of the emergency is the extreme importance of the ancient medical maxim of Hippocrates, a maxim that our dear Dr. Fauci apparently never heard of—“Primum non nocere”, which means “First, do no harm”.

The next lesson of the emergency is, quarantine the sick, protect the vulnerable, but do NOT quarantine the healthy. That’s madness.

Let me set aside what we’ve learned to return to the COVID19 emergency. The emergency everyone feared was exemplified by the reality that in some countries, the medical system was overwhelmed by the number of COVID-19 cases. The cause of this was that the cases came on too fast—the peak hospitalizations and deaths were packed into a week or two. Early on in the pandemic, this peak in the load on the medical system in Italy caused parts of the system to collapse under the weight of cases.

To prevent that peak load from crushing the medical system, it was decided in many countries to try to “flatten the curve” by slowing the spread of the virus. Note that the stated intention of flattening the curve was not to stop the virus. The declared goal was to decrease the number of new cases per day, not to decrease the total number of new cases.

Figure 1. The theoretical effect of “flattening the curve”.

In that manner, rather than having a sharp peak in medical need, the curve would be flattened out and hopefully the medical system would not be overwhelmed.

So … did this work? Hard to tell at this point. However, we do have one example of a modern country that did NOT shut down and kill their economy to fight the virus, which is Sweden. How are they doing? Here’s the comparison:

Figure 2. Deaths per ten million over time, for the hardest-hit countries.

As you can see, Sweden is in the middle of the pack—a bit better than the UK and Switzerland, same as the Netherlands and Ireland, and a bit worse than the US and France.

So if the lockdowns and the “shelter-at-home” orders are having an effect, you couldn’t tell it by looking at Sweden.

And to return to the question of lowering the peak and flattening the curve, here are the results from a number of countries. I’ll start with Sweden and the Netherlands, since per Figure 2 they are on the same path. I’m using the Complete Ensemble Empirical Mode Decomposition (CEEMD) method to remove the fluctuations due to incomplete data reporting on the weekends. See here and here for a discussion of the CEEMD method. 

Figure 3. Daily deaths. The black/yellow line is the CEEMD “residual”, which is the value of the data with the weekly and other regular fluctuations removed.

Figure 4. Daily deaths. The black/yellow line is the CEEMD “residual”, which is the value of the data with the weekly and other regular fluctuations removed.

Both the Netherlands and Sweden are past the peak load on the medical system. Neither one was overwhelmed by that load. The difference is … Sweden did not pull the wheels off of its economy and drive millions into joblessness and despair. I know which path I prefer …

Here are the daily deaths of a number of other countries. I’ll start with Belgium, which is the hardest-hit country, and roll on down from there.

OK, so much for the countries. All are about a month past their peak. How about the US states? Here you go.

The spike in the New York data is from a single day’s reporting of a bunch of “overlooked” deaths in nursing homes. Bizarrely, Governor Cuomo ordered nursing homes to accept COVID-19 patients … so as you might imagine, the totally predictable nursing home deaths were concealed until their hand was forced.

I also note how resistant the CEEMD residual is to that single outlier data point of nursing home deaths. A better-guess solution would be to spread those deaths out over the earlier time, distribute by the number of non-nursing home deaths.

(In passing, let me note that Georgia started loosening the lockdown on April 20th, and there’s no sign of a “second peak” of deaths.)

Those are the hardest-hit states. However, not all of the hardest-hit states are past their peak. Here are the two states of the hardest-hit that are not past their peak.

Finally, to close the circle before discussing all of this, here are two views of the world deaths, one with and one without China. I left out China in one of them to see how much difference it made, because a) China’s numbers are big, and b) I don’t trust them one bit. Here are those two charts. It turns out that leaving out China makes very little difference.

So … given all of that, what can we conclude?

Well, first in importance, if medical care was outpaced by the virus in some location and there was an emergency, the peak of the emergency is over now. Yes, there are some states and countries yet to pass the peak. But by and large, and in particular for the hardest-hit countries as well as for the world as a whole, the peak of the medical load from the pandemic passed about a month ago.

And that means that in those states and countries, whatever chance we had to “flatten the curve” is GONE. The opportunity has passed. For most of the world, curve flattening is history.

And since we were sold this bill of goods on the basis of “flattening the curve”, and since we’re now well past any opportunity to do that, let’s remove the restrictions. Or as I’ve said for weeks, “End The American Lockdown Now”.

Of course, the local petty tyrants who have vastly expanded powers under the “emergency” want to hold on to them. So they’re now saying that we have something new to fear, a “rebound” or a “second peak” … me, I’ve said before that I think we will see very little in the way of any second peak, for a simple reason:

As Sweden has shown, the virus laughs at our pathetic western-style “shelter in place” regulations.

Too many people in “essential” jobs, too many deliveries, too many people coming and going from the households. Combine that with a very infectious virus, and the shelter in place will have little effect … and since it has had little effect when it was there, I say it will have little effect when it is removed.

Now, here’s my argument. The various local instant totalitarian rulers derive their power from the State of Emergency. But the emergency is past, we can’t flatten the curve now. We’re past that, which means there is no further emergency. So them holding onto that power now that the emergency is ended is illegitimate and illegal. It’s also in some cases unconstitutional.

Here’s what I’d do …

In those countries and states that are past the peak, declare the emergency is over and open everything back up. Acknowledge that the chance to flatten the curve is gone, and revoke each and every emergency order. They are only valid for the duration of the emergency.

Maintain some approximation of social distancing, on a voluntary basis.

There are flareups in certain locations now, even with all of the regulationss. There will be flareups after the regs are removed. Get used to it. A flareup is not a second peak.

 Maintain personal sanitation on a voluntary basis. Wear a mask, wear gloves, wash hands, and for goodness sake, if you’re ordering bat soup, tell them to hold the bats …

• Once the majority of the pandemic deaths are over, establish a testing and contact tracing process to keep track of the virus.

• Test people entering the country. As far as I know, I get tested more going in to get my blood drawn than do people entering the US.

• Keep a close watch on the numbers to see if there is some kind of “second peak” developing. If and where that might happen, then in those areas that had trouble with the first peak, push policies that don’t kill the economy, and for heaven’s sake, quarantine the sick rather than the healthy.

• Encourage the vulnerable population (elderly with co-morbidities, immunocompromised, etc.) to self-isolate to some comfortable extent, to be extra vigilant in avoiding crowds, and to maintain a high level of personal sanitation.

Folks, the ugly reality is that every day we keep the now-useless lockdowns in place is another day of misery for a large chunk of the population. COVID-19 is now a part of the virus landscape. Let’s reclaim the power from the Federal, state, county, and city megalomaniacs who are issuing diktats and expecting everyone to obey.

END THE AMERICAN LOCKDOWN NOW!


Here, the unusual late rains have returned. We didn’t get one drop in February, which is usually wet, so these late rains are most wonderful.

Best to all, stay well,

w.

AFTERWORD: I note today that Matt Briggs, Statistician To The Stars, has a new post up entitled “There Is No Evidence Lockdowns Saved Lives. It Is Indisputable They Caused Great Harm“. His posts are always worth reading, and he actually is a statistician to the stars.

PS—When you comment, please quote the exact words you’re referring to. This prevents much misunderstanding and useless argumentation.

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Clyde Spencer
May 14, 2020 10:49 am

Willis
You remarked, “… as well as for the world as a whole, the peak of the medical load from the pandemic passed about a month ago.” More to the point, it appears that most countries peaked within a month or less from the time of the first death, regardless of the severity of the lockdown. Probably, the minimal social distancing, use of masks to suppress aerosols, and increased attention to washing hands, were the major influencesw on attenuating the number of new cases. While I can’t make a strong case for it, I suspect that any additional suppression related to “shelter in place,” and shuttering businesses was probably compensated by increased transmissions with families in close proximity and ignoring the requirement for masks and improved hygiene among family members. Few family members probably used masks at home, while their employers would have required it while at work. The only situation I can imagine that contributed to reducing the spread of the virus was keeping people out of the mass-transit subways in large cities, where it is impossible to maintain a safe distance from others. The world, following the advice of pathologists and epidemiologists, has done a poor job of dealing with this pandemic. They have been focused on eliminating contacts, while ignoring the bigger picture of unintended consequences and consequent crippling of economies. What has happened to institutionalized people is unconscionable! The most vulnerable were NOT protected.

Sören F
May 14, 2020 11:00 am

A Swede living in Denmark here. Fine, but Swedes compare with fellow Scandinavians Danes and Norwegians first, and then the death counts are double theirs, and I’d say, that’s because SE just has more difficult-to-move control knobs. for policy compared to DK/NO, so people try part bottom-up lockdown themselves.

May 14, 2020 11:26 am

Mr. Mosher claims half of Sweedes live alone. Just checked and he’s close: 40%. Don’t know how rest of Europe compares yet, but if this is unusual, it could be a factor.

Gator
Reply to  Gordon Lehman
May 14, 2020 12:29 pm

A third of EU households are composed of a single person, according to new figures released this month.

Out of 220 million homes in the European Union, 33 percent were lived in by just one person. In Sweden that number was over half of households (52 percent), followed by Lithuania, Denmark and Finland.

The lowest amount of people living alone was recorded in Poland, Slovakia, Portugal and Malta.

A quarter (25 percent) of households consisted of couples without children, while 20 percent were couples with children.

Finland had the highest share of couples living together without children at 32 per cent, while Ireland had the largest proportion of couples living with children at 28 per cent.

The Eurostat study of data collected in 2016 found that just four percent of European households were made up of single parents living with children.

At 9 percent, Denmark had the highest share of households consisting of single parents living with children.

The remaining 18 percent were made up were made up of other types of households such as house shares.

The largest average household size was recorded in Croatia at 2.8 people, while the smallest was in Sweden with 1.9 people.

Almost two thirds of households in Europe were composed of one or two people.

https://www.euronews.com/2017/09/05/people-living-alone-europe-solo-living

Gator
Reply to  Gordon Lehman
May 14, 2020 1:02 pm

A third of EU households are composed of a single person, according to new figures released this month.

Out of 220 million homes in the European Union, 33 percent were lived in by just one person. In Sweden that number was over half of households (52 percent), followed by Lithuania, Denmark and Finland.

The lowest amount of people living alone was recorded in Poland, Slovakia, Portugal and Malta.

A quarter (25 percent) of households consisted of couples without children, while 20 percent were couples with children.

Finland had the highest share of couples living together without children at 32 per cent, while Ireland had the largest proportion of couples living with children at 28 per cent.

The Eurostat study of data collected in 2016 found that just four percent of European households were made up of single parents living with children.

At 9 percent, Denmark had the highest share of households consisting of single parents living with children.

The remaining 18 percent were made up were made up of other types of households such as house shares.

The largest average household size was recorded in Croatia at 2.8 people, while the smallest was in Sweden with 1.9 people.

Almost two thirds of households in Europe were composed of one or two people.

https://www.euronews.com/2017/09/05/people-living-alone-europe-solo-living

Posted this once already, I think… sorry if double posts…

Poems of Our Climate
Reply to  Gordon Lehman
May 16, 2020 10:08 pm

But living alone would suppress immunity so why the stabilization?

John Robertson
May 14, 2020 11:46 am

Every generation needs learn anew, the pain that comes to you when these words you hear;”We are from the government we are here to help you”.
What the current panic has brought into sharp focus,is the stunning ineptitude of our high priced help.
A time line of Public Health utterances in any country highlights this.
They were caught flatfooted,politically correct,gender neutral and fully credentialed,yet without a clue as to how our society functions.
Shutdown was a knee jerk panicked response,with no plan for recovery and no concept of what must occur when you regulate the productive into home imprisonment.

The damage here has not been the Virus from Wuhan China,the real cost is in the madness of leaders without any leadership skills.
But hey..we elected them.
As an interesting aside,the cost of government did not reduce anywhere.The minions did not suffer any loss of income,”working from home”…the revenuers still demand their payoff..
We were commanded to cease and desist producing,on threat of imprisonment and financial harm.
So why should we be taxed?

Curious George
Reply to  John Robertson
May 15, 2020 11:47 am

Nice to know that Mr. Putin, Mr. Macron, and Mr. Xi have no leadership skills.
We are doomed.

Italian witness
May 14, 2020 12:20 pm

Here in Italy we were told another VERY interesting thing by our National Statistical Institute: the non-born children due to the stress for losing job and/or salary and all other troubles will account for twice the number of the death. In other words, for MOSTLY saving aged people (median age 81) with two or three other pathology, we “killed” almost 100.000 babies. Then, suicide, drugs addiction, homelessness and other death will be to add to the foolish way the government approached the emergency (if you are sick and positive but not so critical to need emergency hospital, stay at home . . . spreading the virus all around your condo).
About Sweden, I wonder how many deaths were about guests (immigrants, very few in other Nordics countries) and old, final people supposed to have few weeks or months to live.

Matthew R Marler
May 14, 2020 12:20 pm

One-tenth of one measly percent

I have been pushing the comparison/contrast to measles, along with other infectious outbreaks, endemics, and pandemics. Whichever comparison(s) you think most informative, this lockdown has been unprecedented and a disaster.

Thank you for another good essay, and thanks to all the discussants for unusually mild and informative commentary.

Wim Röst
May 14, 2020 12:23 pm

This is the future: testing everyone: Wuhan draws up plans to test all 11 million residents. Testing everyone will will bring the Corona problem back to nearly zero. This will save the economy.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-china-52629213
“The Chinese city of Wuhan is drawing up plans to test its entire population of 11 million people for Covid-19, state media report. The plan appears to be in its early stages, with all districts in Wuhan told to submit details as to how testing could be done within 10 days.
It comes after Wuhan, where the virus first emerged, recorded six new cases over the weekend.”

Gator
May 14, 2020 12:29 pm

A third of EU households are composed of a single person, according to new figures released this month.

Out of 220 million homes in the European Union, 33 percent were lived in by just one person. In Sweden that number was over half of households (52 percent), followed by Lithuania, Denmark and Finland.

The lowest amount of people living alone was recorded in Poland, Slovakia, Portugal and Malta.

A quarter (25 percent) of households consisted of couples without children, while 20 percent were couples with children.

Finland had the highest share of couples living together without children at 32 per cent, while Ireland had the largest proportion of couples living with children at 28 per cent.

The Eurostat study of data collected in 2016 found that just four percent of European households were made up of single parents living with children.

At 9 percent, Denmark had the highest share of households consisting of single parents living with children.

The remaining 18 percent were made up were made up of other types of households such as house shares.

The largest average household size was recorded in Croatia at 2.8 people, while the smallest was in Sweden with 1.9 people.

Almost two thirds of households in Europe were composed of one or two people.

https://www.euronews.com/2017/09/05/people-living-alone-europe-solo-living

Vuk
Reply to  Gator
May 14, 2020 2:14 pm

At first glance by looking at death rate published by European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control
http://www.vukcevic.co.uk/EuropeCV.htm
it appears there is no direct correlation for countries (as quoted in your post) with number of people living in the household .

Chris Barron
May 14, 2020 12:35 pm

Would you like a laugh ?
This prophetic comedy piece was recorded just 2 weeks before lockdown

https://youtu.be/_ds9u0O6X8o

Jai Seli
May 14, 2020 12:36 pm

So . . . what’s possibly [one of the] “Blessings from the Beginning” revealed by Grifters Gates and Fauci’s P[L]andemic Hoax to forced vaccinations and social tracking op? Millions of people getting a very sobering WAKE-UP CALL. And hopefully there will be a major demographic shift from “blue urb” to “fly-over rural.

May 14, 2020 12:56 pm

I live in Georgia and just got my haircut today — first time in more than two months. In Michigan both I and my barber would be criminals.

Governor Kemp has caught a lot of flack both for delaying a statewide shutdown order (which reopened public parks and beaches which some local orders had closed), and then laying out a plan for statewide reopening before he could guarantee that absolutely everyone would be absolutely safe.

If Kemp turns out to be right, his critics will find something else to complain about and no one will remind us of their errors. If Kemp turns out to be wrong, he’s going to get blasted from all sides. I give him credit for being willing to make that call — so many other governors are willing to hide behind the experts and keep everything shut down.

John Dowser
May 14, 2020 1:04 pm

Will — “Sweden did not pull the wheels off of its economy and drive millions into joblessness and despair”

Sweden didn’t employ a *mandatory* lockdown simply because most of their citizens didn’t need to be forced. Social distancing and avoiding a lot of the typical situations for contamination was understood by most and followed soberly without having to put it in law and sending patrols out. Some spreading would happen any way, was assumed.

However the economy is still hit pretty hard, many lost their job and economical activity as a whole is down and the outlook remains dim. This is also caused by a government paid reduction in work hours (!) to allow people to self-isolate. But overall the economy has cooled down in the same order as elsewhere. Maybe a little milder.

In the words of their state virologist: “it doesn’t matter”. What does matter is the fantasy that Sweden follows a radical different trajectory somehow. This is simply not supported by any fact.

Greg
Reply to  John Dowser
May 14, 2020 1:22 pm

” But overall the economy has cooled down in the same order as elsewhere. ”

where are you seeing “this cool down” ? Everyone beyond supermarkets staying at a home and small businesses going to the wall and tens of millions on unemployment is not “cooling down” it is a full blown depression. This will be followed by high inflation as the results of shutting down 90% of the economic activity of most countries hits the fan.

this is like calling the last glacial maximum a “cool period”.

astonerii
Reply to  John Dowser
May 14, 2020 2:28 pm

John…
How about you put some numbers to your claims?

Bindidon
Reply to  astonerii
May 14, 2020 5:26 pm

astonerii

So! You like numbers?

Sweden is 6th in the top ten sorts of both
– the death toll per million (340);
– the case mortality ( total cases per total deaths, 16 %).

J.-P. D.

astonerii
Reply to  Bindidon
May 14, 2020 6:24 pm

Yes it is. Open for business. Yet it is not worse than everyone. Which it should be.
They are tracking for an at worst 0.1% infection fatality ratio. And by at worst, I mean fake made up overly high number.
They are estimating that Stockholm has seen 30% infection while total deaths come in at about .03%. Which is 0.1% total deaths if 100% of the population gets infected.
But like all places, their body count is not of those who were killed by Covid-19. They are of people who tested positive for SARS-COC-2 and died. I was also told anyone who dies in home for the aged is also simply added to the total.
What if only 50% of those people even had symptoms of Covid-19? What if only 50% of those who had symptoms had severe symptoms and yet another 50% of those had severe enough symptoms to actually kill someone?
The bulk of the people were really old and were really sick.
How many were heart attacks? How many were strokes? How many were live failures? How many were renal failures? Kidney disease? We will probably never know unless they are doing a better job of maintaining records of what actually killed those people than places like the United States is doing.

astonerii
Reply to  astonerii
May 14, 2020 6:25 pm

SARS-COC-2 should be SARS-COV-2

Scissor
Reply to  Bindidon
May 14, 2020 8:08 pm

I know that Brazil is far behind and India is even further behind, but give them a chance. Heck even Peru might sneak up from behind. I’m afraid that Russians drink too much vodka.

Chris Barron
May 14, 2020 1:08 pm

I hope we’re still allowed to laugh ?

A brief piece of prophetic comedy, from 2 weeks before lockdown
https://youtu.be/_ds9u0O6X8o

Vuk
May 14, 2020 2:05 pm

“London has just 24 new coronavirus cases a day
Capital’s lockdown questioned as models suggest virus will be wiped out in June
…… the “R” reproduction rate has fallen to 0.4 in London, with the number of new cases halving every 3.5 days.
The report, published this week by the Medical Research Councils Biostatistics Unit at Cambridge University, rather than by the Government, has left some MPs questioning whether they are being shown all the evidence.
Steve Baker, the Tory MP who sits on the Commons Treasury select committee, said: “This means the Government really must publish fully and frankly the underlying advice and data, so we can have a full public consultation. All this black box policy making isn’t working for the country.
………..
Separate data from the ONS released on Thursday showed that at any given time between April 27 and May 10, around 0.27 per cent of the population was infected”
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/05/14/london-has-just-24-new-coronavirus-cases-day/

Eliza
May 14, 2020 2:35 pm

Again and again Willis is correct there are 7 billion people on earth OK? 200000 die each DAY mostly old people with cancer, hypertension and yes respiratory diseases such as flu influenzas caused by CORONAVIRUSES. 60,000,000 people die each year! NORMALLY. So to date about (but let’s exaggerate for the morbid crowds here), 300000 mostly old people with co morbidities with suppossedly COVID 19 (which i really doubt because influenza cases have suddenly dropped to near zero. I think they are counting influenza cases as covid 19 my personal view), worlwide have died OVER A 6 month period since this supposed pandemic started (Dec 2019??). So the daily death rate from this suppossed pandemic is 150 days /300000 or 0.0005% increase in deaths or 2000 per day check it out over the 6 month period. This is a nothing burger virus that affects freezing cold countries where humans should not be living in (joke)

Juice
May 14, 2020 2:53 pm

Thank the gods Sweden chose a different path and acted as sort of a control.

Jurgen
May 14, 2020 2:55 pm

Willis is right.

In my own words, the danger is not one of the many biological viruses around, often signaling the weak spots in the human condition rather than causing them. The real danger is a mix of mental viruses going around. Among them the panic virus, the mass hysteria virus, the bad news is good news virus, the let’s play doctor with the whole world virus, to name some. When you are spooked by corona, you may be blinded into not realizing you are infected by one, or several of these mental viruses.

I wish all infected persons happy return to sanity. This post from Willis could be a great help for that.

May 14, 2020 4:28 pm

I agree with Willis on all points.
Interesting chart on vitamin D level vs disease risk: https://www.grassrootshealth.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/disease-incidence-prev-chart-051317.pdf Be sure to read the legend to understand the chart.
Note that average level for US and Canada is barely enough to prevent rickets.
The recommended daily minimum intake of vitamin D, 400 IU, is now considered to be too low.
I have been (inadvertently) getting 2000 IU (50 mcg) Vitamin D as an added item in a daily fish oil supplement. The claim is that will increase blood serum level by 20 ng/ml. I suspect that might not be enough.

Jack Black
Reply to  Dan Pangburn
May 15, 2020 3:06 am

ionic Zinc is very important too in the actions of a properly functioning immune system. Eating plastic packed sterilised and chemically processed pseudo-foods does contibute to so very many mineral and nutrient deficiencies these days. Few clinicians even investigate such underlying causes though when presented with a so called Covid victim in the emergency room. It’s a jag in the arm, off to a coma, tube down the oesophagus, and oops another Covid death whilst on a respirator….. Another $38,000 to the Hospital’s coffers… Ka-Ching $$$$$ ….. Oh, cynic me?

Gator
Reply to  Dan Pangburn
May 15, 2020 12:54 pm

To find out if you are getting enough Vitamin D, you really need to have bloodwork done. I discovered that I was D deficient over ten years ago when I was having trouble sleeping through the night. My doctor wanted to prescribe sleeping pills, and I was sure that was not the answer. Years later that same doctor started checking my D levels annually (apparently he ran across the same study that I had read years before), and after a few years my levels started dropping again. I now take 20,000 iu’s of D every day, and my levels are good. The medical community has a bad habit of prescribing one size to fit all. We are individuals.

Reply to  Gator
May 15, 2020 3:41 pm

Gator: I have written as much, and was low in D when measured 10 years ago, but it was my wife, a naturopath who told me. Not the effing doctor! So good on you.

Anyway, I think you’re correct. 20,000IU is sort of what we get when we get 30 minutes of sun midday… so I assume it’s not toxic, even though it does build up in our fat cells.

So it’s good to know that you’re taking that much and not overdoing it since you’re monitoring your blood levels.

I am only guessing that I am not deficient by taking 6000IU a day, and getting sun in my convertible or being out in it when I can. I do not use sunscreen unless I am going to get overexposed by the way. When I am sick, which between every 1 and 2 years, I bump up D… to 8000IU, but now I may do more.

But something of caution about the sun for vit D. I think getting sun away from peak hours increases the proportion of UVA which will tan, but not make vit D… Not the benefit I am looking for. I recall a while ago saying be careful not to burn in the clouds or in late or early day sun. Now it makes sense since UVB by definition is higher frequency and will get reduced by filtering through more atmosphere as the sun angle decreases.

Gator
Reply to  mario lento
May 15, 2020 5:36 pm

I was diagnosed at an early age with what is best described as an allergy to the UV light of the Sun. If I am going to be out for more than an hour, I need sunscreen or long sleeves and a hat. I still tan and burn (like any blonde and blue eye), but I am blessed with an additional consequence. That likely explains my need for higher doses, and again illustrates how one size does not fit all. I eventually stopped seeing that doctor.

Reply to  Gator
May 15, 2020 5:41 pm

Gator:
Thank you so much for the context and good information!

Chris Barron
May 14, 2020 5:00 pm

Just curious, how many other people’s government very rapidly enacted a new law regarding coronavirus ?

Here in the UK we got the Coronavirus Act, which is slated to exist for a maximum 2 years, but with a review every six months to see if it’s still necessary.

At the time, nobody was really going to argue, but they enacted the law almost as if they had already experienced some civil rebellion, which didn’t actually come until after the created the law.

And now we have a group of people looking to blockade Scotland Yard Police Station soon, to enact our rights under Magna Carta’s Article 61, which makes it the duty of the citizenry to disobey the government where the government is tyrannical. At the moment, the enabling process behind the creation of the Coronavirus Act is in dispute

MikeN
May 14, 2020 5:57 pm

The numbers are not accurate. The US is close to 3000 deaths per 10 million population,
as there are about thirty tens of millions of people in the US, and nearly 90,000 deaths.

TRM
May 14, 2020 7:52 pm

In some online discussions some were suggesting using “excess deaths” to see what effect the covid-19 disease is having and I thought that would be a reasonable approach because total deaths could not be fudged as easily.

Instead of using the CDC page for top causes of death as I did previously,
https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/pressroom/states/newyork/newyork.htm
I have looked up other sources such as the state government sites. Problem is they are a mess. Very hard to find total death stats and in the case of Georgia I went with Statista for a single year. So much for a standard 4 year average.

My previous estimates were all very conservative by design. I made a rough estimate by adding the top 10 causes plus drug overdoses. It was close and erred on the low side by design.

Using the new numbers there is no “excess deaths” of any statistical significance. This makes the case for lockdown at all, much less continuing, dodgy at best.

New York: Expected 50,319 / Actual 39,005
Georgia: Expected 27,699 / Actual 27,161
Illinois: Expected 36,138 / Actual 37,870

All 2020 deaths year to date are from this CDC page:
https://gis.cdc.gov/grasp/fluview/mortality.htm
Click the state and then go through weeks 1 to 16 and then get the “Total Deaths” from the bottom right.

New York: 150,959 yearly deaths (2013-16) expected average for 4 months = 50,319
https://apps.health.ny.gov/public/tabvis/PHIG_Public/lcd/reports/#state

Georgia: 83,098 yearly deaths (2017) expected average for 4 months = 27,699
https://www.statista.com/statistics/241581/births-and-deaths-in-the-us-by-state/

Illinois: 108,414 yearly deaths (2015-18) expected average for 4 months = 36,138
https://dph.illinois.gov/data-statistics/vital-statistics/death-statistics

JohnM
Reply to  donald penman
May 14, 2020 10:33 pm

You think?

Daily number of lab-confirmed UK cases
Number of additional cases on Thursday 14 May 2020: 3,446

Total number of COVID-19 associated UK deaths
Deaths of people who have had a positive test result confirmed by a Public Health or NHS laboratory: 33,614

Daily number of COVID-19 associated UK deaths
Number of additional deaths on Thursday 14 May 2020: 428

https://coronavirus.data.gov.uk/

You have to use caution with the number of recorded figures this week. The week started with a public holiday. The custom with many people is to use the holiday day as part of annual holiday, thereby getting 9 days of holiday while using only 4 days of the annual entitlement (UK has 28 days paid annual leave by law)

donald penman
Reply to  JohnM
May 15, 2020 1:55 am

I don’t think, I am giving you the total all cause mortality rate for the UK you are giving me estimated COVID-19 deaths, when the total all cause mortality rate for the UK falls to the seasonal average then I would consider this scare over even though there might be a small amount of COVID-19 deaths still. The weekly all cause mortality rate has only been above the winter 1999-2000 all cause mortality rate in two recent weeks a difference of about plus 8000 deaths for the COVID-19 outbreak but the two periods are comparable for number of deaths weekly. We seem to have had fewer seasonal deaths from the flu in the last two decades perhaps because of milder winters recently which makes the effect of the COVID-19 outbreak seem higher.

JohnM
May 14, 2020 10:47 pm

“The spike in deaths comes as Republican Gov. Greg Abbott has been trying to re-open the state’s economy. Last week he allowed hair salons and barbershops to reopen and was planning to allow gyms to open next week. Before that he allowed restaurants, malls, retail stores and movie theaters to reopen at 25 percent of their maximum occupancy”

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/article/Texas-reported-58-coronavirus-deaths-today-a-15270877.php

Poems of Our Climate
Reply to  JohnM
May 15, 2020 3:13 pm

Oh, there it is, the scientific term, “spike”!

Bindidon
May 15, 2020 1:19 am

Hmmh.

I sent a comment 20 min before this one

https://wattsupwiththat.com/2020/05/13/attention-citizens-the-covid19-emergency-is-over/#comment-2994687

but it did not appear… Maybe it was considered as spam.

J.-P. D.

Bindidon
Reply to  Bindidon
May 15, 2020 2:02 am
Jack Black
Reply to  Bindidon
May 15, 2020 3:30 am

Hint/

Don’t be took eager in refreshing page or navigating away after posting some comment.

Must wait until whirling circle in tab changes to static …
WU
WT
logo, else comment can vanish into the ether, and even the Mods won’t see it.

That’s been my anecdotal experience anyway.

Bindidon
Reply to  Jack Black
May 15, 2020 8:01 am

Jack Black

” Don’t be took eager … ”

Since when must I have been eager just because you think I was?

” That’s been my anecdotal experience anyway. ”

Yes, and it will remain no more than that.

You seem to have major problems with your Internet connection – browser, box, provider…

I have no problems of that kind.

Yesterday I posted numerous comments at Roy Spencer’s site, and… NOT ONE was missing.

My experience, Mr Black, is that every time I missed a comment here on WUWT, one of the moderators managed to get it out of the spam area.

The comment I miss today is the very first one which did not appear within a few hours.
So: where is it?

In the sum, your comment was much less helpful than you probably imagined.

J.-P. D.

Jack Black
Reply to  Bindidon
May 15, 2020 9:25 am

“You seem to have major problems with your Internet connection…”

Since when must I have problems with my Internet connection, just because you think I have? I have no problems of that kind, rather the entire web is slowed markedly especially at busy remote destinations.

“So: where is it?”

I could probably guess, but I wouldn’t want to be unhelpful.

In the sum, your reply much less helpful than you probably imagined.

“You cannot be serious !” – J. McEnroe

😅

gbaikie
May 15, 2020 2:48 am

So, flatten the curve means, when lift lockdown/social distancing/measures taken to stop an exponential increasing number of cases {which could could overload medical service] when lift some of these measures to stop the exponential increase, it doesn’t start again with exponential growth. But doesn’t mean no more infection from the virus, you have a high level of new infection, but what don’t want is ever increase amount infection. Or lockdown, roughly speaking, does save you from eventually being infected- doesn’t lower chance of serious illness or death.
But a lockdown gives more time. And having more time, allows better treatments to be found- and in that sense save people from getting seriously ill or dying. And having more time has lots other benefits. With this china virus, the lockdown delayed it so it was no longer mostly occurring at same time as the “flu season”. Also getting closer to summer could other advantages, other not being at same time as flu season or it seems “summer like conditions” which are in the tropics- corresponds lower rate of spread and perhaps less severe effects.
So nearer to summer could act like lockdown type measure. Or as get nearer to summer, we can lift some lockdown measures for “free”, because warmer weather is slowing it down. Which also means, you should look at a longer weather forecast, when considering when considering to lifting some lockdown measure.
I think largely to do with Vitamin D levels, but also it appears virus doesn’t last as long in sunlight or warmer conditions. And perhaps the virus will mutate more- that might be good or bad