amandstu wrote: » How do they know this?Can they track that number in (roughly) real time? What delay is they in reporting this figure,I wonder?
mikhail wrote: » They fit a curve to the recent daily positive tests. For example, if the last ten* days had show exactly the same number of cases each day, the model would show R = 1. *I am plucking that number of days from thin air. I don't know how many days' data they use. If you use more days, you get a more precise fit, but if you use fewer days you get a more responsive fit. It's a trade off.
mickdw wrote: » Surely they just look at models that take into account distancing etc and see how the cases rise day on day and allow for a percentage undetected cases alzo w8lithin the model. It should tie in also with what they see from contact tracing. As far as i know R 0 is a constant which refers to transmission rate within a community that are not resistant and not acting to prevent spread. They should be using another term for the reducing reproductive rate.
Hmmzis wrote: » Ro is the default rate of spread between infected and naïve hosts if no behaviour adjustments are made. Re is the effective rate of spread for same, but takes into account the actual situation where coutermeasures have been applied. Then there is also the K number, that describes the uniformity of the spreading patterns. For the flu and most other respiratory viruses the K is high, for SARS like viruses it's very low (they seem to rely on super spreading events/conditions).https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/05/why-do-some-covid-19-patients-infect-many-others-whereas-most-don-t-spread-virus-all
Dravokivich wrote: » I thought it was a reproductive rate per case?
YFlyer wrote: » Anyone know what was the highest R0 calculated? This can determine the percentage of population needed to be immune for herd protection.
ExMachina1000 wrote: » I thought we were all laughing at boris Johnson for his thoughts on herd immunity? Its a thing now?
YFlyer wrote: » I'm thinking in regard to vaccine.
amandstu wrote: » Heard that around 50% won't even take the vaccine if available (of course herd immunity is "a thing" ..facts of life and all that)
amandstu wrote: » Don't know that (or of that relationship) but 60% is frequently mentioned. This seems unattainable in any convenient timeframe. There was a story today that the virus may have become less virulent in Ital but the story is behind an adblocker barrier so I can't read it.https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8376105/Is-Covid-19-really-potent.html
YFlyer wrote: » I doubt up to 50% won't take the vaccine. Anyway if true an R0 of 2 or less would handle those numbers.
amandstu wrote: » How so ? R(0)=2 means fast exponential growth
amandstu wrote: » Are we getting confused between a "natural"R(0)number and a mitigated one?
downcow wrote: » Am I assuming you are all in same position as me ie no clue where this mysterious daily changing r number comes from or how it is calculated?
Polar101 wrote: » In Germany it's the number of cases today compared to what is was 4 days earlier. I read it on page 6 of this publication:https://www.rki.de/DE/Content/InfAZ/N/Neuartiges_Coronavirus/Situationsberichte/2020-05-10-en.pdf?__blob=publicationFile Happy to be corrected/re-educated, as I'm not mathematically gifted. Assuming other countries use similar methods.
Roselyn Nutritious Dwarf wrote: » Would it be safe to assume the R number might increase for Dublin next week, after 1,000+ covidiots today spent more than 15mins together, in close proximity, on a walkabout with a majority not even wearing facemasks properly?