Deaths and cases up today. Here's the overall Covid-19 picture in the UK, I'll try and unpack whats happening in a thread (1)
If you look at recent trends for reported cases on log plots, its getting frightening. Cases are rising ever faster, and deaths are rising. 6765 cases, up from 3398 last Saturday, and 13 deaths, up from 7. (2)
Deaths have risen, relative to the same day the previous week, for 6 of the last 7 days. The exception was Monday, which of course was at the end of a bank holiday weekend, meaning the report was likely artificially low (3)
8.71 deaths per day, as a rolling average, is higher than at any time since the 18th of May. At that time deaths were still declining (4)
With the number of deaths being lower right now the data is noisier - but the daily average change is still going the wrong way - on average deaths are rising at 1.37% per day right now (5)
The rate cases are rising is -terrifying-. Its an average of 5.59% per day, which is the fastest since the 4th of January. There have been two days this year (3rd and 4th of Jan) when the average daily change in cases was greater. (6)
Half term might slow things down. My gosh we need it to. A line thats curving up on an exponential plot? As the D strain takes over from the A strain, the proportional rate of change gets faster. Cases are rocketing. (7)
At this rate we go over 10,000 cases per day in a little over 10 days, based on the change in cases over the last 7 or 14 days. If we cross that earlier, be alarmed. (8)
Calculating a proxy of infection rate (R) from deaths we can get up to the 13th of last moth (the average day people who caught Covid who died today caught it), that has just crossed to over 1, to 1.05. As calculated form infections it was also 1.05 that day (8)
Or, n other words, almost none of the recent rise in infections is yet indicated in death data. Claims that vaccines have conclusively broken this link are not yet borne out. Deaths are rising slowly now - thats what we would predict when we compare R from deaths to infectins (9)
Case numbers look ominously like they did at the start of wave 2 last July (10)
Just like last July people were brushing that off because deaths weren't much rising yet - but of course the gap between cases rising and deaths rising was the same (11)
Cases are now doubling every 8.8 days. (12)
So what can we conclude? Nothing good. It matters if cases spread, it means thousands more will suffer long term health effects. We know that at Easter cases slowed when the kids were off school, that may happen for half term too (13)
So if the rate of rise slows now, don't take too much comfort in that, it'll take off again after the holiday. If deaths start rising faster this week, well, we sort of might expect that. The rate of change will be what we need to keep an eye on (14)
We don't have herd immunity from vaccination yet, not with the new strain that is spreading. We would have had that by now with the original strain, as I've previously described, thats a mathematical certainty (15)
Stay alert, stay safe. We've a way to go yet before we can say we are safe. It would be immensely foolhardy to unlock faster now (fin)
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PSA (so please RT): After the death of Awaab Ishak, a few words on black mold. Do you have a couple of spots of mold in your shower? Like, maybe top corners on the grouting? That. Well, it might be. It might be a different mold. The really nasty one is Stachbotrytis chartarum.(1)
Well... Aspergillus niger is a badass mofo of a fungus. It's a fighter, it competes in all sorts of environments and it's a generalist. Black spot on an onion? Might be that. Black mark on the grouting? Might definitely be that. (3)
Nobody cares, but here's the solution to the energy price crisis in the UK, at least this Winter. (1)
Start with a windfall tax on producers. The excess profits they're making here, based on our relative political stability, are worth extra because £ is so low. That's just a start (2)
Next thing to do? Scrap standing charges, immediately. You pay for energy, the notion of a 'standing charge' that you pay to have the honour of then spending more, it's just nonsense. Put the cost on use, not having access (3)
Pet hate. Company puts a card through your door "We will be in your area on these days doing (X)". You phone them. They offer you an appointment date a month or months later. So your card was basically a lie, wasn't it @OVOEnergy? Straight up, flay out a lie.
"well the appointments went really fast..." No. If the card comes through my door, posted yesterday to the whole area, all 5 days did not fill up in that time, you did not book out for a whole extra month in that time. I don't believe you @OVOEnergy
You put immediate, early dates on your literature and post it out, bait people to sign up to something and switch to a later date. It's an old and really rubbish trick @OVOEnergy - I expected better from you. Really expected better.
Let me stop you there, David. Peak infection can be calculated from peak fatalities, we know average time it takes Covid to kill. Peak infection was just prior to lockdown, if you cast your mind back you'll recall lockdown was a reaction to public behaviour, not a leader thereof.
In other words we have mathematical proof that lockdown 1 was both needed and way, way too late to save as many lives as we could. Lockdown was soft, without masking, and infection continued to spread in supermarkets etc....
...which meant our rate of recovery from peak 1 was gunbarrel straight for many, many weeks - and too slow. We then opened too fast and sprinted into another catastrophe, and more late lockdowns...
There were things wrong with the first episodes. This wasn't one of them. There are times when a producer concentrates on inclusivity while failing on content (most recent BBC version of Dracula, Doctor Who spinoff Class) but it ain't casting that's the problem, it's content...
...the problem is that whoever you cast, the show can
still be crap. Rings of Power was just OK rather than great, Lenny Henry as a hobbit and a brown guy cast as an Elf weren't the reasons why it didn't meet higher expectations...
...but I do wonder, if you didn't enjoy it and you're rationalising it "well Tolkien didn't make his harfoots brown" then y'all haven't done your reading and you might well rectify that. Google harfoots and nut brown, there's a starting point for you...
So, Polio in London? I'm going to meander on a bit. Sorry. A thread by a microbiologist (but not that kind of microbiologist) detailing what you need to know (1)
Unusually, for me, I'm going to start with a tl;dr point. Should you be worried? Only a little bit, so far. Get your kids vaccinated if you have not. Call your doctor - now-. NOTHING is gained by this risk (2)
Ok. Polio is short for poliomyelitis, from the greek for grey (polio) marrow (myelon). Grey matter myelitis, which sounds (and is) horrible (3)