After weeks of having lowest Covid in Europe the UK is now creeping up the league as reopening means more cases... data.spectator.co.uk
...UK now amongst the more liberal countries in Europe for retail...
...with signs of a big economic boom...
...and a surge in job vacancies, with ads now higher than pre-pandemic...
...big question is whether the (expected) rise in cases is a threat to NHS. Bolton has highest Covid in UK but the virus there is rising amongst the young (esp children)...
...big difference is vaccine success....
...which means huge antibody rates amongst the at-risk groups...
So all eyes on Covid hospitalisation at Bolton, the epicentre. Below from 25 May: still far below peak...
But overall, hospital rates after reopening (in black) running below even the best-case scenario released by Sage. This may change, but so far reopening going as well as could be expected.
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In that Sep meeting John Edmunds, a Sage adviser, made his case for lockdown to No10 by showing a controversial graph screen-grabbed from the FT website...
In his No10 presentation, Edmunds said the FT graph "unambiguously" shows "that the key factor for the large number of deaths in the UK was the lateness of our response..."
To (quickly) answer a few points on my Sweden column in the Telegraph - its strategy was to minimise all deaths. This meant the ones counted daily (Covid) plus indirect deaths, counted later. On Covid deaths, it's about the European average...
...by avoiding lockdown, Sweden sought to minimise (long-term) collateral damage on society & health. On total 'excess death' last year, it's a bit lower than European average...
...but the age of those who died is also a factor. Lockdowns risk deterring use of health service for cancer, heart disease etc and leading to excess death amongst the under-65s. Deaths in this age group declined in Sweden last year, but rose in UK...
Our most-read article yesterday was an in-depth, data-rich analysis by Prof Simon Wood - looking at statistical assumptions and lockdown modelling spectator.co.uk/article/covid-…
We have another one coming on Saturday by Prof Philip Thomas, and I suspect it will be our most-read piece that day too. All told, the digital era has given a chance to get stuck into data-based articles in a way that’s impractical with print.
The setback for AstraZeneca vaccine today need to be set in context. By being easily-stored (and made here) UK has protected more people than any comparably-sized country...
The AZ success is reflected not just in trials but antibody studies. Vaccine success has helped 55% of population acquire Covid antibodies: a figure that rises all the time...
This has helped push Covid cases for the over-60s down markedly faster than those of other age groups...
Sweden's premise: if you level with the public, share details of Covid battle in real time, you foster trust. People will socially distance on a voluntary basis, "flattening the curve" enough for hospitals to cope. Today, only a quarter of Sweden's intensive care units being used
Big difference with UK is data transparency. Sweden releases live data on Covid patients in real time: here is their Covid portal icuregswe.org/en/data--resul…