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What If There’s A Spike After The Demos Two Weeks Ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The demos themselves will almost certainly be not the main contributing factor, given that many shops have now opened, many people are returning to work, schools are partially re-opened, people are now allowed to travel across the country, public transport use has increased slightly...
Picking up on any one factor is probably a mistake. I don't doubt that the protests will play a part in any future "second wave", but there are so many other contributing factors.
At the moment, though, daily new cases appear to be holding steady.
Picking up on any one factor is probably a mistake. I don't doubt that the protests will play a part in any future "second wave", but there are so many other contributing factors.
At the moment, though, daily new cases appear to be holding steady.
I hope you're right jim, but for most of those social distancing was maintained (apart from scrum outside Nike store) whereas the protestors and police were standing side by side and face to face with each other. I think a fair number of the younger protestors had been ignoring social distancing anyway beforehand so I don't think there will be a noticeable spike that can be linked directly to this
Indeed, we need to keep a careful eye on new cases in the next few weeks. However, there was a general easing at the beginning of June, and it seems that so far the effect has only been to stop the decline rather than lead to an increase in cases/day. So I'm feeling a little more optimistic that the timing of easing measures has been OK so far.
"Also no one actually knows how many new cases there are a day as only a fraction of the population gets tested..."
This is true, but the ONS estimates based on (what I assume to be) a random sample of households suggests that the "true" figure of new cases per day, as of last week at least, is something in the region of 3,000 -- 5,000. Rough rule of thumb at the moment therefore seems to be that you should multiply the daily announced cases by 4 to get the "true" figure.
This is true, but the ONS estimates based on (what I assume to be) a random sample of households suggests that the "true" figure of new cases per day, as of last week at least, is something in the region of 3,000 -- 5,000. Rough rule of thumb at the moment therefore seems to be that you should multiply the daily announced cases by 4 to get the "true" figure.
// We shall all scweem until we are sick, 'All lives matter'//
I think that should be
We shall all thcweem until we are thick, 'All liveth matter'
the time for infection is 5 d plus or minus one and so it should have occurred (Durdle Door) and another one for the BLM demos
and none which means the fellas who said that open air transmission was a non starter were correct
so.... if you are going to the pub - use the beer garden
I think that should be
We shall all thcweem until we are thick, 'All liveth matter'
the time for infection is 5 d plus or minus one and so it should have occurred (Durdle Door) and another one for the BLM demos
and none which means the fellas who said that open air transmission was a non starter were correct
so.... if you are going to the pub - use the beer garden
Data from https:/ /www.on s.gov.u k/peopl epopula tionand communi ty/heal thandso cialcar e/condi tionsan ddiseas es/data sets/co ronavir uscovid 19infec tionsur veydata
The 95% confidence interval is, unsurprisingly, quite high, so it's better to take this as a decent order of magnitude estimate rather than an exact figure -- ie, we can say with a high degree confidence that the number of new daily infections in the community is only a four-figure number, as opposed to a five-figure number in April.
The 95% confidence interval is, unsurprisingly, quite high, so it's better to take this as a decent order of magnitude estimate rather than an exact figure -- ie, we can say with a high degree confidence that the number of new daily infections in the community is only a four-figure number, as opposed to a five-figure number in April.
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