A comparison of case rates and hospitalizations at the beginning of the second and the current wave.
(We can't do this for cases in the first wave as mass testing didn't exist.)
A short thread.
In August/September last year, cases started in 20-29 year olds and then moved up to older and younger age groups.
This is the case for this wave: May/June 2021. Cases starting in 10-19 year olds and moving to older and younger age groups. Over this period we see a doubling in 60-69, 70-79, and 80+ age groups but from a *very low base*.
We hope and expect that there will be considerable resistance from vaccinations in the age groups that have been vaccinated.
And we do see that resistance in *hospitalizations*.
If we look at the second wave (August/September 2020) hospitalizations in the same time period as cases in the chart above, we can clearly see hospitalizations in the older age groups.
In the current wave, we still see hospitalizations, but not to the same extent.
However, we *do* see hospitalizations. The next week will be interesting to see how hospitalizations change in *all* age groups.
The wave is still relatively early in its evolution (especially for hospitalizations).
There is however a risk that increases in cases in all age groups translate into a significant number of hospitalizations (significant in the sense of high pressure on the health system).
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The UK Covid Public Inquiry has published its first Report, on Resilience and Preparedness. It is the most urgent report, as we are still ill-prepared for the next pandemic.
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This is the first of many reports, each reviewing a specific area, including healthcare systems; test, trace, and isolate; and the economic response to the pandemic.
The Module 1 Report sets out nine significant flaws from the Covid-19 pandemic:
"Inflation is currently 10%. If inflation halves, how much will a £1 pint of milk cost".
Sounds easy. It's not. It's ambiguous. It's not a good question. Unless it's designed to be a bad question. In which case it's a good question.
1. It talks about 'inflation'. But *what* inflation? At the moment, we have overall inflation at roughly 10% but inflation of food at roughly 20%. So is the overall inflation rate the same as the inflation rate for milk? It's not clear. Bad question.
First, the @ONS Covid Infection Survey is being paused, and @CovidGenomicsUK is being retired. This will have implications for data reliability and availability going forward.
OK, I'm going to write a response to this maths problem, published in @DailyMailUK, that has caused a lot of comment, some thinking the answer is 1 and some thinking the answer is 9.
Many of us would go straight to the answer 1. That's because we know (or our children know, and have taught us), that there is a 'rule' for how you deal with the order of doing the calculation - do you do + first or ÷, for example?
Enter BIDMAS (or BODMAS).
"It stands for Brackets, Indices [or Order], Division, Multiplication, Addition and Subtraction."
That's the conventional order. Forget about indices [or order] for now - that's not important for this one. bbc.co.uk/bitesize/topic…