It's been clear for a while that the vast majority of the deaths are in the people aged 60 and above.
What I can't find is information on what percentage of people, by age, need the ICU.
Because it doesn't matter if the death rate of 30-year-olds is 0.01% - if that death rate assumes that 5% of them go to the ICU and then survive because of medical treatment. Because that means that overwhelming the health system massively multiplies the death rate.
Which seems to be what the models are assuming. But I can't actually find any stats on the percentages of people who need the ICU (by age) and thus would be in much greater danger.
Anyone point me towards something useful?
What I can't find is information on what percentage of people, by age, need the ICU.
Because it doesn't matter if the death rate of 30-year-olds is 0.01% - if that death rate assumes that 5% of them go to the ICU and then survive because of medical treatment. Because that means that overwhelming the health system massively multiplies the death rate.
Which seems to be what the models are assuming. But I can't actually find any stats on the percentages of people who need the ICU (by age) and thus would be in much greater danger.
Anyone point me towards something useful?
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 01:10 pm (UTC)https://www.statista.com/statistics/1105420/covid-icu-admission-rates-us-by-age-group/
Details are, unfortunately, paywalled. Will keep trying at my end as the day goes on.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 01:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 01:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 01:44 pm (UTC)Overwhelming the health system doesn't just mean running out of ventilators. It means running out of doctors and nurses to provide other kinds of care, and hospital beds for patients. S
Overwhelming the health care system includes running out of masks, gowns, etc. to protect hospital staff from getting sick--a nurse or doctor who is quarantined is a nurse or doctor who isn't there to take care of patients. It means EMTs not even trying to save patients who aren't breathing when the hospital gets there: the survival rate of people who needed CPR, defibrillators, and so on isn't great, but it's non-zero. Those deaths aren't counted as due to COVID-19, but the people are still dead. (Not trying to save those patients is where New York City was a week or so ago.)
Massachusetts is "in the surge," which among other things means that they're doing only the most urgent of surgery. How long can they postpone necessary surgery before those delays increase the death rate?
I might not have asked to be taken to the ER a dozen years ago, for what I found out afterwards had been a life-threatening gall bladder problem, if the system had been overloaded the way it is now. (I'd spent quite a while thinking "it's not a big deal, the pain comes and goes" before I realized that yes, it might be a big deal.)
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 02:09 pm (UTC)https://www.uptodate.com/contents/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19-epidemiology-virology-clinical-features-diagnosis-and-prevention#H162437075
https://www.uptodate.com/contents/coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19-epidemiology-virology-clinical-features-diagnosis-and-prevention/abstract/77
"As of March 16, a total of 4,226 COVID-19 cases in the United States had been reported to CDC, with multiple cases reported among older adults living in long-term care facilities (4). Overall, 31% of cases, 45% of hospitalizations, 53% of ICU admissions, and 80% of deaths associated with COVID-19 were among adults aged≥65 years with the highest percentage of severe outcomes among persons aged≥85 years. In contrast, no ICU admissions or deaths were reported among persons aged≤19 years. Similar to reports from other countries, this finding suggests that the risk for serious disease and death from COVID-19 is higher in older age groups."
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 02:20 pm (UTC)Alternatively...
Date: 2020-04-20 02:24 pm (UTC)https://covid19.who.int/
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 02:29 pm (UTC)"Health officials remained emphatic that severe cases are very rare in young people. In a weekly briefing, Director of Health, Jérôme Salomon, said that the 15 to 44-year age group represented only 8% of serious coronavirus cases admitted to hospital, and half of the cases exhibited pre-existing health conditions.[101] Up to 24 March, only 5 cases out of 507 certified deaths were in the 15–44 age group, and all had pre-existing health issues."
The way it works here is that you're not admitted to the hospital unless you have respiratory issues or other severe symptoms. If they are not acute and don't worsen you can be sent back home and have video consultations with a doctor.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 02:36 pm (UTC)Figure 1 shows the ICU requirement of the first hospitalised cohort in Wuhan,
by age.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 04:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 04:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 04:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 05:07 pm (UTC)I also expect to see eventual increase in deaths from other causes, e.g., due to people not getting treatment for illnesses other than COVID-19. But right now, at least in hotspots like NY, more people die from COVID-19 than from all other causes combined, so in the first approximation we can just concentrate on COVID-19. Especially since some of the increase in deaths will be offset by reduction of traffic fatalities and violent crime due to stay-at-home orders.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 06:58 pm (UTC)https://www.economist.com/graphic-detail/2020/04/13/deaths-from-cardiac-arrests-have-surged-in-new-york-city
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 07:07 pm (UTC)http://www.bccdc.ca/health-info/diseases-conditions/covid-19/data
When last measured (2019), population of BC was/is 5.071 million. We've also got 944735 square kilometers of space. Most of the population is in the Lower Mainland, which is roughly from Hope to the Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal. Comparatively tiny land amount.
I'm in the Interior Health region.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 09:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 10:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-20 11:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-21 12:37 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2020-04-21 01:34 am (UTC)Violent crime is not as clear. Domestic violence will go up, but robberies will go down (most happen in transitional spaces). Gang violence will also be down (fewer people on the street, as in cold weather). And surely there will be no school shootings. Overall I think we'll be better off, but won't know for sure for a while.
Unless some kind of civil unrest and mass looting begins, in which case all bets are off.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-21 01:47 am (UTC)I think under the stress of job loss, change in routines, children home from school, some people who previously were not overstressed or had enough outlets now express more violence.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-21 03:17 am (UTC)http://archive.is/rUYmq - New York Times article that links to several current studies on patients in China, New York and France
Also for comparison purposes https://www.moh.gov.sg/covid-19
That's the Singapore Ministry of Health COVID-19 page
Case summary at the tip, including total number of tests performed country-wide, number of deaths, number of people in critical condition.
It seems clear that the underlying health and demographics of the general population play a role too. The younger people in European countries (including the UK for this purpose) and the US who end up seriously ill from COVID-19 seem to have been mostly those with existing health conditions, including being obese. I believe the French Health Minsiter remarked on this in a press conference quite recently, with specific reference to the extraordinarily high rate of obesity in the US. So that would probably make a difference to the population that ends up in an ICU.
no subject
Date: 2020-04-25 12:36 am (UTC)