theprunetang
Shaedon "Deadly Nightshade" Sharpe is HIM
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2008
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The chemtrails must have finally got to him.
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This is 2020 like a motherfucker!!!!
Melbourne has endured one of the longest COVID-19 lockdowns in the world and finally, an end is in sight.
Debate will rage for decades over what worked, whether it was too long or whether the price in terms of jobs or unemployment was too high.
After 100 days confined to their homes and ordered not to leave for more than two hours of daily exercise – it started as a one hour limit – Victorians have lived a grim existence that few Australians outside of the state can understand.
But by enduring it and sticking to the plan, have Victorians also made history as one of the only cities across the globe to bring a second wave of coronavirus under control and return daily case numbers to zero?
Experts who spoke to news.com.au believe they have and outside of Singapore, it’s hard to think of any other city in the world that has done anything like it.
One of the nation’s most respected epidemiologists Dr Catherine Bennett of Deakin University told news.com.au that she believes what Victorians have achieved is of international significance.
Casino? As in alcohol, gambling and hookers? Okay, you've got my attention.Believe it or not I studied abroad at Deakin. Crown casino in Melbourne is awesome.
Boo, hiss, hiss.
lol...you'd have to actually correlate the percentage of Covid deaths to obesity being a contributing factor. You're just guessing, and it looks a lot like attempted deflection.
besides that, Canada is pretty close to the US on your obesity chart. The US obesity rate is 23% higher than Canada, but our mortality rate is 163% higher. The US Obesity rate is 54% higher than Germany, but the mortality rate is 476% higher.
swing and a miss HB
I know it's a radical idea but a doctor who is also a professor at Columbia and a public health expert might actually be capable of decent analysis of data that accounts for what the data shows
I consider overall health a considerable contributing factor and the fact is America is extremely unhealthy. Saying we should be the best is not realistic.
Ding ding dingfine then, you have a philosophy. But you supported that philosophy by citing obesity rates and I believe I showed that obesity does not control mortality rates
could it be a factor? sure. But Germany's death/million is 119. The US has an obesity rate about 54% above Germany. That would mean that if Obesity was the factor your tried to make it out to be, America's mortality rate would be 184 deaths/million. But the reality is our rate is 686 deaths/million, 3.7 times higher than the 'obesity-adjusted' rate of Germany
so, if there was an actual correlation to obesity, and that correlation would have to start with an infection rate equal to everybody else among the obese (good luck finding that), and using Germany as the baseline, then the US should have 59,000 dead, instead of 227,000.
I think the actual analysis you disagreed with was that our Covid response has been a disaster primarily because of the policies and actions of the federal government, and that far too many citizens operate under the illusion they know more than doctors, epidemiologists, and scientists
Ding ding ding
Dong dong dong
The following are the top underlying medical conditions linked with (94%) COVID-19 deaths.
* Influenza and pneumonia
* Respiratory failure
* Hypertensive disease
* Diabetes
* Vascular and unspecified dementia
* Cardiac Arrest
* Heart failure
* Renal failure
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/me...had-underlying-medical-conditions/ar-BB18wrA7
In the 60 minutes interview he said we are testing the second most in the world (after India). Is this true?
It might be that the obesity related death rate is not linear with respect to the extent of the obesity.fine then, you have a philosophy. But you supported that philosophy by citing obesity rates and I believe I showed that obesity does not control mortality rates
could it be a factor? sure. But Germany's death/million is 119. The US has an obesity rate about 54% above Germany. That would mean that if Obesity was the factor your tried to make it out to be, America's mortality rate would be 184 deaths/million. But the reality is our rate is 686 deaths/million, 3.7 times higher than the 'obesity-adjusted' rate of Germany
so, if there was an actual correlation to obesity, and that correlation would have to start with an infection rate equal to everybody else among the obese (good luck finding that), and using Germany as the baseline, then the US should have 59,000 dead, instead of 227,000.
I think the actual analysis you disagreed with was that our Covid response has been a disaster primarily because of the policies and actions of the federal government, and that far too many citizens operate under the illusion they know more than doctors, epidemiologists, and scientists
