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by 9uq34aofgh
2285 days ago
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I agree a temporary reprieve of infections from isolation will happen and based on the type of pandemic isolations can be an appropriate response. What I haven't found is good evidence of what happens after isolation ends? Why won't a peak happen soon after? Any scientific sources you can point me to? Also, the economic affect of isolations must be taken into account when implementing NPIs. The paper from the CDC states the economic disaster of isolations outweighs its general usefulness. This seems especially poignant for covid-19. |
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If testing capacity and health department capacity is available to do contact tracing on new cases, we would see (significantly) reduced spread as unknown carriers could be tracked down.
If the virus has reduced viability in warm weather (as has been suggested) and isolation ends during warmer weather, that will reduce the rate of new infections vs today without isolation.
If many people with undiagnosed cases heal during isolation, they may not transmit to anyone, and they may emerge with some immunity afterwards, reducing spread when isolation ends.
There's certainly a chance none of this works well. There's also a real chance that the (mostly longer term) negative health effects from isolation outweighs the (mostly shorter term) negative health effects from an uncontrolled epidemic.
I think it's pretty unlikely that the peak after isolation will be as high as the peak without isolation, and there's hope that with isolation, the health system won't be overwhelmed with this to the exclusion of other urgent needs. The economy is going to be a big mess with either isolation or an uncontrolled epidemic.