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by grey-area
2179 days ago
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But looking at NYC now, after peaking in April, infections and deaths are way down and stabilised, in spite of rising infections in surrounding areas and very few travel restrictions. So something is going on that we don't understand, and it could have a significant impact. If we have a higher immune population than we think, NYC might have passed the worst, if not millions will die in a second wave (though there are no signs of that yet). So this does matter. |
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As many European countries show (including Germany, where the infected population is very low, much lower than the European average, much much lower than Italy or Spain) it’s very possible to keep the epidemic at a low, simmering level without extremely drastic lockdowns.
Given a probably pretty low K value it’s also often sufficient to not be super-efficient about prevention. Some efficiency goes a long way.