This thread was created on 3/8/2020, or approximately one million years ago in virus time. It’s getting pretty bloated now, and a lot of things that were high value at the time have been eclipsed by events, making karma not a very useful sorting tool. So I’m declaring this thread finished, and asking everyone to move over to the April Coronavirus Open Thread.
Interested in what happened in this thread? Here’s the timeless or not-yet-eclipsed highlights:
- Scott Alexander comes up with Hammer and Dance 6 days before Tomas Pueyo
- Spiracular on why SARS-Cov-2 is unlikely to be lab-created.
- Two documents collating estimates of basic epidemiological parameters, in response to this thread
- Discussion on whether the tuberculosis vaccine provides protection against COVID-19.
- Suggestive evidence that COVID-19 removes sense of taste and smell.
- Could copper tape be net harmful?
South Korea, Singapore, Italy
The UK.
We're running an interesting experiment to see which approach works. One potential benefit is that the world will be able to observe which of the two strategies is viable and switch between them, at least theoretically. Practically, switching from 'suppress/contain' to 'flatten curve' seems a lot more feasible than the alternative of trying to suppress after not taking tough measures, as the UK will have to do if its strategy means cases grow out of control. South Korea could still try to use curve-flattening as a backup plan.
However, for the reason given in the blog post, suppression will be a viable backup even if switching from curve-flattening to suppression is intrinsically harder than the other way round.