Agree. At the very least, the next "spike" will be a small one in terms of cases and even smaller in terms of deaths assuming the vaccines are effective in the older age groups. There's no reason to believe otherwise at this point.Have to believe this will be the last spike. With vaccine available plus the shear numbers of people that have already got it, figure it starts to go down by 3rd week in Jan. Hoping.
The Christmas/New Years surge will come in a couple weeks. It will get much worse before it gets any better.Agree. At the very least, the next "spike" will be a small one in terms of cases and even smaller in terms of deaths assuming the vaccines are effective in the older age groups. There's no reason to believe otherwise at this point.
Cases are showing signs of a peak. Unfortunately, three big states - CA, TX and FL are still trending up. That's a lot to overcome nationally. It's looking like a plateau now until those states level off a bit. I'm guessing we start heading down by the end of the first week in January - maybe earlier unless we get some sort of bump at Christmas.
Much worse? Maybe. Airports had the heaviest travel day of the year yesterday. Based on the graphs of the states, there is little indication that states got much worse after Thanksgiving. In many states, there was a bump up, but the trend after Thanksgiving was pretty consistent with the trend prior to Thanksgiving.The Christmas/New Years surge will come in a couple weeks. It will get much worse before it gets any better.
Definitely good news, @dean. Thanks for sharing. We have had a dearth of good news lately.Not sure where to put this. But it didn't read like Bad News.
https://news.emory.edu/stories/2021/01/coronavirus_endemic_future/index.html
Ok, my "Good News" is really just a different perspective that we don't typically see in the news. It's also something @Desert Hound posted a while back. While the vaccine rollout is going slower than desired, the effect on the rate of death will happen quickly where states focus on vaccinating the older population. This "surge" already appears to be well past the apex for infections and even for deaths/day. Add that to a significant proportion of the older population already getting vaccines and we are headed in the right direction quickly.
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This needs to happen nationwide. Focus on the actual at risk people first.While the vaccine rollout is going slower than desired, the effect on the rate of death will happen quickly where states focus on vaccinating the older population
Yes. States like FL and TX will be back to near normal in no time, but CA? I think it will be a while.Think you are right. The IFR is going to drop to the equivalent of a bad flu season within a couple months even with some states like CA and NY dragging its feet with the elderly.
On the other side of the ledger though you have a system which is entirely built into cases (though the WHO might help with that with the new advice that just came out), kids vaccines no where on the horizon, mass vaccination of the non-elderly held up until we get either the AZ or JJ vaccines approved, a Biden task force heavily focused on prolockdowners, and health advisers that want to be masked up and restricted until 2022 at the earliest. Also, because those children vaccines won't be here any time soon, and because the "experimental" label won't be removed from the vaccine any time soon, the COVID cases aren't disappearing any time soon (they'll floor over the summer and then we'll experience outbreaks in the fall/winter again).
The actual emergency will be all but over in the next 2-3 months. From there on out everything is just plain political.
I remember the "bad press" FL got for having long lines of old folks to get the vaccine. Looks like we'd be better off in CA if we'd have done the same.This needs to happen nationwide. Focus on the actual at risk people first.
The elderly account for 70-80% of all the deaths. Take care of them, and this thing will be over effectively speaking.
Yes. States like FL and TX will be back to near normal in no time, but CA? I think it will be a while.
This is largely due to politics, though....not the vaccine. Florida is pretty much back to semi-normal anyway...the step to near normal is short for them....California has a long way to go before we even get to semi-normal, and from the look of the city these days it might be years before we achieve pre-pandemic normality, if ever. I also point out that all this self-flagellation has gotten us pretty much bubkis....despite mask mandates, curfews, lockdowns, no outdoor dining, and kids out of school, we still for a period of time have had a worst-in-the-country outbreak.
I'm thinking we can reopen everything by May, with cases dropping dramatically by end of March. US has administered 18.4 million doses. Biden plans on another 100 million in the next 100 days. Kids under 16 don't get the shot, that is another 70 million. Another 25 million already had covid(this number is probably much greater). 1/4 the population will choose not to get the shot. 80 million. Add it all up and we have close to 300 million by end of April.
Since this is good news, my dad and stepmom had their first shots last week, my mom gets hers this Saturday. In-laws shortly. They are all in the 75+ category.