How do we better measure the impact of a disease when it is widely acknowledged that traditional methods of measuring disease mortality are inaccurate?
One tool is "excess death" analysis
This is simply a comparison of current mortality to a historic baseline
Here's an example of excess death analysis
The white line represents the number of deaths per month that we EXPECT, given history
The black line represents the ACTUAL number of deaths each month
The US CDC has announced that, going forward, reported SARS-CoV-2 wastewater levels will be normalized to an endemic baseline
"Zero" on this baseline will be levels in the previous year
@EvanBlake17 @BenjaminMateus7 @arijitchakrav
What this means is that the level of SARS-CoV-2 virus in the environment will be reported as the difference between current readings & the readings of a year ago
If Jan of 2024 reading was 1,000 & Jan 2025 it's also 1,000, Jan 2025 wastewater levels will be reported as 0 (zero)
It is difficult to fathom just how cynical this is
It's a bureaucratic admission that not only do we need to live with a constant and very high amount of SARS-CoV-2 virus around us but that this constant and very high amount will represent "normal."
Luigi Mangione’s manifesto is remarkable in its banality
I say banal because anyone who encountering our health care system has the same experience as Mangione
The same cruelty-for-cruelty’s sake, the same rapaciousness, the same desert of empathy
To wit
1.Unsatisfied pleas to fix his mother’s and his ailments
2.Endless cycles of incompetence and repetition of failed processes that have not succeeded in the past
And have no promise of succeeding in the future
3. Frightening demands for payment. Payment for failure
An institutional shakedown compelling people to pay what they cannot live without at a price they afford
4. All packaged in an uncaring cascade of disdain from providers and payers upon the hapless patient