The free democratic nations are not China.
Italy has changed everything. What is happening in the rest of Europe is sobering.
Now modelling from Imperial college has caused a rapid change in policy for the UK.
My brother who was here just over two weeks ago was fairly unconcerned. He has just stepped down as chairman of the Kent County council, the UKs most populous county, but is still on the KCC.
Now he is very worried as he sees events start to unfold in the UK. He thinks the UK will soon be forced into lock down. It is close as I write this.
The choice is now pretty stark. Do we want a lot more deaths and a shorter period of disruption or do we want less deaths and longer severe disruption?
So the argument is now mitigation versus suppression.
So now the issue of herd immunity comes into play. Mitigation will get us though this may be in three to four months. Suppression will last until we have and effective vaccine. That likely means a year to eighteen months time frame. Roughly speaking the modelling shows that suppression will save about ten times more lives than mitigation.
As far as our plans. My wife had to go and have the stitches taken out of her foot today following her reconstruction two weeks ago. At this time we have decided on "house arrest" and will have food delivered from now on, and see how events unfold.
We have had few cases here in Minnesota and yet the state is pretty much shut down. The Mall of America decided to shut abruptly at 5:00 PM this evening, putting 1,100 people out of work.
My brother's worry, and I agree, that the economic damage will be severe but recoverable for mitigation, but lasting may be generations for suppression.
If you look at the graphs in the article, you can also see there is a set up for generational conflict. Having said that though the number of children and younger adults that will require ICU services is sobering. I have to make the point again, that mitigation will exhaust ICU services quickly. We will do better in the US not by the amount required. Once out of ICU capacity then those needing but not receiving ICU care will all go into the mortality side.
I don't know the best approach here, but I do know that politicians are highly adverse to high body count numbers.
I think governor Cuomo is correct that we have to consider the rapid building of large temporary hospitals. The Chinese did it, so they have proved this is possible. It was that action that really turned their mortality round and saved a lot of lives. This is not the case in Italy and Spain where there are gut wrenching scenes and the modelling shows why.
I just don't know if you can keep a whole nation under "house arrest" for 18 months. I doubt you can. Now China is loosening restrictions we will see if there is another exponential uptick in cases. So I suppose suppression is warranted at least until we have a definitive answer to that question.