| > can still overburden health care systems But they haven’t. The prevailing opinion I’m seeing on HN recently is that the US didn’t do a “real” lockdown which is why there are still so many cases. They opine that Americans largely didn’t “comply” with the government orders rendering any potential positive effects from lockdowns moot. If you take that at face value, then shouldn’t we have had an overwhelmed medical system by now? The Denver convention center was turned into a makeshift hospital for almost a year. They never had a single patient. My relatives lost their low-paying jobs and are still jobless today. Remember the military hospital ships that were sent to NY and LA? They never saw a single COVID patient? At this point I just don’t see any evidence that our healthcare system overwhelmed in any meaningful way. It’s FUD. Don’t try and post an article about how some random ICU was at 80% capacity. ICUs are designed to be near operating capacity because it’s a waste of resources to over supply. |
We did, in many cases, had overwhelmed medical systems at the local peaks, which were not nationally synchronized.
> Remember the military hospital ships that were sent to NY and LA? They never saw a single COVID patient?
You mean the ones that the military explicitly restricted to not taking COVID patients?
Yeah, I remember that. Funny how they never saw any COVID patients.