You claim to be so accomplished and experienced but you write this drivel. You claim to work in the pandemic field but can't answer anything from my original post. We know what pile you go in.
I'm not even going to respond further to someone who twists what I say and then play the race card.
Go plot your curves. We know you won't think critically or dive deeper into the numbers.
I didn't claim any accomplishments, I listed my experiences. I said I am currently working on pandemic planning, not that it is my job normally. This is my third round of having to support pandemic planning. H1N1 in 2009, Ebola in 2014 and this. The first two were helping ensure facilities were ready to support the needs of our medical providers technically. This round is helping ensure our operations team can maintain operations during this time technically. If you want to read more into it, go for it.
You keep using your racist overtones and jokes about the virus, the only reason that is done is to be a racist A-Hole. You probably think the "Spanish Flu" originated in Spain, so we're being "historically correct". Many historians actually believe the 1918 pandemic originated in the US, France, UK or China. Nobody will ever know, it doesn't matter. Using the terms people are throwing around is simply because they feel the Chinese are responsible or lesser. It's BS, flat out racism.
You have been claiming that "60-70% of Italy's deaths are are due to a high chinese population who had been traveling to and from China at the beginning of all of this". There is 0 proof to that, link the source or stop spewing your racist BS.
https://bit.ly/2J7xZU4
Here is one source of numbers. The day we hit the button compared to the day Italy hit the button we had more infections despite less widespread testing over a larger spread area. The US has less hospital beds per capita than Italy, US hospitals in the Seattle region are already running low on supplies. If we are lucky, this will look like a typical flu season, if we do nothing then it looks probably much worse than the 1918 pandemic.
Here was the first article, his projections have held pretty true from 11 days ago.
https://bit.ly/3dhoTSB
Here's the Imperial research report that appears to have woken global leaders up to what can happen worldwide.
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/196234/covid19-imperial-researchers-model-likely-impact/
Vanderbilt Medical Center built a unit inside a parking garage to prep for a surge of patients, China built hospitals, the US is shipping floating hospitals to NYC. Why? Because they can follow the math, and they need to be prepared.
Italy released that there are another 637 died today and they had like 6500 more cases. Hopefully their measures keep numbers from continuing to grow exponentially.
Ignoring Italy...here are US numbers from the CDC 5 days ago.
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6912e2.htm
As of March 16, a total of 4,226 COVID-19 cases had been reported in the United States, with reports increasing to 500 or more cases per day beginning March 14 (
Figure 1). Among 2,449 patients with known age, 6% were aged ≥85, 25% were aged 65–84 years, 18% each were aged 55–64 years and 45–54 years, and 29% were aged 20–44 years (
Figure 2). Only 5% of cases occurred in persons aged 0–19 years.
Among 508 (12%) patients known to have been hospitalized, 9% were aged ≥85 years, 36% were aged 65–84 years, 17% were aged 55–64 years, 18% were 45–54 years, and
20% were aged 20–44 years. Less than 1% of hospitalizations were among persons aged ≤19 years (Figure 2). The percentage of persons hospitalized increased with age, from 2%–3% among persons aged ≤19 years, to ≥31% among adults aged ≥85 years. (
Table).
Among 121 patients known to have been admitted to an ICU, 7% of cases were reported among adults ≥85 years, 46% among adults aged 65–84 years, 36% among adults aged 45–64 years, and 12% among adults aged 20–44 years (Figure 2). No ICU admissions were reported among persons aged ≤19 years. Percentages of ICU admissions were lowest among adults aged 20–44 years (2%–4%) and highest among adults aged 75–84 years (11%–31%) (Table).
Among 44 cases with known outcome, 15 (34%) deaths were reported among adults aged ≥85 years, 20 (46%) among adults aged 65–84 years, and nine
(20%) among adults aged 20–64 years. Case-fatality percentages increased with increasing age, from no deaths reported among persons aged ≤19 years to highest percentages (10%–27%) among adults aged ≥85 years (Table) (Figure 2).
Now these numbers are early, hopefully they get better, but 55% of hospitalizations were 20-64 and 20% of deaths were 20-64. If we outstrip the medical capacity (ICU beds, vents, healthcare workers, PPE) then our death totals will trend towards Italy.