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United States Medicine

US Surpasses 8 Million Coronavirus Cases (cnet.com) 431

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNET: America surpassed 8 million cases of the novel coronavirus on Friday, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. The grim milestone that puts the U.S. ahead of every other country in terms of total cases. Over 218,000 coronavirus deaths have been reported in the U.S. as well, again setting a record that represents about 20% of total deaths worldwide. COVID-19, the illness caused by the coronavirus, has rapidly spread across the globe, infecting nearly 40 million and killing over 1.1 million. Beside the U.S., India has the highest number of cases, at almost 7.4 million, while some countries like New Zealand have all but eliminated COVID-19 with the number of active infections now at zero.
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US Surpasses 8 Million Coronavirus Cases

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  • by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @11:46PM (#60617440) Homepage
    A 9/11 every 4 days. The 3rd leading cause of death. But it's nothing really.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @12:42AM (#60617518)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Huh, I guess it's just an impossible situation then, since no authority has the power to tell Walmart what to do.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @11:03AM (#60618634)

            So what are you suggesting? Close all stores including those selling food?

            No moron. How about we fucking enforce the mask mandate.

            If a civilian Wal-mart greeter can't manage to do their fucking job, fine. Replace them with Joe Sherriff.

            If Joe Sherriff can't manage to do his fucking job, fine. Replace him with the National Guard.

            You want to enter the store? Put your fucking mask on. And keep it on.

            No. This isn't hard. Amazing how we'll happily use the military to barely justify a two-decade long war, but we can't manage to figure out how to define "matter of national security" when it comes to a fucking pandemic affecting EVERY citizen in the nation?

            Either use your own tools, or become a fucking tool.

            • Masks are enforced here in Canada and we still have surges in cases. Masks do nothing to reduce the number of cases. People think they do, but their effect, if any, is negligible...
              • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @01:19PM (#60619074)

                Masks are enforced here in Canada and we still have surges in cases. Masks do nothing to reduce the number of cases. People think they do, but their effect, if any, is negligible...

                Military grade gas masks for every deadly cocktail we've ever encountered or engineered on the battlefield, but a deadly novel coronavirus? Yeah, just tie an old t-shirt around your face and write a cute saying on it. Good enough.

                Go figure they're basically worthless, because that is not protection.

      • by mark-t ( 151149 )

        The reason it is still spreading like wildfire is because people who do not know that they have it are spreading it everywhere they go.

        Lockdowns *COULD* change that, but the restrictions (nation-wide curfews, heavy fines for being outside of your home for absolutely *ANY* non-essential purpose, etc) would not be feasible in a country like the USA. Such measures would need to be in place for 6 to 8 weeks and the virus would be all but completely gone.

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @02:06AM (#60617670) Homepage Journal

          Actually, it would take only about two weeks of a truly 100% shutdown to eliminate the virus. Yes, there might be very rare occasions where the incubation period is longer than two weeks, but it is extremely rare.

          That said, you really don't have to do something nearly that drastic. You'd have similar results with this approach:

          • Require that any worker in any business who gets sick for any reason be tested within 24 hours.
          • Require that those tests be given priority over all other tests, with results available within 24 hours.
          • Immediately close down any business if any of their employees get a positive test. Require all employees of that business to remain quarantined in their homes for two full weeks before allowing that business to reopen. Provide them with food deliveries, etc. For certain critical businesses (UPS/FedEx/Amazon depots, grocery stores, etc.), you might allow them to quarantine only employees who shared a shift with the sick employee within the previous two weeks.
          • Close all non-retail businesses unless the employees can work from home.
          • Close all retail business to foot traffic; allow delivery and outdoor pickup only.
          • Close all restaurants to foot traffic; allow delivery and outdoor pickup only.
          • Close all other shared facilities, whether indoor or outdoor.
          • Close all public transit systems.
          • Close all private ride sharing and taxi services (except when delivering goods, rather than people).
          • Close all schools.
          • Ban all gatherings, whether indoor or outdoor.
          • Announce that if an outbreak is determined to have started from any unauthorized gathering, the person who organized the gathering will automatically be charged with second-degree murder.
          • Require masks while within 20 feet of anyone from outside of your household, with fines starting at $200, and doubling for each repeat occurrence, and a one-year prison term on the third strike.

          And you're done. Those rules will reduce the likelihood of spreading the virus to almost zero, all without necessitating curfews or fines for being outside your home for purposes that are not particularly risky (e.g. jogging on a walking trail). And most economic activity could still continue, albeit in a modified form.

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by nonBORG ( 5254161 )
            Are you sure, in NZ they locked down for months level 4 most extreme I think 8 weeks or more. Now you think it is two weeks. By the way they had almost zero cases when they started. How long has California been locked down, and NY. Did you see the latest guidance from WHO on lockdowns. You need to have some lockdown data before claiming you can solve it with 2 weeks, or do you not believe in science and data?
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @08:39PM (#60620304)

        Stupid is the reason lockdowns are necessary. If people were not stupid they'd avoid unnecessary contact and use appropriate precautions for a few weeks, then there'd be no problem.

    • The 3rd leading cause of death.

      Citation needed.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by thegreatbob ( 693104 )
        Various resources list heart disease at around 650k yearly deaths in the US, and cancer at around 600k. Haven't found any lists (in the two minutes I spent looking) that have a third entry with a value over much over 200k (chronic lower respiratory diseases and accidents seem to be jockeying for third).
        • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @06:10AM (#60618086)

          Various resources list heart disease at around 650k yearly deaths in the US, and cancer at around 600k. Haven't found any lists (in the two minutes I spent looking) that have a third entry with a value over much over 200k (chronic lower respiratory diseases and accidents seem to be jockeying for third).

          Let us know when heart disease and cancer become infectious. Then we can talk.

          Although oddly, both are highly preventable if people take the proper measures. Sound familiar?

      • by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @05:16AM (#60617988)
        here's a 3 year old list for you. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/fasta... [cdc.gov] It should put Covid comfortably in 3rd place by a 40 or 50k.
      • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @08:40AM (#60618284)

        I looked it up just now on the CDC. It takes a couple years to finalize these tables. But here is the 2017 breakdown for top 3.

        Heart disease: 647,457
        Cancer: 599,108
        Accidents (unintentional injuries): 169,936

        So assuming these numbers stay roughly the same, I would accept 3rd leading cause of death in the US.

  • I'm not saying that a public hanging of everyone in the current administration would help stop further deaths... but it WOULD help!

    I mean, do we REALLY need to hit Saddam Hussein's numbers [wikipedia.org] before hangings start?
    After all, late November is NOT that far off. Why wait? Get some steel cables and start utilizing them poles.

  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Friday October 16, 2020 @11:53PM (#60617450)

    The thing is, the number will go up until SARS-COV-2 is gone. It won't go down either, because math.

    Treating the number as something ominous is basically stupidity and fear-mongering.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      Yes, we should be quoting "active cases", which has increased to a scary 2.7 million in the US now, 30% of known cases worlwide from 4% of the world population.
      Bad, France is even worse per-capita with 700k active case and 20% the population of the US.
      So, uh, yay USA, I guess :-(

      • silly to compare numbers at a point in time when pandemic isn't over. it will surge back in many places as seasons change.

  • Case-fatality Rate (Score:4, Informative)

    by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Friday October 16, 2020 @11:59PM (#60617462) Homepage Journal

    Over 218,000 coronavirus deaths have been reported in the U.S. as well

    218K dead out of 8 million infected translates into case-fatality rate of 2.7% — lower than even Germany's 2.76%, and much lower than in Mexico (10.18%), Italy (9.30%), UK (6.30%), or Canada (5.01%) — the countries, whose "free" healthcare is often lauded as superior to America's "for profit" abomination. (All numbers are from WorldOMeter, fetched today).

    again setting a record that represents about 20% of total deaths worldwide.

    Only if you continue trusting China's openness and India's competence :-)

    • by adfraggs ( 4718383 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @12:12AM (#60617472)

      Universal health is better in terms of equity of distribution, not quality of treatment. Americans will often argue that the quality of care in the US is better, and that's fair because it costs a hell of a lot more.

      I'm also guessing you don't work with statistics much because there are a bunch of other factors at play here, not least of all the sample size and the distribution of deaths over time.

      • That's a fair assessment. Let's take a look at that. Here are the percentages again for reference:

        US 2.7%
        Germany 2.76%
        Italy 9.30%
        UK 6.30%
        Canada 5.01%

        As you acknowledged, the US rate is 2-3X better than the countries with government medical care.

        Most people in the US are middle income, so we know the death rate for middle class people is around the 2.7% number, half the rate of Canada. It might be reasonable to estimate that upper income people could have a rate half that, or 1.4% and lower income double

        • Given the shit that has gone on with the CDC and the Trump government, I trust US official figures about as much as I trust Chinas.

          And I also trust the treatment that I get from the NHS (when I lived in the UK) better that I trust any US hospital.

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          No it keeps more people alive with chronic conditions. Have a stroke, heart attack or even need insulin and in a country with good healthcare, you have a lot more vulnerable people who in a country without universal healthcare would already be dead.

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by raymorris ( 2726007 )

            That would be a reasonable belief. Until you see the numbers, of course.

            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              Most deaths have been in old age homes, at least in parts of Canada. There was also a big problem in the 2 largest Provinces with underpaid workers running away from the worst hit places in Ontario and especially Quebec, where the army had to be called in to care for people, with those 2 Provinces having most of the deaths.
              Canada is a federation and each Province is different when it comes to all this stuff.

        • by alexo ( 9335 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @03:21AM (#60617762) Journal

          That's a fair assessment. Let's take a look at that. Here are the percentages again for reference:

          US 2.7%

          674 deaths per 1M pop

          Germany 2.76%

          117 deaths per 1M pop

          Italy 9.30%

          603 deaths per 1M pop

          UK 6.30%

          639 deaths per 1M pop

          Canada 5.01%

          257 deaths per 1M pop

          Source: https://www.worldometers.info/... [worldometers.info]

      • Americans will often argue that the quality of care in the US is better, and that's fair because it costs a hell of a lot more.
        It is only better in special clinics, which have specialized into something. A broken leg e.g. is just the same as everywhere on the planet and there is no real difference if you have Tuberculosis a or a cancer that can be treated with chemo.
        It is no longer 1970 - basically every country has top notch hospitals. And for your surprise: the best health care in quality - not only price

    • by dryeo ( 100693 )

      It's the disadvantage of having good healthcare, you end up with a lot more people with chronic conditions. You keep people alive after strokes and heart attacks and they're more likely to die in a pandemic.
      Other countries just let people die ahead of having a pandemic so with fewer elders, there's less to die.
      The other problem is the US has learned well how to fudge data and is about as trustworthy as China, with a leadership actually pushing to fuck with the numbers so the leader doesn't look bad.

    • Yup, good math, and yet you are modded down.

      People just do not think. Trump is not related to the spread of CODID-19.

    • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @03:14AM (#60617754)
      You're comparing imaginary numbers. Germany is at 2% excess mortality while USA is at 12% so clearly they are kicking your ass.
  • More like 80 million in the worst case. Still puts the death rate at 0.2% which is double the seasonal flu and with a much greater power to infect.

    • Twice as bad as the flu and 2-3 times as contagious is not a valid reason to compound illness and death among the older members of society with mass unemployment among younger adults and under education among the children.
    • The average death rate to COVID19 is worldwide 3.7% - not 0.2%.
      It is 30 - 40 times higher than a Flu.

      What you think why most countries are on a "semi" lock down?

  • Still not enough PPE (Score:4, Informative)

    by Ly4 ( 2353328 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @12:17AM (#60617484)

    We're some eight months into this thing, and we still do not have enough protective masks for health care workers:

    https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

  • Wooo (Score:3, Insightful)

    by sizzlinkitty ( 1199479 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @12:41AM (#60617514)

    WOOHOOO America #1

  • Make America (corona cases) great again!
  • There are only two countries with more people than the USA, India and China, so, DUH, we have more cases than UK, Germany, and everyone else.

    I lack the knowledge about India to comment on COVID-19 reporting there. China, well Hubei had to build two new hospitals in Wuhan with a total of ~1,800 beds to handle the problem, and China closed travel between provinces to halt the spread. From that and other reporting on BBC, the problem was very likely much larger than officially reported.

    Do the math, R factor

    • The United States has more cases than the whole European Union, which has a comparable population. More deaths, too.

      Coincidence, no doubt.

  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Saturday October 17, 2020 @10:55AM (#60618616) Homepage Journal

    The US has about 350 million people living within its borders, each of those 350 million decided how they would act/react to the current situation, sort of like the "pick your path" fiction that was briefly popular in the early 80s.

    Don't want to hold individuals responsible? Fine, there are 50 governors that each decided how their states would react to the situation. For example, it was governors that ordered civic-infected patients back into nursing homes that couldn't isolate them, it was governors that cherry-picked who, what and when to shut things down based on whims, not science, and so on.

    Don't want to hold the governors responsible? Fine, let's talk about the leaders of the medical community - The Scientists, the ones we're told we need to slavishly follow, because, well, SCIENCE - they told us not to wear masks (because doctors needed the masks), they told us there was no airborne transmission of the virus, and they failed to produce a correct test in a timely manner, delaying testing for far too long.

    Don't want to blame the medical community? Fine, I guess that leaves the President - he failed to take early action (except travel ban in January), downplayed the threat (except for the creation of the task force which went on TV almost daily with political and scientific leaders answering questions for months), and failed to replenish pandemic PPE stock piles after taking office (did anyone in the scientific or medical community ever raise the issue to the administration before the pandemic, or is POTUS omnipotent and supposed to personally monitor national stockpiles?), failed to treat the situation seriously (except for the war production powers act, ramping us up to a million tests a DAY in record time, and project whatever-they-call-it that has promising vaccine being produced in massive quantities while PARALLEL clinical trials phases are testing efficacy, dosing, and side-effects at the same time turning multi-year vaccine development into a one year process, and partnering with Pharma and the military (logistical experts) to manage deployment of safe, effective vaccines as soon as possible). Oh, and the administration did pass what, $3.5 Trillion in aid for almost every American, a number that approaches our annual national budget in normal times.

    Also, the summary on /. conflates "cases" with "active cases" and "deaths" - please stick with one metric, don't compare apples to oranges and bananas.

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