In China 8% of over 70s who contracted the virus, and 15% of over 80s, have died. The number of confirmed cases in the UK currently stands at 2,626 - a jump of over 600 in 24hrs. Given the infection rate of the virus, the initial long asymptomatic period, and that people only started taking social isolation as a concept seriously on Monday after the Prime Ministers briefing, it's estimated that up to 80% of the population may have been exposed.Scot Dutchy wrote: ↑Wed Mar 18, 2020 4:22 pmThe last Dutch news:
171 coronapatiënten op de intensive care, ziekenhuizen 'stralen rust uit'
In a population of 17 million.Op dit moment liggen er 171 mensen met het coronavirus op intensivecareafdelingen in Nederland. Dat meldt de Nederlandse Vereniging voor Intensive Care (NVIC). Twee dagen geleden ging het nog om 96 mensen. Gisteren waren het er 135.![]()
According to the most recent government statistics from June last year there are 8,769,122 over 70s in the UK. If the Chinese mortality rate were to be reproduced in the UK then we'd expect over 700,000 over 70s to die from the contagion. Now, we aren't China, we have been forewarned about the virus and we have different health systems. Even so if the mortality rate in over 70s is, say, only 1% then we'd still expect 87,691 deaths. And of course, if the mortality rate is even lower, say, 0.5% then we're still looking c.44,000 over 70s deaths in that group alone.
So what's the UK mortality rate? If we plot the number of confirmed cases against the number of deaths attributed to the virus so far, 104, then we can guess that it stands just under 4%. Of course, the figures are skewed by the fact that only sick people have been tested so far - and if we apply that figure to the estimated 80% of the population who might have the virus then we're suddenly into frightening numbers of deaths. However, only a fraction of the people who contract the virus develop serious symptoms, and only a fraction of those will need hospital treatment, and only a fraction of those will die - but faced with the facts about the UK ageing demographic, the infection rate, and the mortality risk to older people relatively small percentages can still amount to a significant burden on the health system and a significant number of deaths, both due the virus itself and to the inability of other sick people to access acute and intensive treatments in an over-burdened health care system.
So my question to you is: what percentage of deaths due to the virus in the general population is acceptable and at what point would you stop considering it trivial?