E
Erikaspirit16
Guest
Taiwan: As the JAMA article cited earlier states, in 2004 Taiwan established the National Health Command Center. And they created a PLAN (!!!) of what to do if an epidemic struck. So they didn’t sit around and wonder what to do. They acted.
So what did they do? Well, actually the first anyone outside of China had an idea of what was going on was a blogger (in the US, I think) who tracked outbreaks of disease as a hobby. He realized something weird was going on in Wuhan. In the next day or two, Taiwan realized it too. Dec. 31 the WHO was notified of some strange events in Wuhan. Now the Taiwanese had a choice: They could sit back and see what happened. Or they could take action. They took action–they sent two doctors to Wuhan to see what was going on. The doctors returned and said it looked bad. Taiwan began implementing their plan.
Now if you didn’t see the PBS story on two Taiwanese students returning home, one from Australia and one from London, take a couple minutes and watch it. It’s illuminating.
It’s a shining example of how to do this right.
Taiwan: Taiwan’s aggressive efforts are paying off in fight against COVID-19 | PBS NewsHour
As you can see, they do not screw around.
Now beyond their plan, they also passed a law (probably around 2004) saying that every hospital had to have at least 30 days supply of everything. Imagine that.
So no, Taiwan has not had a lockdown. It hasn’t needed one (I’ll get to that below). But guess what? After two days of no new cases at all, it held a simulation of a lockdown with all interested parties taking part. This was April 20. Why? Because they are rational–they know that the virus is not “just going to go away.” Taiwan contained Covid-19, but simulated a lockdown anyway — Quartz
Sweden. A modified lockdown. Rush Limbaugh wanted to compare it to Michigan. Commenters above want to compare it to the UK, Italy, and Spain. But of course (!) that’s nonsense. You need to compare it to its neighbors, Norway, Denmark, and Finland–all of which had lockdowns. I’m using numbers from April 22 when I researched this:
Sweden – pop. 10.33 million, 16,004 cases, 1,937 deaths (1,549 cases per million population; 187.5 deaths per million)
Finland – pop. 5.5 million, 4,129 cases, 149 deaths (750.7 cases per million; 27.1 deaths per million)
Norway – pop. 5.4 million, 7,275 cases, 186 deaths (1,347 cases per million; 34.4 deaths per million)
Denmark – pop. 5.82 million, 8,108 cases, 384 deaths (1,393 cases per million 65.98 deaths per million)
Sweden has at least 156 more cases per million compared to the next closest country (Denmark) and more than twice as many cases as Finland per million. As for death rates, it’s much, much worse: 2.8 times worse than the next country, Denmark, and almost 7 times the best country (Finland). Does locking the country down have an effect? Absolutely–look at the numbers above. If you could cut the death rate by 2.8-7 times, wouldn’t you do it? (Think: There are now about 90,000 deaths in the US…what if that was 2.8 times as high–252,000? How about 630,000 deaths? Acceptable? Worth getting a haircut?)
So what did they do? Well, actually the first anyone outside of China had an idea of what was going on was a blogger (in the US, I think) who tracked outbreaks of disease as a hobby. He realized something weird was going on in Wuhan. In the next day or two, Taiwan realized it too. Dec. 31 the WHO was notified of some strange events in Wuhan. Now the Taiwanese had a choice: They could sit back and see what happened. Or they could take action. They took action–they sent two doctors to Wuhan to see what was going on. The doctors returned and said it looked bad. Taiwan began implementing their plan.
Now if you didn’t see the PBS story on two Taiwanese students returning home, one from Australia and one from London, take a couple minutes and watch it. It’s illuminating.
It’s a shining example of how to do this right.
Taiwan: Taiwan’s aggressive efforts are paying off in fight against COVID-19 | PBS NewsHour
As you can see, they do not screw around.
Now beyond their plan, they also passed a law (probably around 2004) saying that every hospital had to have at least 30 days supply of everything. Imagine that.
So no, Taiwan has not had a lockdown. It hasn’t needed one (I’ll get to that below). But guess what? After two days of no new cases at all, it held a simulation of a lockdown with all interested parties taking part. This was April 20. Why? Because they are rational–they know that the virus is not “just going to go away.” Taiwan contained Covid-19, but simulated a lockdown anyway — Quartz
Sweden. A modified lockdown. Rush Limbaugh wanted to compare it to Michigan. Commenters above want to compare it to the UK, Italy, and Spain. But of course (!) that’s nonsense. You need to compare it to its neighbors, Norway, Denmark, and Finland–all of which had lockdowns. I’m using numbers from April 22 when I researched this:
Sweden – pop. 10.33 million, 16,004 cases, 1,937 deaths (1,549 cases per million population; 187.5 deaths per million)
Finland – pop. 5.5 million, 4,129 cases, 149 deaths (750.7 cases per million; 27.1 deaths per million)
Norway – pop. 5.4 million, 7,275 cases, 186 deaths (1,347 cases per million; 34.4 deaths per million)
Denmark – pop. 5.82 million, 8,108 cases, 384 deaths (1,393 cases per million 65.98 deaths per million)
Sweden has at least 156 more cases per million compared to the next closest country (Denmark) and more than twice as many cases as Finland per million. As for death rates, it’s much, much worse: 2.8 times worse than the next country, Denmark, and almost 7 times the best country (Finland). Does locking the country down have an effect? Absolutely–look at the numbers above. If you could cut the death rate by 2.8-7 times, wouldn’t you do it? (Think: There are now about 90,000 deaths in the US…what if that was 2.8 times as high–252,000? How about 630,000 deaths? Acceptable? Worth getting a haircut?)
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