Case fatality rate is # of deaths / # of positive tests. It’s enormously biased by the availability of testing, and the allocation of the tests we have to the sickest people. It’s not especially likely to generalize to the population at large. We need large scale random sampling of the population for that.
Everyone is eager for these results, because there’s a good chance that the true case count is higher by anywhere from 2x to 100x. If it is, then proportionally fewer people are expected to die as the virus eventually does churn through the whole population.
It’s probably still too early to tell, but this is promising.
Everyone is eager for these results, because there’s a good chance that the true case count is higher by anywhere from 2x to 100x. If it is, then proportionally fewer people are expected to die as the virus eventually does churn through the whole population.
It’s probably still too early to tell, but this is promising.