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Rochelobe

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Posts posted by Rochelobe

  1. 12 minutes ago, Notre Dame Joe said:

     

    No I word it carefully 

     

    Testing the efficacy of a mask in a controlled laboratory setting is many degrees removed from proving their effect on public health.   I wore my old dust mask in public places once it started and eventually got some cloth ones.  But I don't kid myself that I'm stopping corona. 

     

     

     

    That would be so typical of governing bodies.  If one team gets a corona outbreak; don't cancel an individual game, don't pause their season until they all test negative, no, all of college football must immediately cease because there was an imperfection.

     

    That great omaha.com story someone linked about the 1918 ND@NU game was very illustrative.  Facing a much more dangerous virus, our grandparents held the season and did cancellations and postponements where it was needed.  And they did it without team jets and Spanish Flu test kits. 

    I agree that masks do not stop the spread.  That is not the purpose.  Slowing the spread != Stopping the spread.

     

    I guess what I don't understand is the massive resistance as if somehow masks make all live unlivable.

     

    As far as 1918 - approximately ~675K Americans died during that pandemic, out of a population of ~106M.  Since we are at around 3 times that number of Americans today, following the same approaches used during the 1918 pandemic would result in a around ~2M American deaths due to coronavirus, assuming the death rate is the same.  Estimates I've seen for the Spanish flu mortality rate have been as high as 2.5%.  At this time we have a mortality rate of 6% for coronavirus worldwide. 

     

    I realize we may be missing a bunch of asymptomatic cases, meaning coronavirus isn't that deadly, but, since we only have the current data, we don't yet have any "strong science" to support a lower death rate, so I guess we have to go with what the current numbers are for a mortality rate based upon current deaths and positive cases.  A lower number is only inferred, correct?

     

    Also in 1918 vs 2020 is that schools had nothing remotely close to the liability attached to them in 1918 if athletes got sick/died as we would have in 2020.  Lawyers have fundamentally changed how institutions will have to deal with this, even outside of the medical information.  There can be positive and negative benefits due to this increased scrutiny, but in this case it probably leads to an increasing chance of the season being cancelled.  I doubt the same types of legal protections were in place for players in 1918.

     

    For good or for bad that is probably the dominant reason the season will be cancelled.  The virus could be raging, but if there was any way the schools knew they would be legally protected, I think we'd be having a very different discussion - more about how teams would cope with missing players, but the expectation would be the season would proceed.

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  2. 4 minutes ago, Notre Dame Joe said:

    I didn't see any masks for sale in mid-April, did you?  Our many box stores sold out of even basic bandanas.  Also, slowing the spread of a virus with cloth masks is an inference, not a conclusion backed by strong science. 

     

     

    Yes. The NCAA is laying down some pretty specific guidelines for a season that is supposedly doomed to not happen.   Kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy.

     

    Speaking of which everyone seems to assume that the NCAA has the authority to cancel college football?  IS that in their charter?

    I was using cloth masks in mid-April.  I started using crude folded bandannas cut from a T-shirt around 1 Apr, ~2 weeks after my state issued their stay-at-home order.  Some kind of covering was required if you wished to enter grocery stores at that time.  By ~13 Apr I was able to find and start using cloth masks with ear holders.

     

    "Strong science"

     

    Are you are saying there is no published research on the use of cloth masks?

     

    http://files.fast.ai/papers/masks_lit_review.pdf

     

    Quote

    Multiple studies show the filtration effects of cloth masks relative to surgical masks. Particle sizes for speech are on the order of 1μm(20) while typical definitions of droplet size are 5μm-10μm(5). Generally available household materials had between a 49% and 86% filtration rate for0.02μm exhaled particles whereas surgical masks filtered 89% of those particles(21). In a laboratory setting, household materials had 3% to 60% filtration rate for particles in the relevant size range, finding them comparable to some surgical masks (22). In anotherlaboratory setup, a tea cloth mask was found to filter 60% of particles between0.02μmto1μm, where surgical masks filtered 75% (23). Dato et al (2006) (24), note that "quality commercial masks are not always accessible." They designed and tested a mask made from heavyweight T-shirts, finding that it "offered substantial protection from the challenge aerosol and showed good fit with minimal leakage". Although cloth and surgical masks are primarily targeted towards droplet particles, some evidence suggests they may have a partial effect in reducing viral aerosol shedding (25).

     

    From the abstract of the same paper:

    Quote

    The preponderance of evidence indicates that mask wearing reduces the transmissibility per contact by reducing transmission of infected droplets in both laboratory and clinical contexts. Public mask wearing is most effective at stopping spread of the virus when compliance is high.

     

    This paper was published in April 2020. At that time a mask recommendation was considered scientifically valid.

     

    https://www.ucsf.edu/news/2020/06/417906/still-confused-about-masks-heres-science-behind-how-face-masks-prevent

     

    Quote

    We talked to UC San Francisco epidemiologist George Rutherford, MD, and infectious disease specialist Peter Chin-Hong, MD, about the CDC’s reversal on mask-wearing, the current science on how masks work, and what to consider when choosing a mask.

     

    The original CDC guidance partly was based on what was thought to be low disease prevalence earlier in the pandemic, said Chin-Hong.

     

    “So, of course, you’re preaching that the juice isn’t really worth the squeeze to have the whole population wear masks in the beginning – but that was really a reflection of not having enough testing, anyway,” he said. “We were getting a false sense of security.”

     

    Rutherford was more blunt. The legitimate concern that the limited supply of surgical masks and N95 respirators should be saved for health care workers should not have prevented more nuanced messaging about the benefits of masking. “We should have told people to wear cloth masks right off the bat,” he said.

     

    https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/coronavirus/in-depth/coronavirus-mask/art-20485449

     

    Quote

    A cloth mask is intended to trap droplets that are released when the wearer talks, coughs or sneezes. Asking everyone to wear cloth masks can help reduce the spread of the virus by people who have COVID-19 but don't realize it.

    Cloth face coverings are most likely to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus when they are widely used by people in public settings. And countries that required face masks, testing, isolation and social distancing early in the pandemic have successfully slowed the spread of the virus.

     

    I doubt the Mayo Clinic is going to recommend cloth masks without having seen some metrics that support their use in reducing spread of the virus. 

     

    https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prevent-getting-sick/cloth-face-cover-guidance.html

     

    Quote

    Cloth face coverings are recommended as a simple barrier to help prevent respiratory droplets from traveling into the air and onto other people when the person wearing the cloth face covering coughs, sneezes, talks, or raises their voice. This is called source control. This recommendation is based on what we know about the role respiratory droplets play in the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19, paired with emerging evidence from clinical and laboratory studies that shows cloth face coverings reduce the spray of droplets when worn over the nose and mouth. COVID-19 spreads mainly among people who are in close contact with one another (within about 6 feet), so the use of cloth face coverings is particularly important in settings where people are close to each other or where social distancing is difficult to maintain.

     

    https://www.kpax.com/news/how-cloth-face-mask-reduce-covid-spread

    Quote

    “Nothing is foolproof, but what we’re doing is putting another prevention measure in to decrease the spread of this disease,” said State Medical Officer Dr. Greg Holzman.

     

    Yeah, there is no scientific evidence at all.

     

    Are cloth masks in and of themselves a complete solution?

     

    NO

     

    Is anyone saying they are a complete solution?

     

    NO

     

    Who is (generally) saying that they should not be used?

     

    (In my opinion) Those using political, rather than medical agendas as their driving point.

     

    Once again - the idea is to slow the spread as much as possible in order to buy time for proactive quarantining rather than bulk quarantining of everyone.

     

    Europe has used cloth masks in conjunction with social distancing and heavy testing as they have decreased their rate of active positive cases.   They still have hot spots flaring up, so we must continue to work for a vaccine.  Masks are meant to help us buy time.

     

    Most of the rest of the world resumed sports sooner than the US, and has been able to start allowing attendance at some of those sporting events (AFL).  The US may try that in September with college football, but, based upon current infection rates, it will probably hasten the shutdown of the season unless things seriously improve, such as an order of magnitude or more reduction in daily positives.

     

    Bottom Line:

    In my opinion, the United States missed the opportunity to sufficiently contain the initial wave of the virus during the months of April/May/June, which would have lowered the daily new positive rate low enough that a feasible college football season could have occurred in the Sep-Dec time frame.  At this point, evidence would indicate that we will not sufficiently lower counts anytime in the near future, unless we become more diligent about mask use.  So, if a season does occur under the current situation it will probably be greatly disrupted by outbreaks, with many teams playing (at most) 3 or 4 games this fall.

     

     

    • Plus1 5
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  3. 2 hours ago, Hilltop said:

    I am personally not convinced that masks are the end all strategy to end the virus but I am doing my part.  I think to really determine the effectiveness, we need everyone to wear them while keeping society open.  If everything has to be closed for them to work, I'm not on board.  We need our economy going... and we need football.        

    I doubt Fauci feels it is an end all strategy either. 

     

    Now that we have several months of data, there is evidence that wearing a mask lowers the chance of transmission. I think the thrust is as follows:

     

    1. Wear masks: Wearing masks lowers the transmission rate, slowing the spread of the virus (but not stopping it all by itself). 

     

    2. Increase testing: Increased testing should provide a more complete snapshot of how widespread the infection is, particularly the asymptomatic cases that apparently can spread the virus without ever being aware they have the virus.

     

    3. Expanded testing processing:  Expanded processing lowers the amount of time people wait to get results after they are tested. 

     

    Advantages of using all three in combination:

     

    a. Slowing transmission rate allows for hospitals to "space out" the number of COVID patients they have at any given time, thus allowing them to provide better treatment, resulting in a (hopefully) lower rate of death. 

     

    b. Slowing transmission rate with increased testing/expanded processing allows for a chance to get ahead to better identify potential hotspots prior to being fully realized. 

     

    Thus, to me the logical steps at that time would be to use the combination of the three methods to more quickly identify those with the virus earlier in the process - and find the asymptomatic cases and quarantine them - instead of having to quarantine everyone.  However, those out and about in society should still use masks to slow the rate, so that the spread can be limited until we can turn around, say 30% or more tests per day in a given community (with much quicker turnaround times, hopefully only a day or so).

     

    I think by doing that we would be able to slowly stamp it down (probably not out), and at least buy time for a vaccine.  At the same time, it allows for more opening of a communities businesses as the positive rate drops, and those that are positive are more quickly identified and quarantined.

     

    Had we started implementing this in mid-April, we would most likely have a semi-normal college football season this fall - maybe with 20-40% attendance.

     

    I just watched an Australian Rules Football match Saturday night (our time) that had fans in the stands.  Probably 15% attendance. I believe Australia implemented procedures similar to the ones I listed above.

     

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  4. I know they are not a football league, but yet another conference dropping all non-conference games:

     

    https://omaha.com/sports/college/creighton/big-east-goes-conference-only-for-fall-sports-no-decision-on-basketball-yet/article_a02eed44-18e3-5d6d-9445-79f53621d65c.html

     

    Quote

    The Big East will cancel all nonconference competitions for its fall sports teams, it announced Thursday.

     

     

    This entire exercise (going conference only, minor conferences canceling fall sports), feels like slow motion dominoes that will eventually knock over fall P5 football.

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  5. 14 minutes ago, Undone said:

     

    I'm curious how many of these 20 total guys wound up showing symptoms. I'll see if I can find any info on that.

    That information does seem hard to find.  Of course, with HIPAA, the players would have to consent to releasing that they tested positive. 

     

    My guess (pure speculation) is not many, possibly none of them showed symptoms.  If a huge cluster of players were showing symptoms I think it would have been much bigger news.

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  6. 23 minutes ago, talaricohusker said:

    MLS is playing right now with no fans and the MLB,NBA,NHL are getting ready to start I haven’t heard much about MLS having positive cases since they started playing. Also my wife said the there was an athletic camp some where in Illinois and 65 kids tested positive and one 13 year old died from it not sure if it’s true but I thought I throw that little tidbit out there 

    Yes, and they seem to be having success.  However, they have already had two teams withdraw (FC Dallas and Nashville SC) - Dallas had 11 players test positive and Nashville had 9. A few other games have been postponed due to positive cases.  And this is for players in an isolation bubble. 

     

    Unless they are just going to lock down all the college football players for the entire fall, I think we will see many more teams have to withdraw or postponement/cancellation of games.  Not impossible to work through, but we could see a lot of teams with 4 game seasons spread out over 3 months, or similar types of chaos.

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  7. 1 minute ago, kansas45 said:

    If there is no football season this fall (and it is looking more like it every day), will this whole thing be officially called an apocalypse? You know, real Biblical stuff like we read about and movies were made of like The Day After Tomorrow, Mad Max, or whatever your favorite is. 

     

    Which leads me to this: which "end of the world" movie best fits with the cancelling of college football? 

    On the Beach?

  8. 40 minutes ago, Archy1221 said:

    One problem we have when looking at COVID-19 is that too many people look at the national numbers.  How many total deaths, infections, hospitalizations, etc...those don’t mean much in places where things are relatively under control(flat, slightly rising, slightly falling). 
     

    even looking at this from a state level is misleading because density matters And most states have unique areas.  Look at it from a county perspective.  You take Texas like you cited and most infections are coming from a handful of counties.  

    Yes, I think there is evidence that the risk is lower in lower population density areas.  That is probably not a surprising result.

     

    However, what does seem to be indicated, no matter where we are is that large numbers of people, gathered in close proximity, seems to greatly increase the spread.  This is the situation in bars.  There have been several cases of bars/restaurants being responsible for hot spots.  At this time there doesn't seem to be a large indication that the protests have been as bad - even though those are also high density events.

     

    To me the main difference is (1) the majority of protestors are wearing masks while those in bars/restaurants are not and (2) the protests are outside while the documented bar/restaurant hot spots have taken place indoors.

     

    So which matters more?  Probably being indoors with non-filtered recirculated air.  But, I'm not sure we can completely discount the impact masks have had on reducing spread during the protests.  It could be simply that the outdoor environment with UV+wind disperses things better, but it might also be the combination of masks reducing the amount of aerosols. 

     

    So where would football be in this scenario?  I could see arguing both ways - football is close proximity thus dangerous or football is (primarily) outdoors and thus lower risk.  I've seen the face shield plans and I'm not sure how effective those would be vs masks at reducing aerosol propagation during an athletic event.  I think we end up with no football primarily because we won't have enough evidence in a month or so to show that risk is much lower than indoor dining.  I hope I am wrong and we can have football this fall, I'm just not very optimistic.

  9. 18 hours ago, RedDenver said:

    Others have already mentioned that the deaths lag the cases by several weeks. There is an uptick in the daily death rate over the past week that suggests the death rate is going back up. Note that the data in this image is a few days old and I don't see a more current image I can paste here, but you can check the updated data at this site: https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/us/

     

    US-deaths_trans_NvBQzQNjv4BqDAoCN0zt2fIW

    Looking at the worldometer site for daily new cases supports your point - the uptick in positive cases dates from early/mid June, right around 4 weeks ago.  Some of the people that have died have died quickly - I've read a few stories where someone started feeling bad and within a few days they were gone.  However, I've seen more stories of people that had a slow decline that pushed them to the hospital, then spent weeks on a ventilator before dying - which is more aligned with the 4 weeks from exposure to death scenario. As far as the sudden declines go, it could be they were exposed and pre-symptomatic/mild for 2 weeks or more prior to their quick decline.

     

    image.png.e4bc2a95dc6cd556fd074c36fea133be.png

     

    The next 3 weeks could be really bad (as in peak in New York/Italy bad).  Some things that might mitigate that -

     

    (1) average age of those hospitalized is going down, and maybe younger people that get really sick will have a high probability of recovering

     

    (2) as the pandemic has progressed there are signs that doctors are finding ways to mitigate the effects of the virus in some patients, improving their chance for recovery.

     

    (3) the virus may have mutated into a less lethal form (even as it seems it may have mutated into a more communicable form)

     

    I don't think we have enough evidence to be definitive on any of these possibilities, so I think it is reasonable to say we are still in a very high risk environment, until we see if any of the things listed above are actually happening.

     

    The timeline for determining any of these factors does not match up well with the planned start of the football season. 

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  10. Because, apparently its just like WWII, I guess.

     

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/ncaaf/2020/07/10/lou-holtz-fox-news-normandy-college-football-season/5414975002/

     

    Quote

    "People stormed Normandy," Holtz said to host Laura Ingraham. "They knew there was going to be casualties, they knew there was gonna be risk. ... It's our way of living, look at it from both points of view. The risk is always there. But you cannot just look at it from one side.

    I understand what he means about risk, but its always a lot easier to say that when the speaker doesn't have to take the risk.

     

    Later, regarding the Big Ten's move to conference only for this season:

     

    Quote

    "But let me tell you the devastating effect is the non-power conference schools. ... Louisiana Tech, they used to play Baylor, Vanderbilt, those aren't going to happen. Those were very, very important."

    Skip Holtz coaches at La Tech, so I guess that is why he picked them.  I just thought it was funny that he picked a team that has its non conference P5 matchups against two conferences (Big XII, SEC) that haven't yet moved to conference only schedules. 

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  11. 2 minutes ago, 84HuskerLaw said:

    It seems that health & safety protocols are a part of the story but financial issues are much bigger factors. 

    I think this is a key point. Most Athletic Departments at large universities deal with serious coin, involving hundreds of employees, players, and support personnel.

     

    By going conference only, it provides control over scheduling the games which is crucial to maximize flexibility for TV broadcasts. In a scenario with empty (or very low allowed attendance) stadiums, the TV money will be even more critical this season than in a normal season. 

     

  12. 24 minutes ago, krc1995 said:

    How about bringing  Notre Dame in as a one season free agent?  

    Since Notre Dame has the agreement with the ACC for ~5 games a year, I saw a couple of stories speculating that they may just end up playing all ACC teams this year - since ACC may want to not abandon their agreement with Notre Dame this year in hopes of keeping it going forward when things return to "normal".

     

    I think it would be good to bring in Notre Dame for a year, but would they also want one more team to keep it at an even number of teams so they don't have to have mandatory idle weeks? 

     

    Of course that's the same issue the ACC faces if they bring in Notre Dame for the year.

     

  13. 5 minutes ago, kansas45 said:

     

    I am not trolling anyone. It is a perfect pictorial analogy. And I did respond to the person who asked the question. If I hit the wrong button, my apologies, but I included the quote that asked the question "thoughts?" 

     

      55 minutes ago, Rochelobe said:

    Thoughts?

    Round peg in square hole or square peg in round hole? | plus.maths.org

     
    Did you mean respond with text? Ok, square peg in a round hole to your plan. Or you are attempting to put a conventional wisdom idea into a totally different view.  You are using typical hope and potential delusion into a totally different problem with too many different variables. Is this satisfactory?

    I did not ask the question "Thoughts?"

     

    I assume you understand that word was in my post because I was quoting another poster.

     

    Or, were you just trying to troll me but cut all of my response?

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  14. 19 minutes ago, HuskermanMike said:

     

    3) Start after Halloween- the schedule would just move back the playoff, CCG, and bowl games

     

    4) Start after Thanksgiving- might have to condense the season some and play 8 games instead of 10. Teams would play 2 opponents outside their division- for Nebraska hopefully Rutgers and PSU, but more likely OSU and PSU. 

     

    5) Start when regular bowl games are played/middle of December- might condense the season to divisional games only then the CCG and go to playoff/bowls. For those that play less games like the Pac 12, they just play an extra game during CCG weekend to get to 6 games or they just play the closest team in the other division. The goal would be to end the season by late Feb/early March. 

     

    6) Start first week of January and play all 10 games. The goal would be to try and get the playoff by Easter. Spring practice is all but gone in this scenario. 

     

     

    Numbers 3-6 would prevent an entire Spring ball season. Spring ball is cancelled most likely and fall camp can start earlier to make up for those practices. Another possibility is no contact practices in May/June when new students arrive as a Spring practice. 

     

     

    Thoughts?

     

     

    I think these (particularly 3 and 4) seem like a good compromise if we have good progress on lowering the number of positive cases by mid Oct.  3 and 4 also have the advantage of probably not really affecting the fall 2021 season, if things have started getting back to pre-COVID days.

  15. 11 minutes ago, DevoHusker said:

     

    Not sure on the schollies...but they almost have to grant the eligibility, no?

    Until it is definitive on what, if any season happens for this fall, I would doubt we hear much.  Once we see what kind of season there will be I would assume a few possibilities:

     

    1) No season - eligibility extended, similar to how NCAA handled spring sports

    2) ~10 game seasons (conference only) - most likely business as usual as far as eligibility

    3) Truncated season (schedule is interrupted, most teams only play 2 or 3 games) - Who knows?

     

    One solution for possibility 3 would be to treat it similar to the redshirt rule and say no one had the opportunity to play enough games, so eligibility is extended. Or they could treat it like the way basketball was treated - you got your season, so no eligibility extension. Of course there is a difference in this scenario vs basketball, where the regular season was completed, just not the post season. Possibility 2 is more similar to how the 2019-2020 Basketball season was handled.

     

    Maybe if the season is truncated they try to come back in the spring to finish or play a few games.  Spring practice with actual games on the weekends, or something like that.

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  16. On 6/15/2020 at 9:00 AM, knapplc said:

    We have games on the schedule! Hooray!

     

     

    In light of the Big Ten making all fall sports conference only, what impact does this have on the non-conference basketball schedule?  Is basketball considered a winter sport without any changes (at this time) even though these games would still be played when it is technically fall?

  17. 7 hours ago, 84HuskerLaw said:

    Drs have learned some things about covid 19 which has helped.  I feel Fauci and the world’s experts should have known a bad virus would be deadly to sickly, old people.  Common sense and experience should have warranted extreme caution and quarantine of those people immediately. 

    Yes, Doctors have learned about this virus in the past few months.  All I have been saying is that by extending the timeline, they have the opportunity to develop treatments which can result in a net drop in loss of life.  To me this is important if we don't have a vaccine for a few years.  At this time, there is still not definitive evidence that herd immunity is going to be meaningful for this particular virus.

     

    https://www.ibtimes.com/coronavirus-treatment-drug-banned-sports-found-effective-fighting-covid-19-3006779

    Quote

    “In the present COVID-19 pandemic, we suggest short-term supportive EPO treatment of severely affected patients, which we expect to improve disease course and outcome. Although case reports always call for extreme caution, two recently published/submitted case studies on EPO in seriously ill COVID-19 patients are encouraging for the present concept,” said the researchers in their paper published in Molecular Medicine.

     

    https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/07/why-covid-death-rate-down/613945/

     

    Quote

    Hospitalizations and deaths moved up and down in tandem before June. After June, they’ve diverged. National hospitalizations are rising, but deaths aren’t.

     

    Quote

    One study from a hospital in Milan found that from March to May, the mortality rate of its COVID-19 patients declined from 24 percent to 2 percent—"without significant changes in patients’ age.” British hospitals found that their hospital mortality rate has declined every month since April.

     

    So what’s going on? Maybe doctors are just getting smarter about the disease.

     

    Also, the herd immunity approach doesn't mean the economy just keeps chugging along:

     

    https://theweek.com/speedreads/924238/sweden-literally-gained-nothing-from-staying-open-during-covid19-including-no-economic-gains

     

    Quote

    Sweden decided early on for a "soft" approach, forgoing lockdowns for subtle changes to commerce and entertainment, voluntary mitigation guidelines, and encouraging working from home. "This is what has happened," economic correspondent Peter S. Goodman reports in The New York Times: "Not only have thousands more people died than in neighboring countries that imposed lockdowns, but Sweden's economy has fared little better."

     

    https://www.marketwatch.com/story/sweden-didnt-impose-a-lockdown-its-economy-is-just-as-bad-as-its-neighbors-who-did-2020-06-25

     

    Quote

    But there is also an economic question. Did Sweden benefit economically from avoiding the lockdown?

     

    The economic data doesn’t suggest that.

     

    Quote

    Why didn’t Sweden benefit economically?

     

    “The simple answer is that in a pandemic, most people will change their behavior to avoid catching the virus. The cautious behavior is voluntary, irrespective of whether there is no lockdown, as in Sweden, or there is a lockdown, as in Denmark,” Joshi said.

     

     

    I agree - it sucks what has happened to the economy.  A lot of people are going to be evicted over the next month or so, simply because their job evaporated due to the lockdown.  Small businesses will be lost.  College towns are going to have severe impacts this fall due to the lack of home football games.

     

    However, there is a compromise between complete lockdown and completely being opened.  Its called masks and social distancing.  Does it solely resolve the problem?  No.  But it is an important contributing factor to allow us to work through two competing interests.

     

    1) Keep economy chugging along

    2) Protect citizens

     

    Using masks and social distancing buys time for doctors to find a way to at least improve survival rates of those hospitalized - which evidence indicates they are having measurable success at.  At the same time, masks and social distancing, while still being an imposition, are certainly less impactful on the economy than a complete shutdown.

     

    Why do you feel the only solution is absolutely no restrictions?  At this point, herd immunity has not shown much promise.

     

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-06-17/sweden-proves-surprisingly-slow-in-achieving-herd-immunity

     

    Quote

    Sweden has made less progress than expected in achieving immunity to the coronavirus, according to its state epidemiologist.

     

    After leaving schools, shops and restaurants open throughout the pandemic, contagion rates in Sweden are much higher than anywhere else in the Nordic region. Its Covid-19 mortality rate is among the worst in the world. Scientists have been eager to learn whether the flipside of widespread contagion is a higher level of immunity.

     

    But according to Anders Tegnell, Sweden’s state epidemiologist, “the trends in immunity have been surprisingly slow.” He also says “it’s difficult to explain why this is so.”

     

    Granted we are still learning about immunity to this new disease, but at this point the evidence is indicative of no herd immunity until the vaccine is available.  This is possibly due to the fact that this is a new virus, and our body doesn't know what to do with the antibodies.

     

    Even worse, natural antibodies may actually worsen the impact:

     

    https://www.newsweek.com/coronavirus-antibodies-body-brain-damage-1516828

     

    Quote

    The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 may turn our antibodies against us so they attack the brain, according to a small study.

    Researchers looked at 11 intensive care COVID-19 patients in two hospitals in Germany who had unexplained neurological problems. These included epileptic seizures, involuntary muscle jerking, nerve problems, issues moving their eyes, delirium, and uncontrollable muscle contractions. Symptoms were not caused by other conditions or their ICU treatment, the team said.

     

    Granted, many of these studies are in the early stages.  The point is doctors need time to figure this out.  Stretching things via masks/social distancing is about the only method we have that still allows us to keep an operational economy.

     

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  18. This guy seems a bit miffed at the Big Ten's decision:

     

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/college/2020/07/09/big-10-football-cancels-nonconference-games-2020-ramifications-coronavirus/5410182002/

     

    Quote

    The bigger schools are about to kill off the smaller ones, like condors devouring a flock of cardinals. Like vultures, really, picking at the dying, making sure they’re dead.

     

    Quote

    The five biggest conferences — the Big Ten, Pac-12, SEC, ACC and Big 12 — follow each other around, sniffing each other’s rear end, making up the rules as they go and forcing the other 250-plus schools in Division I, not all of which play football, to fall in line.

     

    I guess this columnist feels it is the responsibility of the large schools to make sure the small schools' athletic programs are funded. 

     

    That would be true, to an extent if the NCAA was like the NFL, NBA, MLB, etc.  If universities were "franchises" within the NCAA Football League.  But the organization is only an association.  The closest thing to a league concept are conferences.

     

    At the end, the point is probably moot for this year, since the chance the whole season just gets canceled is probably increasing each day.

     

    There is validity to the fact that the P5 does push the rest of the teams around.  I wonder what % of athletic money is generated by the P5 schools vs the other ~200 non-P5 Division 1 schools across all sports.

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  19. 2 hours ago, WyoHusker56 said:

     

    He didn't give a specific percentage because there was not research verifying that yet, but he did recommend masks as early as April 3rd.

     

     

     

    Also, we would not be anywhere near herd immunity. The hardest hit areas have estimates of 5-15% of the population having the virus and their hospitals were overwhelmed. If we had just let this run wild it would have taken years to get herd immunity (look at the Spanish flu it took 3 years) and the deaths would not be the same. At the peak in NY and Italy the death rate was significantly higher than it is now because hospitals couldn't effectively treat people and more died. This would only accelerate with no attempt to slow it down. Sweden took the herd immunity route and they had deaths at rates three times higher per capita than their neighbors in a very rural country. And guess what? They are headed for their worst recession since WWII because people stayed home anyways and their economy is contracting 7% this year. And the final nail in the coffin for your herd immunity argument is that estimates show Sweden as a nation is at 6-14% immunity right now indicating they have a LONG way to go before they are anywhere near herd immunity. In the scientific community Sweden's approach is looked at as a certified failure.

     

    Stop using your herd immunity argument it's wrong and there are absolutely no facts to back it up.

     

    I agree.  Sweden went for the herd immunity approach.

     

    The results: 7359 cases/million, 545 deaths/million

    For comparison, the US is currently at 9723 cases/million, 410 deaths/million

     

    Other Scandinavian countries (which followed more formal lockdowns/masking/social distancing):

     

    Denmark: 2230 cases/million, 105 deaths/million

    Finland: 1313 cases/million, 59 deaths/million

    Norway: 1653 cases/million, 46 deaths/million

     

    Since May 31:

    Norway is averaging <10 new positive cases/day,

    Finland is averaging ~40 new positive cases/day (down to <10 since mid June)

    Denmark is averaging ~35 new positive cases/day

    Sweden is averaging ~1000 new positive cases/day

    Sweden actually had a surge in June, and just in the last week or two they've finally started to drop.

     

    Provided doctors can develop treatments, wide open herd immunity would kill a lot more people than masking/social distancing: 

    (1) too many sick at once - hospitals can't do proper treatment

    (2) not enough time to develop mitigating treatments

     

    However, if your goal is to maximize the number of victims, herd immunity is a great solution

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  20. 35 minutes ago, 84HuskerLaw said:

    You still miss the point.  We are NOT saving any lives, net, by delaying the spread.  Absent a cure / vaccine, the death toll will be about the same.  There is risk that more deaths result if we drag out the spread across the population too slowly.  Immunity from exposure/recovery lasts only so long (months - a year maybe).

    To starve out the virus (herd immunity) you have to get enough people sick in a short time span.  This is my understanding of herd immunity.  Maybe its not the best and we do not know for sure it even applies but other nations seem to have developed some of it as large segments of the populations have not had reported infections. No way the virus is gone without vaccine or herd immunity effects.  

    Seriously!?!?!!?

     

    Improving treatments which improve survival means no additional lives saved?

    So no medicine anywhere that ever saves anyone from dying is actually worth it, since the patient will eventually die anyway (from old age if nothing else)

     

    So, I have a situation where I know 10000 people will get the virus. 

     

    Scenario 1: I do nothing to stop the spread and all 10000 get it in the first month, with a death rate of 5%, meaning 500 people die.  Of course your fanciful herd immunity thing is in effect. 

     

    Scenario 2: I enforce wearing masks, doing social distancing, etc and instead of all 10000 getting it the first month, we spread it out over 10 months, with 1000 per month getting it.  During that time, doctors learn about various techniques/medicines that are able to mitigate many of the bad effects of the virus.  So as each month goes by, there is a slight decrease in the death rate, say from 5% the first month down to 1% by the 10th month.  So lets assume the average is 3% over the 10 months.  In that situation only 300 people die.

     

    There is evidence that doctors are learning about treatments that can lower the death rate.  While not proven yet, it could really help with lowering the overall number of deaths, at the cost of making the period of masking/social distancing go on for longer.

     

     

    I guess the people that are saved in scenario 2 are not important to you. 

     

    When the hospitals overflow in scenario 1, who gets to decided who lives and who dies (who gets treatment and who doesn't)? 

     

     

     

     

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