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America and France Reach New All-Time Highs For COVID-19 Infections (time.com) 402

An anonymous reader quotes Time: The United States has reached a new record high in the number of daily COVID-19 infections, surpassing the peak in mid-July during the second wave of the coronavirus pandemic's domestic toll. As of Oct. 24, there was a weekly average of 23.0 infections per 100,000 residents, up from 20.5 on July 19 and ticking rapidly upward. The country also set a new single-day record on Oct. 23 with 83,757 new cases.

There have been clear signs for weeks of a third wave of the pandemic in the U.S. as the weather gets colder and the virus has migrated from metropolitan regions to more rural settings. But it was far from certain, at the beginning of October, that the resurgence would surpass that of the summer...

We know now that the third wave will be worse than the second, which was far worse than the first, when cases peaked at 9.7 per 100,000 on April 7.

Reuters reports that France has also "registered a record 52,010 new confirmed coronavirus infections over the past 24 hours, following a record 45,422 on Saturday, the health ministry said in a statement on Sunday... The new cases took the total to 1,138,507, with France now ahead of Argentina and Spain to register the world's fifth highest number of cases after the United States, India, Brazil and Russia.

"In the past three days, France has registered over 139,000 new cases, which is more than the 132,000 cases registered during the two-month lockdown from mid-March to mid-May."
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America and France Reach New All-Time Highs For COVID-19 Infections

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  • by cygnusvis ( 6168614 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:39PM (#60648254)
    What about deaths?
    • Re:Infections? (Score:4, Informative)

      by dunkelfalke ( 91624 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:43PM (#60648264)

      10 times more deaths than in summer in France, back to September numbers in the USA.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        Well they could have https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com] check the date and nothing since. They all choose not to do anything what so ever about it, no profit in it versus a new vaccine they could sell for BILLIONS. They did not just die, they were wilfully left to die by blocking what all statistics to date indicate would have reduced the death toll by a factor of ten but greed must be served first. MASS MURDER

        • BCG looked potentially interesting around the same time that HCQ looked particularly interesting. Which is why the did the studies that your own video link says they were starting, back in February.

          It would have been great if HCQ or BCG had worked.
          Unfortunately, not everything that looks like it's worth checking out actually ends up working.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by grasshoppa ( 657393 )

      Or hospitalizations?

      A lot has changed since March, or even July. Infections doesn't quite mean what it did, and it was always ever a barometer for the important metric; healthcare resource utilization. What's the utilization rate to infections? That's what we should be looking at.

      • Re:Infections? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Camel Pilot ( 78781 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:52PM (#60648288) Homepage Journal

        Watch the serious/critical column at

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

        Over the summer this has steadily declined to around 14000 and in past weeks has shot up to 16300. These will lead to an increase in the death rate. Already the death / million in the US tops almost every industrial nation and we are increasing.

        With the Whitehouse admitting that ‘We’re not going to control the pandemic’ hang on.

        • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

          by Train0987 ( 1059246 )

          Around 8,000 people died every day in the US on average pre-Covid. What's missing are the estimates of deaths caused by the economic collapse caused by the shutdowns. Suicides, etc.

          • What's missing are the estimates of deaths caused by the economic collapse caused by the shutdowns. Suicides, etc.

            You should really look up those numbers before commenting next time. They aren't substantial.

          • Re:Infections? (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Mr. Barky ( 152560 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @05:33AM (#60649296)

            Are you suggesting that a 10% increase in the overall death rate (COVID-19 is killing about 700-800 / day in the US right now) is to be minimized? This is a non-trivial increase in the death rate. And it could easily get a lot larger without restrictions.

            There is likely a non-zero increase in deaths due to economic problems, but realize that the economic problems (and the stress that goes with it) would happen regardless of any political decisions. When deaths increase around you, you tend to get afraid and try to avoid that cause (see Iowa right now... they have minimal restrictions but people are going to bars and restaurants a lot less than they did before).

        • These will lead to an increase in the death rate.

          Perhaps the serious case count will. I've been watching the total confirmed case count and don't see a strong a correlation between that and confirmed deaths. I can think of a few reasons that might be so: testing more people with less severe or no symptoms, infections spreading to younger people, better treatments. I trust the real scientists are doing more than eyeballing a few charts.

          What I also don't see is a correlation between containment policies and per-capita death rates. That's the trillion dollar

      • Hospitals are at full capacity in El Paso Texas https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

      • Re:Infections? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Seclusion ( 411646 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @11:38PM (#60648558)

        There's two pages I check periodically.
        https://covidtracking.com/data [covidtracking.com]
        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:2019%E2%80%9320_coronavirus_pandemic_data/United_States_medical_cases [wikipedia.org]
        Unlike new cases, hospitalization rates are the best indicator IMO and the current trend is troubling.

        • by kbahey ( 102895 )

          Unlike new cases, hospitalization rates are the best indicator IMO and the current trend is troubling.

          All the indicators are important for getting the full picture.
          - Number of daily cases is useful to compare to the previous waves, and to compare with other jurisdictions that are similar demographically.
          - Percentage of tests that return positive gives you an idea of the real spread. The WHO guidelines say it is a red flag if more than 5% for a country, and 2.5% in a metro area. Here in Ontario, Canada we ar

    • Re:Infections? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:57PM (#60648306)
      well you will have to wait a few weeks to see the effect on the death rate. hopefully it is at least partially mitigated by better treatment but would still expect it to rise.
      • Better treatment? Oh yes, they can just airlift everybody to Walter Reed for experimental drugs.
        • Better treatment? Oh yes, they can just airlift everybody to Walter Reed for experimental drugs.

          If the experimental drugs are known to be better, then why are they still experimental?

          If they are not known to be better, then you should thank Trump for bravely volunteering to be a guinea pig.

          • If the experimental drugs are known to be better, then why are they still experimental?

            Maybe they haven't found a method to produce them in mass quantities and cheap enough for the masses yet. Or maybe the lengthy and complex approval process hasn't finished yet. Of course, such considerations don't apply/are waived for some patients.

          • Risk to give it to 50 random people with 1 doctor checking in on all of them a bit. Is quite different to the risk for 20 doctors constantly monitoring 1 patient.
          • Re:Infections? (Score:4, Interesting)

            by sjames ( 1099 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @02:19PM (#60651080) Homepage Journal

            It takes a while to ramp up production for something like that. Also regulatory hassles with bureaucrats moving at glacial speed.

            The experimental treatment really shouldn't be that controversial, it's basically 2 antibodies against covid. It's a refinement on convalescent plasma (which contains a bunch of antibodies to a bunch of things and many other things that might potentially cause a reaction).

            The only real controversy is that President Orange of the Primrose Path gets this scarce treatment at the first sign of COVID while telling the rest of up it's just the sniffles and we should just tough it out.

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by blindseer ( 891256 )

          Better treatment? Oh yes, they can just airlift everybody to Walter Reed for experimental drugs.

          What experimental drugs? You mean convalescent plasma? We don't even know if they work. And 99%+ of people recover without it.

          It turns out that the best treatments for COVID-19 infections are zinc, vitamin D, steroids, antibiotics, Tylenol, bed rest, and a bowl of chicken noodle soup. All of this is available for pennies at any drug store, except maybe the chicken noodle soup. Severe cases might get ventilation, and/or Remdesivir or some other antiviral. Ventilation is readily available to anyone that

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            And 99%+ of people recover without it.

            99%+ of people infected with COVID-19 recover.

            "Recover" meaning "didn't die", correct? Last I heard, we still don't know for sure the frequency/duration of long term health effects from contracting the virus.

      • Re:Infections? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @01:50AM (#60648834) Homepage Journal

        No doubt the death rate will be mitigated by care improvements, but it might take longer than you think to see any changes in death rates. It's not just that the median time from first symptoms to death (among patients who are going to die) is 14 days; once a person dies the death reporting system in the US is slower event han that.

        The system is simply not designed to track a fast moving epidemic in real time. It's more geared towards comparing how we did on, say, coronary artery disease last year vs. the year before. When someone dies, there's no telling when he'll show up on national tracking data. It could be two weeks, in some case it might be as long as two months. The only reason it's not a lot faster is it has never been a priority. In retrospect it probably should have been. For an epidemic you want a real time reporting system -- that is to say one that returns data with a guaranteed maximum latency.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by Maxo-Texas ( 864189 )

          That seems low.

          What I've seen has been 21 days after onset of symptoms for average resolution as death or recovery. With today's testing, that means 24 days in many cases. Anyone pre-symptomatic tested as a result of contact tracing is an average of 26 days away from case resolution.

          Likewise, the median time for symptoms is 5 days but it ranges from 2 days to 14 days (with another 1% under 2 days and and 1% between 14 to 28 days).

          South Dakota is now having a massive outbreak from events that occurred roug

    • by ZipK ( 1051658 )

      What about deaths?

      What about long-haul symptoms [washingtonpost.com]?

    • Re:Infections? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @01:17AM (#60648754) Homepage Journal

      Over the entire course of the epidemic, the US has reported 695 deaths per million residents; France 532/1M. These are *direct* COVID-19 deaths, not "excess deaths" which of course there's more of.

      Again over the entire course of the pandemic, the US death rate has been 2.6% and France's about 3.0%. This difference probably doesn't tell us much about the response in each country, because the demographics are different. France has an older population than the US; over 20% of the French are senior citizens; the figure for the US is 16%.

      I'm also stipulating "over the entire course" because as time goes down the case fatality rate also goes down.

      Both countries are experiencing a wave of new infections. This is a second wave for France, after a small first wave and several months with very few new infections. The second wave is considerably worse. In the US we're heading toward a third peak, probably also likely to be the worst so far. To compare we're reporting about 80,000 new cases per day, which amounts to 24 cases per 100,000 inhabitants. France just reported 50,000 cases the other day, which given its smaller size works out to be almost 80 cases/100k inhabitants.

      We should be careful about 1 day counts, however it's clear that the new infection rate is much higher in France than the US, and is growing at an exponential rate -- there is potential for a catastrophic situation if they do not reverse that trend. The case rate in the US is growing at more like a linear rate -- not good, but it means we may have a little more time to deal with it.

      Overall there were very few COVID deaths in France between June and September, but since October it has been trending upward, which makes sense; deaths are a trailing indicator. We should expect the death rate to continue to rise even if France manages to flatten its new case curve. US deaths have been increasing pretty much linearly since May, bending slightly down in mid-June. It is important to note that not only do actual deaths trail covid infections, *reports of deaths* can trail deaths by weeks. This is particularly true in the US, where every state has its own reporting system and many of those systems are slow. It can take well over a month for a death to be reflected in US national figures.

  • November 4th (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymouse Cowtard ( 6211666 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:47PM (#60648278) Homepage
    It's just gonna go away, you'll see. No plan for how. As well as just disappearing there will be a vaccine in a few weeks. We were first told this months ago but hang in there and don't die of the third leading cause of death in the meantime. It's just like a bad flu.
  • I thought we were still waiting for it. :(

  • What's the plan? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @09:55PM (#60648302)
    C'mon man.
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 )

      Political finger-pointing. Trying to exploit tragedy for political gain. Isn't that always the plan?

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @11:09PM (#60648492)

      There wont be any plan, at least not till after the election is over. We tried lock-downs once, and the infection rate is even higher now than it was then. So why aren't we locking down again? Politics, that's why. None of the people who want to be leaders want to make the hard decisions that come with the post, because people don't like "hard decisions" and take it out on the person who made them, and all these politicians are looking out for their own asses before they worry about anyone else.

      • by Mitreya ( 579078 )

        There wont be any plan, at least not till after the election is over. We tried lock-downs once, and the infection rate is even higher now than it was then.

        Gaaah, we could at least do the masks and the testing.
        It may not be perfect, but there is consensus that it would help. The current plan seems to be make fun of the people in masks (particularly if they are large masks).

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by mvdwege ( 243851 )

          See that word there? 'Primary'? That has a meaning, you know. Try to think for once, instead of parotting your right-wing echo chamber.

      • Re:What's the plan? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Tom ( 822 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @02:32AM (#60648946) Homepage Journal

        We tried lock-downs once, and the infection rate is even higher now than it was then. So why aren't we locking down again? Politics, that's why.

        This. I'm in Europe, looking at infections numbers three times as high as the worst day in spring. Death numbers are climbing upwards and we know that they lag behind, so they'll hit new records in the next days.

        And still, politicians are now betting the house on the one thing that anyone with three working brain cells knows doesn't work: People following unclear rules voluntarily in an environment of high uncertainty.

        Hello? Morons? We have decades of research into how humans actually behave. We know about risk-seeking and risk-avoidance. We know about intuitive evaluation of risk and why it's utterly wrong in any situation that's not hunter-gatherer daily life. System one, system two, the psychology of the masses... I mean, you don't have to guess that people will NOT be following suggestions from a ruling class the vast majority sees as corrupt, incompetent or both, that has one of the lowest reputations among all professions, barely above prostitutes.

        Politics. That's it. They over-reacted the first time and it actually worked. It might have been a bit too much and the economy suffered, but it saved thousands of lives. But this time, the lobbyists had time to play the crying game and tell them how all those beautiful companies will go out of business and all those billionaires well you can't expect them to save the companies they own with the money they've squared away, can you?

        The fuckers that run our countries are not going to save us. They're quite ready to sacrifice us by the thousands to keep a fictional system of economics running that has optimised itsellf so aggressively that it can't handle a crisis not of its own making.

        And that's why people flee to those conspiracy theories and anti-Corona nonsense you see flying around. They don't like the rational answer: We're fucked and there's nothing you can do. Hold on tight, secure yourself and your loved ones as good as you can, accept that that's still not very good, and hope for the storm to pass. That's a sad thing to say when you thought you're living in a 1st world country, and most people aren't ready to admit it.

    • Stop testing (Score:5, Insightful)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @11:20PM (#60648508)

      Duh you stop testing and stop reporting numbers to the CDC. Meanwhile Mike Pence's aids and staff have tested positive and he refuses to quarantine. https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/24... [cnn.com]

  • Canada too ... (Score:5, Informative)

    by kbahey ( 102895 ) on Sunday October 25, 2020 @10:41PM (#60648420) Homepage

    This is the second wave in most of Canada, and the trend is the same: record number of infections.

    Ontario, the most populous province with 14.5M people, recorded 1,042 cases today. During the first wave, the peak was 550-600 cases.

    Fortunately, the rate of deaths is still low, unlike the first wave. But with hospitalizations increasing, and the virus starting to creep into retirement homes, I fear a repeat of the first wave, where ~ 70% of deaths were in these settings.

    And we still have a long winter ahead of us ...

    • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

      There are reportedly several strains, with some being considerably less dangerous... It makes sense that the less dangerous strains are more likely to spread given they're less likely to kill or incapacitate the host.

      • There are no reports about different strains.
        Unless you mean the "common cold" - which is caused by a different corona virus strain.

  • And now for a musical interlude:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • I'm in Canada, and it's my understanding that we've recently been put on the same list as the USA for a lot of countries with regards to allowing travel.

    This is not, contrary to what a certain well known person said back in February, simply going to "disappear".

    Yes, it will eventually go away... but I do not think it will simply vanish... more like it will eventually be less and less of a serious problem as we get better at treating the illness and hopefully even one day preventing it. I do not think

  • by nextTimeIsTheLast ( 6188328 ) on Monday October 26, 2020 @01:30AM (#60648794)

    I live in France and the one factor in the difference between now and the spring time is the rate of testing.

    There are literally queues going down the street outside every blood test center (and there are blood test centers in every high street in France) now. That was not the case in the spring. They must be testing at least 10x as many people now, and most of them will be displaying no symptoms (i.e. test and trace driven) compared to the spring when the testing was limited to hospital patients.

  • The numbers will always go up. Every month will bring a new high. That's what happens when you add numbers.

    Jesus H Christ.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday October 26, 2020 @02:16AM (#60648910)
    You stupid FUCKS, put on your goddamned masks, stop going to bars and other stupid shit, and stop spreading the goddamned motherfucking virus already, we all want shit to GET BACK TO NORMAL!
    Fucking HELL how hard is this shit for you morons to understand!?
  • Time breathlessly cries The United States has reached a new record high in the number of daily COVID-19 infections, surpassing [a shopping list of previous "peaks" and "highs"] and goes on to hype about still higher "peaks" being expected in the future. As if this were news, or the current period were somehow special.

    Oh, we so scared!

    What part of an exponential function don't they understand? (Or what part do they think their readers don't understand?)

    So far less than 2.7% of the population has caught the bug. The "epidemiological curve" is essentially indistinguishable from an exponential until it the have-been-infected count reaches about 10% and it BEGINS to ease off.

    With an exponential curve, EVERY day is worse than the day before. And every day gets MORE worse as time goes on. Record now, bigger record tomorrow, more-bigger record the day after, yadda, yadda, yadda... This continues until enough of the population is immune - either from having already had the disease or due to a successfull immunization - that a substantial fraction of those currently being exposed are no longer vulnerable.

    You want to see what REALLY was happening? Check out the first graph in the worldometers' US coronavirus stats [worldometers.info].

"When the going gets tough, the tough get empirical." -- Jon Carroll

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