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?
Thanks for pointing me in this direction. I think the key worry highlighted in the post is that the health care system gets overwhelmed with even just a few percent of the population being infected. So even if we can bring peak infections down by a factor of 2-4 by slowing transmission, the health care system is still going to be creamed at the peak.
I've now built a discrete-time, Bay Area version of the SIR model (+ hospitalization) in this Google sheet. I assume 20% of infections need hospitalization, of which 20% need intensive care, and use raw bed-to-population ratios (non-COVID utilization vs stretching capacity should roughly cancel out). Hospital bed availability at peak infections is 4% (25x over capacity) in the uncontrolled beta=0.25 scenario and only improves to 10% (10x over capacity) in the "controlled" beta=0.14 scenario. Even if my hospitalization/ICU numbers are too high by a factor of 5 the "controlled" scenario still looks pretty terrible. Any feedback on the model assumptions would be super useful.