153 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
153 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3078
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Title: HPR3078: Coronavirus Update 2020-05-07
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3078/hpr3078.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 16:17:08
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3,078 for Wednesday 20 May 2020.
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Today's show is entitled Coronavirus Update 7 May 2020,
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and is part of the series, Health and Health Care. It is hosted by Ahuka
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and is about 15 minutes long
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and carries a clean flag. The summer is
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where we are with this pandemic.
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And how should we respond?
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Quote.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by Ananasthos.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code
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HPR15. That's HPR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at Ananasthos.com.
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Thank you very much.
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Hello, this is Ahuka.
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Welcome to Hacker Public Radio and another episode.
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I won't call it exciting exactly. These are not exciting times.
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But what I want to do is provide an update on something I did a little while ago on the coronavirus,
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taking a look at where we are today.
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First, a few disclaimers. I am not an epidemiologist.
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If we have an epidemiologist in the Hacker Public Radio audience
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who wants to jump in and maybe record a few observations, I would welcome it.
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My background is primarily as an economist with experience with data modeling,
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statistics, data analysis, things like that.
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And so there is some level of insight I can bring to it from that background.
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But I'm not a doctor and I don't play one on TV.
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So I want to get that out of the way.
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Secondly, this is being recorded on May 7, 2020.
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And that's important because the landscape seems to change every day with new reports coming out and so on.
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It could be that something I say today by the time you hear this episode looks stupid.
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Well, okay, that's the risk I'll run.
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But on the other hand, I think the fact that it's changing so much creates a certain problem that I want to address here.
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It creates dangers for us because it's human nature to look for the latest news and jump on it if it looks good.
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It's a prime mistake because we do not in fact know enough at this point to be confident in these news reports.
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I would refer you to my previous program on scientific and medical reports,
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which I will link to in the show notes because it's highly relevant right now.
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While I could not have predicted this pandemic when I wrote it, it contains basic principles that are always relevant.
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Now, the nature of the press is that it is like the carnivorous plant in the movie Little Shop of Horrors, always crying, feed me.
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And of course, we're all interested, if not to say anxious, for any news on the course of this disease and where it is taking us.
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What this means is that you will see an unstoppable stream of news stories touting the latest study on one or another aspect of this.
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Add in the desire of politicians to spend things to their advantage and you have a recipe for disaster.
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So to keep saying, let's remember a few basic principles.
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One study proves nothing.
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There are lots of studies, many of them are one in done without having any effect on medical practice.
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If there is an interesting result, it merely indicates an area for further study.
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Now, study results are only meaningful when they have withstood peer review and have been replicated by other scientists.
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This process does produce good results, but only with time.
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Only in movies do scientists go into the lab and come out 24 hours later with the answer.
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Real life is more complicated.
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If you really want to know what all of this will end, there are two answers.
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It can end very soon with an accompanying loss of life because the virus is still spreading.
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And we're going to see increasing death rates and infection rates show up in places that ignore the science.
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Going outside without a mask and carrying on as usual is not brave, it is stupid.
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Now, the other answer is that a gradual relaxation of isolation can happen if it is guided by sound science.
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Unfortunately, it is just explained that sound science is still being sought and will take time.
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When you see the vast majority of doctors and scientists saying the same thing, that is your best assurance the information is accurate.
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And right now, the number one priority is testing, testing, testing.
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So, with that background, do we know anything at this point?
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Yes, we do. But we also have a lot of unanswered questions.
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The first big question is whether there will be a second wave.
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And this is something that every qualified epidemiologist I have heard from says is guaranteed.
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And the reason is that a certain fatigue sets in with staying in isolation and at least some people will convince themselves they don't need to do it.
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They are wrong and they will guarantee that second wave.
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In the 1918 flu pandemic, the second wave was far worse than the first wave.
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And don't forget, there was a third wave in that pandemic until it petered out in 1920.
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The best thing you can do is keep isolated if at all possible and follow all of the guidelines, such as,
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wear a mask if you must go out, such as for groceries.
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Many stores are offering special hours for seniors. In my state, the governor has mandated that.
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If you are a senior, take advantage. Usually means going early in the morning.
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Okay, that's not a problem. I still have an alarm clock.
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After a shopping trip, wash or disinfect items carefully. Remember that soap is all you need to defeat the virus.
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But use disinfectant wipes when soap is not practical.
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After returning, strip and place all of your clothes in the washer.
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The detergent should kill any virus that is there.
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Wash your hands with soap frequently.
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Try not to touch your face. That's a hard one.
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Maintain at least two meters distance from anyone not in your household when you do go out.
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Or in the United States, we would say, maintain six feet. It's about the same.
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Finally, try to stay fit.
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I go for walks in my neighborhood if there aren't too many others out. And when there is someone else out, I give them a wide separation.
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I also do gardening in my own yard and exercise in my home.
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Now that won't prevent you from getting the disease, but it may prevent you from dying of it.
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Yeah, this is all of the stuff we've been hearing all along. But annoying as it is, it does work if you do it.
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Next question is the virus mutating? Yes. In other news, water is wet.
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Face it, mutation is what organisms do, and it has been true for billions of years.
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The question you really have is, is it getting worse? And right now, the answer is, we don't know.
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Sorry I can't give you any more determinative answer, but we are only at the one study phase right now.
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And we are ways off from the peer-reviewed replicated consensus phase that will resolve this.
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There are indications that at least this virus does not mutate as much as influenza, but even that probably requires more study.
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Am I immune? Well, we'd all love to know if we are immune. This requires two big things to give a good answer.
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First, does having the disease and then recovering give you immunity?
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And the sad truth is, we don't know yet. The common cold is a coronavirus. You never get immunity from that.
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Influenza is a virus and getting it one year provides no immunity the next.
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And if this coronavirus is one where getting it once does provide immunity, we still need testing to discover this.
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The number one priority, as we said, right now in all locations should be testing, testing, testing.
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That is the prerequisite for doing any decent epidemiology.
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There was a report, and note this is one study, out of South Korea that indicated that some people could get the disease twice,
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but they re-analyzed the data and decided it might have just been false positives.
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Now, that's the kind of thing that happens when scientists are trying to do a year's worth of work in a few weeks, which is essentially what they're doing.
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Is it more infectious than we thought? Again, very unclear. It's even less clear what this implies.
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An argument is being made that if the rate of infection is higher for any given number of deaths that would imply it is less lethal.
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So we basically have a fraction where total number of people infected is in the denominator, deaths are in the numerator, and if you increase the denominator, the fraction goes down.
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Okay, so that's basic math. This is being used to argue in favor of this not being a big deal.
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So go ahead and reopen everything. Hey, it's less lethal than we thought. We don't need to worry.
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But to put it in perspective, in the 2017 and 2018 flu season, which was on the higher end of deaths from flu.
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That's why I picked it to give the most reasonable comparison here. I picked a high flu season.
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We had 61,000 deaths in the United States over the entire season. Today is May 7, 2020.
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We have 75,000 deaths in the US, and that is with all of the extraordinary measures we put in place to keep people safe.
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To make an argument that COVID-19 is no more dangerous than the flu is to be criminally stupid at best.
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And if you're doing it because you just want to force people to get off unemployment and go working your business, it is criminal.
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It is evil. That's just something we shouldn't be doing.
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Now, another question. Didn't they predict more deaths? Why yes, they did.
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A widely used model for the US is from the Institute for Health, Metrics, and Evaluation, also known as IHME at the University of Washington.
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And you may or may not know that Washington State is the place where the first coronavirus outbreak seems to have occurred in the United States as best we know.
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And they have issued forecasts that have ranged from hundreds of thousands of deaths to around 60,000 deaths.
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Well, they're all over the place. Clearly, they have no idea what they're doing, right? Not so fast.
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As the statistician George Box famously said, all models are wrong, but some are useful.
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In this case, you have to factor in two things. One is uncertainty, of course.
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To forecast how many people will die, for instance, it helps to know how many people have died.
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And there's been a lot of argument over this one.
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What counts as a COVID-19 death?
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And does each of our 50 states have their own definition of that?
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Because every state has their own health reporting system, there is no national standard as yet.
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There could be one if we had leadership at the national level.
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So one example of the problems you run into is something called excess deaths.
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And New York City is a good example of this.
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If a given area has a pretty regular death rate for a number of years, which was the case in New York City for about 10 years.
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And then suddenly the death rate jumps to five times higher in the midst of a pandemic, it is reasonable to suspect that those excess deaths are a result of the coronavirus.
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But if those deaths get counted, others will argue that you're inflating the numbers to make it look worse than it is, and that only a positive coronavirus serum test should count.
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Well, with each state going their own way on this, we get the interesting result that the lethality of the disease appears to depend on where your state is.
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And that's ridiculous. The disease is the disease. It isn't better or worse in a New York state or Kansas.
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But many politicians have an incentive to get the numbers they want.
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Now, the other factor complicating things is the phenomenon known as self-preventing prophecy.
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You see, the initial high estimates that we got from IHME and other models were along the lines of this is what will happen if you don't take strong measures.
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And of course, they were very high.
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And we know that governments, such as the UK and the US, looked at those predictions and started to take some stronger measures.
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So, after a little bit, new predictions came out that were lower as a result of those measures.
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And now we are seeing misguided efforts to get people to go out and resume normal life.
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And as a result, the newest forecasts are going up again. This is a feedback loop in other words.
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So, this is just a quick look at what we do and do not know at this point.
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This is a hookah for Hacker Public Radio signing off and reminding you to stay indoors and wash your hands. Bye-bye.
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This show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
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Hacker Public Radio was founded by the Digital Dove Pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
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If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up episode yourself.
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On this, otherwise, status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareAlive, 3.0 license.
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