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Flatten the Curve


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2020 Jul 15, 3:31am   29,814 views  720 comments

by Onvacation   ➕follow (4)   💰tip   ignore  


As the numbers of cases, hospitalizations, and deaths surge to record levels in multiple epicenters, local and state officials are struggling with whether and how much to reverse the rollback of restrictions on individuals and businesses. For example, following a gradual reopening over about a month, on Monday, California Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the reintroduction of statewide restrictions that would again shut down bars, all indoor dining, family entertainment, zoos and museums following a surge in coronavirus cases. The governors of Florida, Texas, and Arizona, all now epicenters of infection, have also slowed or reversed reopening, but their actions have been tepid. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is even insisting on opening schools in the face of record-high numbers of infections.

These officials would do well to recall the observation of The Great One. No, not Dr. Tony Fauci of the National Institutes of Health—the other one, hockey legend Wayne Gretzky, who once explained, “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.”

Anticipating what’s coming is important in confronting an infectious disease, especially one whose dynamics are what many infectious disease experts consider their worst nightmare. COVID-19 is highly infectious, has a lengthy incubation period (during which asymptomatic infected persons can unwittingly shed virus and infect other people), and causes serious, sometimes fatal illness.

Those unusual characteristics of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, which causes COVID-19, and the idiosyncrasies and spectrum of presentations of the illness—from pulmonary symptoms (including pneumonia and pulmonary fibrosis) to a range of non-respiratory manifestations, (including loss of sense of smell or taste, confusion and cognitive impairments, fainting, sudden muscle weakness or paralysis, seizures, ischemic strokes, kidney damage, and, rarely, a severe pediatric inflammatory syndrome) mean that we are on a steep learning curve.

The problem is: if we react too slowly to changing circumstances, we can fall off a metaphorical cliff.

There’s an old brain teaser that perfectly illustrates this point. Consider a pond of a certain size, on which there is a single lily pad. This particular species of lily pad reproduces and duplicates itself once a day, so that on day 2, you have two lily pads. On day 3, you have four; on day 4, you have eight; and so on. Here’s the teaser: if it takes the lily pads 48 days to cover the pond completely, how long will it take for the pond to be covered halfway?

The answer? 47 days. In just 24 hours, between day 47 and day 48, the lily pads would double in size and overtake the pond. Moreover, on day 40, the pond would still appear to be relatively clear; just eight days from the pond being completely covered, you’d hardly know the lily pads were there.

If the same thing happens with a virulent and highly contagious infectious agent, like the SARS-CoV-2 virus, you don’t know you’re in trouble until you wake up one morning to find that you’re overwhelmed. Like the lily pad example, the daily number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the U.S. was 18,577 on June 15th—just three weeks later, on July 10th, the number had shot up to 66,281.

Dr. Anthony Fauci
Dr. Anthony Fauci

FLATTENING THE CURVE TO BEAT THE IMPENDING CLIFF

From early in the pandemic, the public health mantra worldwide has been: “flatten the curve.” That important concept, which was in vogue several months ago, seems largely forgotten today.

In the above graphic from the University of Michigan, the blue curve is the viral equivalent of the lily pads, suddenly covering the pond. It represents a large number of people (shown on the vertical axis) becoming infected over a short time (horizontal axis), and, in turn, overwhelming our health care system with people who need hospitalization, or even an Intensive Care Unit (ICU).

People won’t shop for non-essentials, fly, go to restaurants, theaters, and athletic events, or send their kids to school, when numbers of new cases are soaring.

If, however, political officials, individuals, and communities take steps to slow the virus’s spread, the cases of COVID-19 will stretch out across a more extended period, as depicted by the flatter, yellow curve. As long as the number of cases at any given time doesn’t bleed past the dotted line marking the capacity of our nation’s health care system, we’ll be able to accommodate everyone who is very sick.

Curve-flattening has fallen out of focus in recent months, in part because some political leaders reopened too aggressively and prematurely, basing policy on their constituents’ “pandemic fatigue,” instead of on the advice of epidemiologists and infectious disease experts.

But it’s still critical to avoid the pattern of the blue curve, not only to spare hospitals and ICUs—which are especially under stress in parts of Arizona, Florida, and Texas—but also so that we can continue the gradual reopening of the nation’s businesses and schools. Reopening relies on curve-flattening. As the NIH’s Dr. Tony Fauci says frequently, public health and economic considerations are not in opposition but are opposite sides of the same coin; we can’t fully restart and resume commerce until the pandemic is under some measure of control. People won’t shop for non-essentials, fly, go to restaurants, theaters, and athletic events, or send their kids to school, when numbers of new cases are soaring.

That means we need to start anticipating and stop playing catch-up—as the governors of Florida, Arizona, and Texas have been doing, relying on a combination of magical thinking, Happy Talk, and too-little-too-late remedies, instead of aggressive, evidence-based public health policies.

Arizona Governor Doug Ducey, for instance, has offered no strategy for blunting the spike in COVID-19 cases other than to keep repeating that there were enough hospital beds to treat those who fall ill. And yet, ICU beds and ventilators in use by suspected and confirmed COVID-19 patients in Arizona both hit new records on July 12th and were under stress, according to data reported by hospitals to the state.

On July 10th, a physicians group gathered outside Florida Governor DeSantis’s mansion in Tallahassee to urge him to issue an order mandating the use of face masks statewide, which arguably should have been done months ago. Masks have long been considered essential to slowing the spread of COVID-19, but, inexplicably, the Governor resisted. And only on July 10th did Texas Governor Greg Abbott finally mandate the wearing of face masks, and demand the prohibition of large gatherings and the closing of bars across the state.

Elected officials must heed Wayne Gretzky’s admonition and stay ahead of the coronavirus, in order to lower its rate of transmission. That’s the only way to slow the rise of new cases.

Evidence-based policies, such as requiring masks in public, prohibiting large indoor gatherings, and indoor dining at restaurants, are important. But as we’ve seen with California, even aggressive imposition of those kinds of strictures has not been sufficient—in large part because many people, especially younger ones, have failed to comply. As California allowed businesses and public places to reopen, bars, boardwalks, and beaches became crowded with large numbers of maskless patrons. It’s no wonder, then, that as of July 13th, hospitals in the state reported a 27.8% increase in hospitalized patients over the previous 14 days and a 19.9% increase in ICU patients over that same period. In fact, as a result of noncompliance, many local governments in the Golden State have had to coordinate with law enforcement agencies to issue citations and explore civil alternatives through code enforcement, environmental health, or other local government personnel.

Of course, the need for heightened consequences for noncompliance is unfortunate, but it will help to re-flatten the curve. That will spread out the demands on hospitals, which must have sufficient space, supplies, and healthy staff to care for all those who need hospital-level care—whether for COVID-19, a stroke, trauma, emergency surgery, or childbirth. It’s strong, but necessary, medicine—which possibly could have been avoided with more intense efforts to get the public to comply with wearing masks, social distancing, and frequent hand-washing.

If politicians properly understood their role in flattening the curve, they wouldn’t have to resort to policing and ticketing. They would instead launch a tsunami of public service announcements from all manner of dignitaries and celebrities, including prominent politicians, actors, rock stars, and athletes—maybe even The Great One himself—demonstrating how we can anticipate instead of falling behind the curve.

That non-coercive strategy could be a winner.


In this article:Coronavirus, Featured, large
Don't Miss:
For Coronavirus, the Name of the Game Is Minimizing the Probability of Infection.

Written By
Henry I. Miller, M.S., M.D.
Henry I. Miller, a physician and molecular biologist, is a Senior Fellow at the Pacific Research Institute. He was the founding director of the FDA’s Office of Biotechnology.


https://humanevents.com/2020/07/14/flattening-the-curve-is-still-the-right-answer/

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401   Onvacation   2020 Jul 31, 12:36pm  

prodigy says
Covid 19 is a lot worse than the flu.

We can agree to disagree on this point.

Would you agree that the late sixties Hong Kong flu was relatively, to population, more serious than Covid-19?
402   socal2   2020 Jul 31, 12:38pm  

prodigy says
Yes, painful to see a politician asking political questions to a doctor whose skill is in medicine.


Huh? Are you suggesting that Fauci has not opined on public policies to limit the spread of COVID?
403   Onvacation   2020 Jul 31, 12:39pm  

Ceffer says
fattening the curve for purely political goals. Flattening the curve is so passe.

Exactly! At the beginning of this year we were moving into a severe flu season. Now almost no one is dying from the flu, heart attack, stroke, etc.
404   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:39pm  

Well no two flus are alike, so I'll retract my statement below. Not specific enough.

Onvacation says
prodigy says
Covid 19 is a lot worse than the flu.

We can agree to disagree on this point.
405   mell   2020 Jul 31, 12:39pm  

prodigy says
And there is the catch with this bug.
You can be infected up to 7 days and not know it, or never know it.
So we don't know for sure who is sick or not at any point in time.
Which brings us to the current default position of assuming everybody is sick, so everybody wear masks to stop spreading.

mell says
Surgical masks and bandanas do little to nothing for the healthy (in fact can have adverse effects), but they do help a little if someone who is sick is wearing them.


But when you're asymptomatic you're very unlikely to spread it, unless you're in close contact like a SO or other family. Symptoms indicate high viral replication. If you don't have symptoms you hardly shed, see kids. Everyone with symptoms should wear a mask or stay at home or outside only.
406   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:41pm  

How many people die from flu each year in US?
While the impact of flu varies, it places a substantial burden on the health of people in the United States each year. CDC estimates that influenza has resulted in between 9 million – 45 million illnesses, between 140,000 – 810,000 hospitalizations and between 12,000 – 61,000 deaths annually since 2010.
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/index.html
407   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:43pm  

we are at 155k and counting.
My new statement is:
Covid 19 is moving towards 300% of the average flu death rate over the past 10 years.
408   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:47pm  

No.
But he answered Jordens question. It's about large groups gathering closely together without masks.
Doesn't matter what type of group it is.
Jordon was just playing politics as that is his area of expertise. Fauci refused to play.

socal2 says
prodigy says
Yes, painful to see a politician asking political questions to a doctor whose skill is in medicine.


Huh? Are you suggesting that Fauci has not opined on public policies to limit the spread of COVID?
409   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:50pm  

But something is killing people at close to a 300% increase of the average flu deaths over the past 10 years.
What could it be?
Onvacation says
Ceffer says
fattening the curve for purely political goals. Flattening the curve is so passe.

Exactly! At the beginning of this year we were moving into a severe flu season. Now almost no one is dying from the flu, heart attack, stroke, etc.
410   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:54pm  

Can asymptomatic people spread COVID-19?
Generally, asymptomatic people can spread the disease they have. This is thought to be true for the novel coronavirus, too, although officials don't yet know how common the spread of COVID-19 by asymptomatic carriers is.

Studies have shown that people can be contagious in the first several days of having the virus, before they show symptoms. One study actually estimated that more than 40% of novel coronavirus cases were transmitted in the presymptomatic phase. And, in a study that analyzed samples from sailors on the USS Theodore Roosevelt, about 20% of infected people reported that they never developed symptoms.


A survey from the CDC reports that 54% of people who tested positive for COVID-19 couldn't recall how they got it. The remaining 46% of respondents who tested positive reported that they had close contact with someone who was sick, such as a family member, before they developed the disease.

This indicates that the majority of people could have contracted COVID-19 from an asymptomatic person they'd been in close contact with, or from a symptomatic passer-by, such as someone who coughed near you at the grocery store.

The report concludes by saying this ambiguity "underscores the need for isolation of infected persons, contact tracing and testing during ongoing community transmission, and prevention measures including social distancing and use of cloth face coverings."

So, it's clear that people can contract the disease but remain symptomless. It's also clear that people who do develop symptoms could potentially spread the virus before they knew they had it.

mell says
But when you're asymptomatic you're very unlikely to spread it, unless you're in close contact like a SO or other family. Symptoms indicate high viral replication. If you don't have symptoms you hardly shed, see kids. Everyone with symptoms should wear a mask or stay at home or outside only.
411   mell   2020 Jul 31, 12:54pm  

prodigy says
But something is killing people at close to a 300% increase of the average flu deaths over the past 10 years.
What could it be?
Onvacation says
Ceffer says
fattening the curve for purely political goals. Flattening the curve is so passe.

Exactly! At the beginning of this year we were moving into a severe flu season. Now almost no one is dying from the flu, heart attack, stroke, etc.


It's highly contagious and replaces the mix of respiratory infections that combined kills roughly the same amount of people. I know "experts" are already screeching from the rooftop about the double burden come winter but I bet there will be far less flu and cold deaths partially because of mislabeling as Covid and partially because Sars cov 2 will dominate the other viruses if it it doesn't let up. That being said I expect herd immunity reached by then anyways.
412   prodigy   2020 Jul 31, 12:57pm  

And largely due to mask wearing by half the populace greatly reducing transmission of your normal run of respiratory illnesses.

mell says
but I bet there will be far less flu and cold deaths partially because of mislabeling as Covid and partially because Sars cov 2 will dominate the other viruses if it it doesn't let up.
413   Patrick   2020 Jul 31, 1:12pm  

We won't need masks even indoors if the anti-science crowd can suppress their egos long enough to let HCQ + azith + zinc become mainstream.

https://c19study.com/
414   Onvacation   2020 Jul 31, 3:22pm  

APOCALYPSEFUCKisShostakovitch says
Masks are TERRORIST!

TRUMP! should order National Guard snipers to take out people wearing them!

THEN! AMERICA! will rise from the burning rubble of the OBAMA! administration!

It's DEFINITELY Trump's economy now.

Obama never would have pussed out and shut down the country.
415   WookieMan   2020 Jul 31, 4:07pm  

prodigy says
Personal attacks indicate you have no more data to support your position.
Thanks for the win

Why are cases increasing with more mask wearing? For the win...
416   WookieMan   2020 Jul 31, 4:13pm  

WookieMan says
prodigy says
Personal attacks indicate you have no more data to support your position.
Thanks for the win

Why are cases increasing with more mask wearing? For the win...


Please also point out where I personally attacked you. I said the information you’re getting is shit. If you took that personally that’s on you. Claiming it was personal might shed some light on the fact that I’m right getting so defensive.
417   SoTex   2020 Aug 1, 12:34pm  

Eric Holder says
If there is no peer-reviewed study establishing eye route for infection how can there be a link to it? Unless you accept /dev/null as such.


That's probably because it would be redundant as fuck. Lots of previous studies with other viruses/pathogens. In fact, last century the US military wanted to figure out how tightly they could pack soldiers together onto ships and prevent the spread of ... I think it was influenza. Anyhow, if I recall it was 3 feet and they figured out it was entering through the eyes. Through the nasolacrimal duct in particular.



Lots of upper respiratory viruses get in that way. You rub your eyes and they go down the duct and are deposited into your sinuses. There have been some studies that show covid does in fact interact with ACE2 in eyeball tissue but that's different.

Just another reason why I think the mask thing is stupid and not really helping much if at all. No, I don't think we need to just 'add goggles' or some shit. (Unless you are old; might want to consider that lol)

edit: Despite SARS-1 being an upper-respiratory virus I think covid may only be classified as a respiratory virus. It doesn't attack the sinuses as far as I know. Still an entry point though.

Fucking Trump. It's his fault for not forcing auto manufacturers to produce free positive pressure air suits for the entire populace!
418   Onvacation   2020 Aug 1, 12:44pm  

So we're all agreed. We can get covid through our mouth, nose, eyes, and possibly ears and anus.

Spacesuits and strict lockdowns are the obvious answer until the virus dies from Biden being elected.
419   Booger   2020 Aug 1, 12:58pm  

WookieMan says
Why are cases increasing with more mask wearing? For the win...


More testing?
421   Misc   2020 Aug 1, 1:26pm  

We're about to see a huge drop off in number of new daily cases. It's my bet that we've hit testing fatigue. Where everyone who wanted to get tested has gotten tested. With less people getting tested the number of new cases drops like a rock.
422   MrEd   2020 Aug 1, 2:29pm  

Hmmm it's not normal to stick ones finger up ones ass.
Where'd you get that idea?
Onvacation says
So we're all agreed. We can get covid through our mouth, nose, eyes, and possibly ears and anus.
423   MrEd   2020 Aug 1, 2:30pm  

That one is pretty obvious.
Booger says
WookieMan says
Why are cases increasing with more mask wearing? For the win...


More testing?
424   CBOEtrader   2020 Aug 1, 2:31pm  

mell says
That's a dangerous precedent to force "dumbfucks" to use masks just because they could spread a respiratory virus to you.


Mandatory pants, no more of those crotchless virus spreaders. Ratchets are a threat to public safety
425   theoakman   2020 Aug 1, 2:54pm  

prodigy says
How many people die from flu each year in US?
While the impact of flu varies, it places a substantial burden on the health of people in the United States each year. CDC estimates that influenza has resulted in between 9 million – 45 million illnesses, between 140,000 – 810,000 hospitalizations and between 12,000 – 61,000 deaths annually since 2010.
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/about/burden/index.html


You seem to think Covid is capable of taking out that many people on an annual basis. It can't. It takes out the weak first and is likely to not b able to take out the survivors later on. The only reason the rate of transmission is so extremely high because no one ever had it before. So it can spread much more rapidly than the flu.

The reason the flu doesn't kill as many people is because we have yearly vaccines. Moreover, we have a large degree of exposure to previously mutations so immunity can carry over from year to year until it mutates more.

That being said, statistically speaking, this virus is FAR FAR FAR less lethal than the flu to children. Last time I checked, we were only in the teens for deaths of anyone under 14. So...it's more dangerous to people over the age of 60 and almost harmless to children.

So basically, yes, in year 1 Covid kills more than the flu does on average. This is not worse than the flu on a long term basis. Here's why. Young people can easily gain immunity from this disease without even getting sick. Also, this virus appears to be much less mutagenic.
426   SoTex   2020 Aug 1, 5:03pm  

Onvacation says
Biden being elected.


He'll sniff that fucking virus out!
427   SoTex   2020 Aug 1, 5:09pm  

Now that I'm nearing the end of what I sincerely believe is my 2nd round with the rona I'm planning to schedule a flight to go visit the folks in a few weeks. I figure I'll have t-cell immunity for a little while and won't kill them because anything I pick up in transit will be eliminated immediately. After that if I keep wearing a damn mask, washing my hands too much and isolating I'll probably get it again in 6 months. Which makes me think at this point it's better for me (and likely others) if I just keep being exposed constantly to it. That'll keep up my limited immunity.

Ultimately I think that's the sort of thing that may have to happen on a large scale to mostly get rid of it.

Most people don't produce antibodies for any significant length of time if at all. This is also why a vaccine is a pipe dream BS. I'm not going to take it. Flu and others yes but not some bastardized vaccine that was quickly produced for this.
428   WookieMan   2020 Aug 2, 7:10am  

MrEd says
That one is pretty obvious.
Booger says
WookieMan says
Why are cases increasing with more mask wearing? For the win...


More testing?


We were at 0% mask wearing for the general public and have been at say 50% consistent mask wearing the last 2-3 months. Regardless of more testing, the mask theory doesn’t hold water. If it did, positive tests would be going down with more testing because of mask wearing. It’s not going down. Based on that info alone, masks aren’t doing what you think they are.

I’m in Vegas now. 100% of people are wearing them indoors. You can’t continue to have increasing cases with almost 100% mask usage. It’s pure bull shit. Go travel a bit. This is not what you think it is.
429   MrEd   2020 Aug 2, 7:49am  

The European model shows it takes 95% participation for masks to have a positive effect.
Your 50% assumption, for a highly contagious disease, has no positive supporting data .
WookieMan says
We were at 0% mask wearing for the general public and have been at say 50% consistent mask wearing the last 2-3 months. Regardless of more testing, the mask theory doesn’t hold water. If it did, positive tests would be going down with more testing because of mask wearing. It’s not going down. Based on that info alone, masks aren’t doing what you think they are.
430   MrEd   2020 Aug 2, 7:50am  

Btw, saying that someone "eats shit" is a personal attack
431   mell   2020 Aug 2, 8:20am  

just_adhom_preaching says
Now that I'm nearing the end of what I sincerely believe is my 2nd round with the rona I'm planning to schedule a flight to go visit the folks in a few weeks. I figure I'll have t-cell immunity for a little while and won't kill them because anything I pick up in transit will be eliminated immediately. After that if I keep wearing a damn mask, washing my hands too much and isolating I'll probably get it again in 6 months. Which makes me think at this point it's better for me (and likely others) if I just keep being exposed constantly to it. That'll keep up my limited immunity.

Ultimately I think that's the sort of thing that may have to happen on a large scale to mostly get rid of it.

Most people don't produce antibodies for any significant length of time if at all. This is also why a vaccine is a pipe dream BS. I'm not going to take it. Flu and others yes but not some bastardized vaccine that was quickly produced for this.


Given enough distancing during security and boarding I think a flight has a lesser risk of infection than a bout at the grocery store as the Air is being constantly filtered. You should be fine with a n95 mask.
432   Onvacation   2020 Aug 2, 9:00am  

MrEd says
The European model shows it takes 95% participation for masks to have a positive effect.
Your 50% assumption, for a highly contagious disease, has no positive supporting data .

How do you know the masks are having a positive effect when the Europeans,other than UK and Russia, are not testing as much as we are?
433   Onvacation   2020 Aug 2, 9:02am  

MrEd says
"eats shit"

I hear Biden is going to win the election because Trump is so incompetent. Who're you voting for?
434   Shaman   2020 Aug 2, 9:18am  

WookieMan says
I’m in Vegas now.


Drove through there yesterday. Hope you’re having fun!
435   Onvacation   2020 Aug 2, 10:49am  

We took a road trip to Maine. On the way back we stopped at a Denny's for breakfast. I hear they're now spiking in CV-19 cases. My wife and I may be asymptomatic spreaders.
436   SoTex   2020 Aug 2, 12:20pm  

mell says
You should be fine with a n95 mask.


Turns out I have one. I found it in my tool box. I've fitted myself for respirators in labs before, where you test if you can smell things etc., however I can't get the n95 to fit as well as it should not matter what I do. If I'm wearing glasses they fog up so I know it's not really protecting from much.

I sneezed in the damn thing as well.

Either way, I doubt I could catch it again so soon after having it.
437   mell   2020 Aug 2, 5:09pm  

just_adhom_preaching says
mell says
You should be fine with a n95 mask.


Turns out I have one. I found it in my tool box. I've fitted myself for respirators in labs before, where you test if you can smell things etc., however I can't get the n95 to fit as well as it should not matter what I do. If I'm wearing glasses they fog up so I know it's not really protecting from much.

I sneezed in the damn thing as well.

Either way, I doubt I could catch it again so soon after having it.


If you're sure or have confirmation you had it before then I wouldn't worry either way. I will be using n95/100 masks (plus regular glasses) just because it saves me a lot of hassle with freaked out people I have to interact with and saves paying for retesting. It won't be pleasant and I firmly believe the risk is lesser than regular indoor meeting due to the planes high quality particle filters and forced air circulation, let alone that most people have tested negative and proof so they can avoid quarantine at their destination. It's probably more the airport/security indoors and planing/deplaning. Still the level of freak out over this is ridiculous.
438   mell   2020 Aug 2, 5:12pm  

It looks like we're coming in at around 50k cases today, 30% less than the peak of the 2nd wave, deaths around 500. Recovered cases have now overtaken active by 100k, looks like wave 2 brought on mainly by BLM rioters is starting to fade - thanks for participating in the herd immunity project!
439   WookieMan   2020 Aug 2, 7:27pm  

MrEd says
Btw, saying that someone "eats shit" is a personal attack


#NotWhatWasSaid

WookieMan says
prodigy says
but it does not fit your political narrative so you act like you never read it

When have I mentioned politics? I have no narrative. Just reality. You’re being fed a pile of shit and you’re eating it. Congrats.


You're being fed bad information. Not sure how calling that out is personal. You've done nothing to counter the fact that the vast majority of the public has been wearing masks for months now. Yet we're seeing an increase in cases. Going from 0% mask wearers to 50% is astronomical. It's a 50 bagger statistically. Yet, you keep ignoring that cases are increasing. If positive cases are increasing, it's very clear that mask wearing has little to no impact on spread. You haven't proved mask effectiveness anywhere and there's now counter evidence that the more masks being worn, our cases increase. Keep believing the lie man. The data is blatantly staring you in the face.
440   MrEd   2020 Aug 2, 8:05pm  

Ahh you know better than this.
50% mask wearing doest work.
95% does.
April may most people complied things got better.
June july with good times people relaxed masks and distancing, things returned to worse.
As lockdowns and mask wearing increase now, you will see death ratios drop again.
Rinse and repeat.
Except cases will rise for awhile due to more testing.

WookieMan says
If positive cases are increasing, it's very clear that mask wearing has little to no impact on spread.

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