The curve upwards on deaths shows a small but rising uptick about 5-7 days after the case numbers go up, but really hits the top of the curve around 2-4 weeks out. So we wait. In this most recent round of cases, there are proportionately fewer people 80+ and way more 18-44. We're probably still looking at 2% of cases dying, at least (I hope I'm wrong), maybe 3%.
Right now, we stand at ~3.8% known case mortality rate.
That would mean that if we do hit 100,000 new cases a day as some are predicting, we'd see 2000-3800 deaths per day about a month or so after (probably less, since obviously, hospitals will be full, etc). My guess is that it will be 3000 per day.
The people wearing lace masks are despicable and ridiculous. I can't say what I think about this and stay within ToS.
I hope and pray that today's numbers will be the same or slightly better than yesterday's, even though at 75,000 new cases a day, we are still looking at 2,000 deaths per day in future (at the peak, with some deaths occurring early and later than the peak). It'll probably peak at 2200-2500 deaths for a few days.
That's almost one 9-11 event per day.
We're going to be at 150,000 deaths total in about 10 days in any case. So much was preventable.
I'd love to see headlines from everyone's local papers (or close to local). I'm noticing that in some places, CoVid isn't much of a front page story, other places it is. My city's "newspaper" has almost only CoVid news (this is new), because they're closing government buildings (again) and we're down to only 5 ICU beds in the main hospital.
I'm also really curious as to how many of you still have cable television?