sydthebeat wrote: » for you:
On Saturday it processed nearly 8,000 tests, using German laboratories. The UK, which has a population more than ten times the size of Ireland’s, processed 18,000.
STB. wrote: » 800 ICU beds ? There are 500.
Danno wrote: » How nice to pick Saturday's 8,000 tests - the only day we ever managed a decent amount since the crisis unfolded. We were doing fifteen hundred a day up to that. We closed some of our fifty testing centres cause there wasn't enough people or tests.
Deleted User wrote: » We don't really know for sure, but it looks like we are.
Alf Veedersane wrote: » A week or so ago the HSE said they had a surge plan that could see critical care capacity go to 800 beds if necessary.
STB. wrote: » Absolute deaths are the only numbers that count and the universal way of presenting them. You cannot look at numbers on a cold per million basis. This is not a stock check, its the lives of people lost. 919 people are dead in Sweden, that's more than all the other Nordic countries combined.
Widdensushi wrote: » they have a similar population to the other nordic countries combined
Gary kk wrote: » Kind looks like they have pretty much stopped testing with only 81 new cases in the last twenty four hours.
biko wrote: » If we consider Diamond Princess a perfect Petri dish (712 infected and 12 dead) that gives us 1.69% deadliness 3.4% was cited by the WHO for a while. Sweden is currently at 9.28% death rate
topdecko wrote: » the rest of Nordic countries have around 16 million people vs Sweden 10 million.
biko wrote: » Other European countries with 10 million inhabitants each are Greece and Portugal. Sweden 976 dead Greece 99 dead Portugal 535 dead, neighbour to Spain with an enormous 15000 dead
Deleted User wrote: » It is far, far better to have over-reacted, been 'wrong', and learn that we can safely loosen restrictions than discovering we are going to be in this for a year at least and there is no way out.
Deleted User wrote: » IHME are making it up as they go along. These were the people predicting 66,000 deaths in the UK. hastily amended to 23,000, ie divided by 3 in the space of a week. They are predicting fewer deaths in Italy than have already taken place, assuming that there is a degree of under-reporting in every major European country. They don't have a huge amount of credibility on this topic, I am amazed people are still quoting their predictions as if they mean something.
Deleted User wrote: » The logic of "if it saves one life" or "we must save lives at all costs" is never used in normal circumstances by responsible governments.
Deleted User wrote: » Again they quote absolute deaths as opposed to deaths per 1M of population. On this metric, they are still in trouble, at 91, whereas Ireland are not far behind at 74. I wonder do they count deaths in the dishonest way they do in the UK, excluding care homes, which account for over half the deaths here, and doing minimal testing which means that many who die from corona weren't tested so therefore aren't included in the stats?
Deleted User wrote: » If anything that's an overestimate as people who go on cruises tend to be older or with underlying conditions.
biko wrote: » While we "overreacted" they have hardly reacted at all. There is still no lockdown, and people are free to go about their business as usual (provide they mingle is smaller groups than 50. Sweden had all the info from China and Italy but chose to do nothing, and are still going in a different direction. And they have been getting updates every day fro other countries. That's a huge gamble with citizen's lives - I really hope it pays off, but tbh it looks like they will sacrifice old and infirm to maintain their way of life. The sensible thing when a huge threat like this Corona is approaching is to be as cautious as possible in the beginning, and then loosen restriction - not what Sweden is doing which is starting loose and then tightening restrictions when your citizens start dying.
wakka12 wrote: » Why would a person with underlying conditions be more likely to go on a cruise? If anything, it would be the opposite. A person in poor health would be much less likely to go on a long trans continental trip than a healthy person
cgcsb wrote: » Sweden is basically in lockdown all the time. There's no point looking at from an Irish perspective. We have a party culture here, socialising is everything. In Dublin on a Saturday night walk from Rathmines northwards for about 4km and you'll hardly get through the crowds. There is nothing like that in Sweden. After 8 everything is closed anyway and the few night clubs are hard to find, mostly empty and clandestine in set up. Young Swedish people are to be found at home with a bottle of anti depressants and ultra grey scale tv drama.