WellOpenside wrote: ↑Fri Oct 16, 2020 12:07 pm The problem with this situation is it is very hard to know who to believe. You see figures that the average age of those dying is 82.5 and then an article above(which I haven't read) that seems to suggest that those below 65 are the worst hit, they can't both be true...
It seems to me the only defence of lockdown is to prevent hospitals being overrun which didn't happen the first time round and seemingly hospitalisations are way down on Mar/Apr - research even suggests lockdown in the areas since the national lockdown has seen infections rise!!
what does it all mean?
1. Infections will continue to rise for a time after restrictions start, because the time from infection to symptoms can be two weeks.
2. Hospitalisations will trail infections by another week or so, as symptoms until hospitalisation takes time as well.
3. The initial surge of infections recently was in younger people so fewer hospitalisations. But numbers are going up in older age groups as well. If we try and nip it in the bud early, which we didn't do in March, we can hopefully get it under control a lot quicker and avoid restrictions all through the winter.