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Mar 24, 2020
11:01
:41
am
bluesloth
Truly Addicted User
This. Who and when you test has a huge impact. If you wait until
people have serious complications before you test them, you are going to have a high mortality rate.
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bluesloth
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bluesloth
Joined
Nov 19, 2005
Last login
Jun 10, 2024
Total posts
15,705 (10 FO)
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Messages
Author
Time
Trying to make sense of some of the WHO numbers from Spain and US
slappy
All-American
3/24/20 10:48am
That's one of the reasons the data is crap: there is no uniformity in reporting
Indy Coug
3/24/20 10:51am
Reporting isn't consistent, testing isn't consistent, treatment isn't consistent
wabluecoug
3/24/20 10:51am
Because we have done little testing, many people dying from CV currently
Uncle Bluto
3/24/20 10:52am
If true, you'd expect the flu numbers to be higher than average. They aren't.
gwalker
3/24/20 11:48am
Tracking higher than last year slightly but they are independent. It may be
Uncle Bluto
3/24/20 12:03pm
The WHO numbers are basically a load of crap at this point. I
kotacoug
3/24/20 10:54am
Yet they are exponential. So there might be some evening out of the errors.
Blue Ghost
3/24/20 11:01am
Less testing in Spain and they are further along on their curve.
BYUCLA
3/24/20 10:54am
This. Who and when you test has a huge impact. If you wait until
bluesloth
3/24/20 11:01am
The WHo
idcougarfan
3/24/20 10:57am
Does Spain have a mutated form of the virus?
BW84
3/24/20 11:47am
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