bluebird
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+xNot arguing about the sentiment - but online learning is not a new thing - at least in NSW. Many students have traditionally done distance learning. The difference now is not the content but the scaling up of the network. That was done at the end of last term and during the holidays. Online learning and online schooling are two different things Schools are an educational facility. They offer much much more than isolated learning followed by dedicated question periods. From preschool all the way to year 12 The alternative for school is home schooling and parents who choose that path need to meet the requirements of specific curriculum and I imagine it is very much a hands on process. Lots of homes don't have the resources for any more than an hour or two of homework each night. And kids that cut classes, don't do homework and / or are falling behind don't stand a chance Scott Morrison basically said the game plan was suppression. That basically means we can expect to see 100 to 200 cases a day which is manageable by our current resources. And any worrying outbreaks will result in local lockdowns. If school is not practical today then it is not practical until a vaccine is available. And that's why he emphasised that school must continue in its current format because nothing is going to change
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scott20won
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“The Rugby Football Union could face further multimillion pound losses after World Rugby revealed that despite extensive contingency plans to save the 2020 Test calendar, the worst-case scenario is that “no international rugby is possible this year”. The RFU is already forecasting losses of £50m over the next 18 months but that is on the basis that England’s four November matches, against New Zealand, Tonga, Argentina and Australia, take place.” https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2020/apr/16/world-rugby-sends-80m-coronavirus-relief-fund-to-national-unions-rugby-union
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Gyfox
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@ bluebird "Nearly 30 per cent of all locally-acquired infections may have been spread by community transmission, up from 19 per cent three weeks ago, the latest government data shows.
This brings the number of confirmed cases acquired by community transmission — meaning authorities have been unable to identify the source of infection — to more than 640, nationally." https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704
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scott20won
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“Savage 80% salary cuts and stand-down orders for all but a handful of Cricket Australia staff until the end of the financial year were forced partly by demands from banks, for the governing body to drastically scale back its costs in order to be considered for an A$200 million [US$126.5 million approx.] line of credit.” Last October, at its AGM, CA reported cash reserves of A$26 million [US$ 16.4 million approx.] plus an additional A$90 million [US$56.9 million approx.] committed in equity investments, numbers that have been hit severely by market downturns and have served to hurt the board's financial position as it deals with the banks. CA is also closely monitoring the health of its major broadcast partners and, by extension, cash providers Fox Sports and Seven, with daily discussions between the organisations about how to progress. At this point, Fox and Seven have maintained their regular payment instalments to CA, as part of a six-year, A$1.18 billion [US$ 74.6 million approx.] broadcast rights deal signed in 2018. CA has been seeking A$200 million in credit from the banks for some weeks, with these latest measures devised partially to help convince financial institutions that the board and its management have done all they can to pare the business down to critical functions out of season.”
https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/_/id/29047678/bank-demands-force-savage-cricket-australia-salary-cuts
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clockwork orange
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Gee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!”
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bluebird
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Its deceptive There were 4000 overseas cases let into the country before quarantine at the shorelines. We know that From that we had 1400 transmissions to known people. It wasn't a clean ratio as some were the cruise ship and others were the wedding of 50th birthday party. But effectively a 35% transmission known to known Assuming most of the overseas cases were in isolation, that means the spread from known people to unknown people was 600, was about 40% Now if you take an unknown to unknown 40% transmission then that means 600 people becomes 240. Those 240 become 96. And those 96 become 40 (etc...) This results in 974 cases of community transmission which means total community transmission goes from 10% to 15% Pretty much any case reported today that doesn't come from a hotel is going to be community transmission and I think instead of the media sensationalising everything they should report 2 sets of numbers each day instead of the single set they have been doing to incite panic And with every case reported from today onwards we simply need to target testing around them and everybody they have been in contact with to trace start and end points as see how much this has spread My concern has always been whether those 240 people (most of who have no reason to suspect they are infected) become 96, or whether they become 600. I think with current lockdown measures in place and 80% of people doing the right thing we are still on a downwards trend. Between now and the end of April is crucial particularly as we head into winter and our health system has to deal with regular strains of flu and colds If there were invisible and rampant outbreaks we were not aware of they would have occurred weeks ago. Instead we are simply dealing with the declining transmissions of a problem we started
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clockwork orange
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+xIf there were invisible and rampant outbreaks we were not aware of they would have occurred weeks ago. This. In a nutshell. But it doesn’t sell papers, eh?
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Gyfox
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+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Some states have this week begun targeted testing to identify the spread on community acquired Covid 19. It will be interesting to see any trend that develops from the increased testing. PS. The increase in the number of cases up to 3 April also reflects cases that were transferred from "under investigation" to "locally acquired source not known". PPS. It looks as if 80+ cases were transferred across from "under investigation" in those first 6 days.
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bluebird
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+x+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Using the word "grow" is deceptive because we didn't go from 1 case to 6000. Independent and unrelated cases counted together can not be used to determine growth It wasn't that long ago that 1 in every 250 people with the Coronavirus was an Australian who just happened to be overseas in the wrong place at the wrong. What was actually happening was people in hard hit areas had seen the long queues in the medical system and what the governments response was so they figured they had a better chance in Australia The ratio of overseas to known to community has remained constant. An increase in overseas over the last 3 weeks saw an increase in community over the last 3 weeks Also don't forget this virus is invisible for 2 weeks so the data you have at any point in time is a description of the situation 2 weeks ago. You cant tie policy implemented on a particular date to cases reported on a particular date and draw a conclusion. Particularly as the majority of cases were caught in countries that didn't have those policies in place so a correlation cant be drawn If you put every overseas case in the first column of an excel spreadsheet (A1 to A4000) and then put related cases in the second column you would have a much better picture of what is happening then simply adding unrelated cases together and calling it growth because they reported on the same day
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Gyfox
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+x+x+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Using the word "grow" is deceptive because we didn't go from 1 case to 6000. Independent and unrelated cases counted together can not be used to determine growth It wasn't that long ago that 1 in every 250 people with the Coronavirus was an Australian who just happened to be overseas in the wrong place at the wrong. What was actually happening was people in hard hit areas had seen the long queues in the medical system and what the governments response was so they figured they had a better chance in Australia The ratio of overseas to known to community has remained constant. An increase in overseas over the last 3 weeks saw an increase in community over the last 3 weeks Also don't forget this virus is invisible for 2 weeks so the data you have at any point in time is a description of the situation 2 weeks ago. You cant tie policy implemented on a particular date to cases reported on a particular date and draw a conclusion. Particularly as the majority of cases were caught in countries that didn't have those policies in place so a correlation cant be drawn If you put every overseas case in the first column of an excel spreadsheet (A1 to A4000) and then put related cases in the second column you would have a much better picture of what is happening then simply adding unrelated cases together and calling it growth because they reported on the same day The 2 week delay is not correct. Infection can take as little as 2 days up to 10 days+ and symptoms can show over a similar period or hardly at all in 80% of cases.
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bluebird
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+x+x+x+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Using the word "grow" is deceptive because we didn't go from 1 case to 6000. Independent and unrelated cases counted together can not be used to determine growth It wasn't that long ago that 1 in every 250 people with the Coronavirus was an Australian who just happened to be overseas in the wrong place at the wrong. What was actually happening was people in hard hit areas had seen the long queues in the medical system and what the governments response was so they figured they had a better chance in Australia The ratio of overseas to known to community has remained constant. An increase in overseas over the last 3 weeks saw an increase in community over the last 3 weeks Also don't forget this virus is invisible for 2 weeks so the data you have at any point in time is a description of the situation 2 weeks ago. You cant tie policy implemented on a particular date to cases reported on a particular date and draw a conclusion. Particularly as the majority of cases were caught in countries that didn't have those policies in place so a correlation cant be drawn If you put every overseas case in the first column of an excel spreadsheet (A1 to A4000) and then put related cases in the second column you would have a much better picture of what is happening then simply adding unrelated cases together and calling it growth because they reported on the same day The 2 week delay is not correct. Infection can take as little as 2 days up to 10 days+ and symptoms can show over a similar period or hardly at all in 80% of cases. The data we get is the point at which it is reported at a hospital not the point at which it is contracted or symptomatic Its possible there have been cases of the Coronavirus that have not been reported because an isolated person returning from overseas simply toughed it out Effectively you have contraction, mild symptoms (which most people have confessed going about their day to day activities), serious symptoms, then report of the virus. The first reported cases in the hotel were about 8 or 9 days and they were under constant monitoring There is also 3 days between contraction and when our testing techniques work. So testing can only bring back detection from 8-14 days to 3 days. We obviously have a mix and match of results but 2 weeks is an average given all circumstances. It definitely wouldn't be sensible to overlay policy with case numbers on the same day
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Gyfox
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The split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%)
On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%)
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clockwork orange
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+x+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Some states have this week begun targeted testing to identify the spread on community acquired Covid 19. It will be interesting to see any trend that develops from the increased testing. PS. The increase in the number of cases up to 3 April also reflects cases that were transferred from "under investigation" to "locally acquired source not known". PPS. It looks as if 80+ cases were transferred across from "under investigation" in those first 6 days. 3 weeks ago most of the testing was ‘targeted’ at people in contact with overseas travellers. In the last 3 weeks the numbers of people returning from overseas has dwindled so the hundreds of thousands of tests have been focused elsewhere .... and surprise surprise when you test more you find more. 2,200 targeted tests in Queensland yesterday resulted in 7 positives. Not sure why they don’t just do 2,200 random tests to prove once and for all whether the thousands of hidden carriers is a myth or not.
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Gyfox
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+x+x+xGee, who’d have thought? Shut the borders and the % of community transmission goes up. So if we have only 2 cases in the next week and they’re both from community transmission that’ll be 100%. So we’d better keep the lockdown because community transmission is on the rise? Is that your point? Never ceases to amaze how the media uses statistics to scare the masses. A shame we don’t see any headlines like “Serious cases fall by 30% in the past week!” The number of community acquired cases (source not known) 3 weeks ago was 142, as of yesterday it was 642. Up until the suppression strategy was enforced on 3 April it had grown to 471 cases having increased by 329 in 6 days. Under the suppression strategy the growth has been slowed with an increase of 171 in 15 days. NSW with 347 cases (up from about 25 cases 4 weeks ago) and Vic with 136 cases (up from 6 cases 3 weeks ago) are the main regions contributing to the total of community acquired Covid 19. Some states have this week begun targeted testing to identify the spread on community acquired Covid 19. It will be interesting to see any trend that develops from the increased testing. PS. The increase in the number of cases up to 3 April also reflects cases that were transferred from "under investigation" to "locally acquired source not known". PPS. It looks as if 80+ cases were transferred across from "under investigation" in those first 6 days. 3 weeks ago most of the testing was ‘targeted’ at people in contact with overseas travellers. In the last 3 weeks the numbers of people returning from overseas has dwindled so the hundreds of thousands of tests have been focused elsewhere .... and surprise surprise when you test more you find more. 2,200 targeted tests in Queensland yesterday resulted in 7 positives. Not sure why they don’t just do 2,200 random tests to prove once and for all whether the thousands of hidden carriers is a myth or not. 3 weeks ago we were doing significantly more testing than now. Average 11,800 tests on 5 day running average as against 7,500 now, but it has ramped up over the last 3 days from as low as 4,900 in a day to 11,500 yesterday and there appears to be a small kick up in the number of infections being detected.
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bluebird
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+xThe split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%) On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%) Sorry but that's still deceptive. 3 weeks ago there were a lot of under investigation cases but there was more of an effort to find the source. To get a truer picture you have to combine the unknown with under investigation and see that this has dropped from 14.4% in March to 10.5% in April. It is also worth looking at the change in figures from March to April Total 2,880 Overseas acquired 1,753 61% Local known 933 32% Combined 194 7% Local unknown 411 14% Under investigation -217 -8% So under investigation has dropped and Local unknown has predictably increased. But the overseas and linked cases still make up 93% of the change from March to April
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Gyfox
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+x+xThe split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%) On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%) Sorry but that's still deceptive. 3 weeks ago there were a lot of under investigation cases but there was more of an effort to find the source. To get a truer picture you have to combine the unknown with under investigation and see that this has dropped from 14.4% in March to 10.5% in April. It is also worth looking at the change in figures from March to April Total 2,880 Overseas acquired 1,753 61% Local known 933 32% Combined 194 7% Local unknown 411 14% Under investigation -217 -8% So under investigation has dropped and Local unknown has predictably increased. But the overseas and linked cases still make up 93% of the change from March to April Adding the "under investigation" to the "unknown" gives a totally false picture. The "under investigation" was split between the two local categories as it shows by both kicking up on the graph as it was distributed to the correct category. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704
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bluebird
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+x+x+xThe split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%) On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%) Sorry but that's still deceptive. 3 weeks ago there were a lot of under investigation cases but there was more of an effort to find the source. To get a truer picture you have to combine the unknown with under investigation and see that this has dropped from 14.4% in March to 10.5% in April. It is also worth looking at the change in figures from March to April Total 2,880 Overseas acquired 1,753 61% Local known 933 32% Combined 194 7% Local unknown 411 14% Under investigation -217 -8% So under investigation has dropped and Local unknown has predictably increased. But the overseas and linked cases still make up 93% of the change from March to April Adding the "under investigation" to the "unknown" gives a totally false picture. The "under investigation" was split between the two local categories as it shows by both kicking up on the graph as it was distributed to the correct category. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704 The point still remains that when more of an effort was put into finding the source that both categories increased Yes local unknown went from 6% to 10% but local known went from 19% to 25%. We just went from not knowing 8% of the infection source to knowing the infection source. The ratios have still largely held consistent. If there was community transmission running rampant then we would have seen a drastic change in the ratios Instead all we have seen as Clockwork Orange rightfully pointed out is less people returning from overseas offset against the trickle in community transmission we have come to expect
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Gyfox
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+x+x+x+xThe split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%) On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%) Sorry but that's still deceptive. 3 weeks ago there were a lot of under investigation cases but there was more of an effort to find the source. To get a truer picture you have to combine the unknown with under investigation and see that this has dropped from 14.4% in March to 10.5% in April. It is also worth looking at the change in figures from March to April Total 2,880 Overseas acquired 1,753 61% Local known 933 32% Combined 194 7% Local unknown 411 14% Under investigation -217 -8% So under investigation has dropped and Local unknown has predictably increased. But the overseas and linked cases still make up 93% of the change from March to April Adding the "under investigation" to the "unknown" gives a totally false picture. The "under investigation" was split between the two local categories as it shows by both kicking up on the graph as it was distributed to the correct category. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704 The point still remains that when more of an effort was put into finding the source that both categories increased Yes local unknown went from 6% to 10% but local known went from 19% to 25%. We just went from not knowing 8% of the infection source to knowing the infection source. The ratios have still largely held consistent. If there was community transmission running rampant then we would have seen a drastic change in the ratios Instead all we have seen as Clockwork Orange rightfully pointed out is less people returning from overseas offset against the trickle in community transmission we have come to expect That there is an increase in community transmission source unknown means that vigilance needs to be maintained as there is the potential for breakout and fast spread if the wrong restrictions are removed in the wrong location in fact as NW Tassie has shown there is the chance for a significant breakout with the current restrictions. I would expect that the last to have restrictions eased will be NSW and Vic with SA and NT being the trial regions.
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bluebird
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+x+x+x+x+xThe split of cases on 28 March was:- Overseas acquired - 2,456 (67.5%) Local known - 691 (19%) Local unknown - 231 (6.3%) Under investigation - 257 (8.1%) On April 17:- Overseas acquired - 4,209 (64.5%) Local known - 1,624 (24.9%) Local unknown - 642 (9.8%) Under investigation - 40 (0.7%) Sorry but that's still deceptive. 3 weeks ago there were a lot of under investigation cases but there was more of an effort to find the source. To get a truer picture you have to combine the unknown with under investigation and see that this has dropped from 14.4% in March to 10.5% in April. It is also worth looking at the change in figures from March to April Total 2,880 Overseas acquired 1,753 61% Local known 933 32% Combined 194 7% Local unknown 411 14% Under investigation -217 -8% So under investigation has dropped and Local unknown has predictably increased. But the overseas and linked cases still make up 93% of the change from March to April Adding the "under investigation" to the "unknown" gives a totally false picture. The "under investigation" was split between the two local categories as it shows by both kicking up on the graph as it was distributed to the correct category. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704 The point still remains that when more of an effort was put into finding the source that both categories increased Yes local unknown went from 6% to 10% but local known went from 19% to 25%. We just went from not knowing 8% of the infection source to knowing the infection source. The ratios have still largely held consistent. If there was community transmission running rampant then we would have seen a drastic change in the ratios Instead all we have seen as Clockwork Orange rightfully pointed out is less people returning from overseas offset against the trickle in community transmission we have come to expect That there is an increase in community transmission source unknown means that vigilance needs to be maintained as there is the potential for breakout and fast spread if the wrong restrictions are removed in the wrong location in fact as NW Tassie has shown there is the chance for a significant breakout with the current restrictions. I would expect that the last to have restrictions eased will be NSW and Vic with SA and NT being the trial regions. I don't disagree with your sentiment but I still think its wrong to call it an increase If 300 people infect 150 people, 450 total infected is an "increase" in numbers, but anything less than a 100% transmission rate will result in the virus taking care of itself The next 2 weeks need to be focussed on finding the community transmissions, and the 2 weeks after that we need to transition from a state wide response to a local response. Quarantine at a state level is not a good precedent. If 5%-10% of our country was in lockdown our economy would look much different. Instead we have 100% of schools in Victoria learning from home, 100% of pubs and bars closed, a 10% unemployment rate etc... just so we can manage what couldn't be more than 2-3 problematic regions
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clockwork orange
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Is anywhere publishing data on serious/critical cases e.g. new cases and recovered. In the past 2 weeks we’ve gone from around 90+ down to 57 cases. But I can’t tell if this is 33 recovered and no new cases, or 25 recovered and 8 dead, or all recovered and 57 new serious cases. it would also be interesting to know how many (if any) under the age of say 60 have actually been in a serious/critical condition.
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scott20won
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“The $16 million Rugby Australia is hoping to receive in a loan from World Rugby is believed to cover outstanding debts including well over $1 million in legal fees for the Israel Folau case and several million dollars owed to other creditors. “ https://www.theaustralian.com.au/sport/rugby-union/16m-loan-would-only-service-rugby-australias-existing-debts/news-story/3602b0fa8bd95989cdf4b903fa3a340b
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scott20won
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“A vote was held on Friday, with promotion and relegation from and to the Mexican top flight suspended for the next five seasons. Liga MX has suspended promotion and relegation for the next five years, president Enrique Bonilla announced. A vote was held via a video meeting between the 18 Liga MX owners on Friday, with promotion and relegation from and to the league suspended for the next five seasons as part of an agreement with the 12 teams in Ascenso MX. Bonilla confirmed the 12 second-division clubs will receive guaranteed yearly payments of almost $1million from the top flight during that period, with Ascenso MX to promote the inclusion of younger Mexican players in squads. The 2020 Ascenso MX season has also been cancelled, with no champion crowned, due to the Covid-19 crisis.News of potentially ending promotion and relegation in Mexico will fuel speculation over a Liga MX-MLS merger
https://www.goal.com/en-om/news/liga-mx-promotion-and-relegation-suspended-for-five-years-due-to-/1xyy2w9fd8xqp1nvhddokqik82
link to merger article “Mexico, the United States and Canada are working closer together than ever before, throwing up the possibility of a 50-team cross-border league”
https://www.goal.com/en/news/mls-merging-with-liga-mx-the-merits-of-a-north-american/sx881v8nnsce1xgsdk542mn57
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Gyfox
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+xIs anywhere publishing data on serious/critical cases e.g. new cases and recovered. In the past 2 weeks we’ve gone from around 90+ down to 57 cases. But I can’t tell if this is 33 recovered and no new cases, or 25 recovered and 8 dead, or all recovered and 57 new serious cases. it would also be interesting to know how many (if any) under the age of say 60 have actually been in a serious/critical condition. Part of the reduction in serious cases would be the result of the 42 deaths in the last 2 weeks. Formula is:- existing serious cases + new serious cases - new deaths - recovery of serious cases = new serious cases Unfortunately to my knowledge only the deaths each day is available.
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patjennings
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+xIs anywhere publishing data on serious/critical cases e.g. new cases and recovered. In the past 2 weeks we’ve gone from around 90+ down to 57 cases. But I can’t tell if this is 33 recovered and no new cases, or 25 recovered and 8 dead, or all recovered and 57 new serious cases. it would also be interesting to know how many (if any) under the age of say 60 have actually been in a serious/critical condition. https://twitter.com/COVID_AustraliaThis is more a overall picture. However, anecdotally people that have been not serious at the start of the day can quickly die that die, others can spend a week or so in ICU before recovery.
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bluebird
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+xIs anywhere publishing data on serious/critical cases e.g. new cases and recovered. In the past 2 weeks we’ve gone from around 90+ down to 57 cases. But I can’t tell if this is 33 recovered and no new cases, or 25 recovered and 8 dead, or all recovered and 57 new serious cases. it would also be interesting to know how many (if any) under the age of say 60 have actually been in a serious/critical condition. https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/country/australia/https://www.health.gov.au/news/health-alerts/novel-coronavirus-2019-ncov-health-alert/coronavirus-covid-19-current-situation-and-case-numbersAustralia said case numbers recovered are unreliable because it is too much of a hassle to touch base with everybody and see if they have recovered. More of an attempt has been made in the last few days but still unreliable data The COVID at a glance in the third link shows current cases in hospital and those in intensive care. You can piece together stats from the other 2 sites
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scott20won
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Rich Europeans are flying to Stockholm to get their hair done, go out to restaurants and night clubs/bars for luxury trips https://www.aftonbladet.se/nyheter/a/Vb8vkJ/europeiska-kvinnor-flyr-karantanen--for-att-lyxfesta-i-stockholm
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clockwork orange
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Yeah, they’re the sites I’m looking at but you can’t tell much about the trend in serious/critical cases. You can track the downward trend but not if the trend is the result of lots of recoveries and some new serious cases or no new serious cases. Recoveries are any recoveries be they from mild or serious.
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Gyfox
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+xYeah, they’re the sites I’m looking at but you can’t tell much about the trend in serious/critical cases. You can track the downward trend but not if the trend is the result of lots of recoveries and some new serious cases or no new serious cases. Recoveries are any recoveries be they from mild or serious. The stats on the ABC website have started to provide more and more details but they don't answer your specific questions or mine which is how many of the "community acquired unknown source" cases are in the serious category and how many have resulted in death. https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-03-17/coronavirus-cases-data-reveals-how-covid-19-spreads-in-australia/12060704
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quickflick
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+xSurely the gig will be up soon. We keep hearing about the tens of thousands of potential cases undetected in the community ... and the dangers these pose. Yet there’s still no surge in serious cases and hospitalisation (which in fact are going down). The government will have us believe that whereas a few hundred cases on cruise ships resulted in tens of serious/critical cases, hospitalisation and deaths, the many thousands of hidden/undetected cases in the community result in virtually no serious/critical cases. It is not believable. A far more believable scenario is that we’ve largely tamed this, there are bugger all cases in most communities, our hospitals are nowhere near maxing out, and the majority of us should be able to go back to a semi-normal life. Yes all that but then look at what's happening in the UK. 12000 deaths. (Possibly 16k). That could just as easily be us if we take the foot off the pedal. That’s not quite the way it works.
For a start the UK had a “herd immunity” strategy then pulled a massive u-turn when they realised the number of deaths would be too high.
Once the virus is contained then you can take the foot off the pedal without risking the UK outcome - WA, SA and NT must be very close to going that. QLD is not far behind but keeps importing cases from NSWs so harder to do until NSWs gets a better grip.
That's a misinterpretation of the sequencing of events. Both the UK and Australia had an unofficial herd immunity approach until around the same time. Strictly speaking, the UK introduced stricter social distancing measures before Australia did. While the UK was being (rightly) accused of pursuing a thinly-veiled herd immunity policy... Australia had much the same approach at that point. This Q&A episode aired exactly a month ago. Professor Bill Bowtell, from the Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity, accused the Federal Government of taking the herd immunity approach. Behind closed doors, the government was prepping in this way. At the same time that this episode aired (mid-March), a team from Imperial College in London, headed by Neil Ferguson, published modelling which suggested that COVID-19 would overwhelm the UK's ICU capacity. They argued that the virus is too infectious and that countless people would die of the virus (and other things, too) owing to a lack of beds and ventilators. Here's the report. After being presented with this modelling, thankfully, Boris pulled the massive u-turn which you mention. Australia followed suit. But the notion that Australia is different to the UK because it wasn't pursuing the herd immunity approach while the UK was... that's wrong. The difference, thankfully, is that we're further behind the epidemic curve. So our adoption of the necessary social distancing measures wasn't too late. Fair enough. I’m probably appearing too kind to Australia who, had they have shut the borders two weeks earlier and handled cruise ships properly, would have saved much of the current mess - although with tourism, University’s and exports flogged it would still hurt. From the outset though people have looked for generic responses to what is a bespoke crisis by country. Australia has been on its own “curve” since this began and looks to be adopting a more cautious exit approach than many harder-hit European countries and certainly the USA. Yeah 100%. I think Australia's strategy has been good ( except I think I'd probably shut schools, but that's about it). Overall, it has been good so far. Education is an essential resource like police, fire, or hospital. Yet people seem to think "ZOMG!!! hundreds of kids associating with each other lets close it down!!!" First of all our approach is pre-emptive rather than reactive. 3 new cases in total over night in Victoria, less than 200 kids Australia wide infected in total (and some no doubt overseas cases), only 2 or 3 news articles about kids at school with the infection. Yet most kids (well over 90%) are now learning from home Secondly do you think online learning programs whipped together in 3 weeks are effective? What about disadvantaged kids, those with learning disabilities, kids from non supportive home environments, indigenous or kids from ethnic origins, etc.... Also how are kids supposed to replicate science labs, wood shops, electronics, home economics etc... from home? What about group learning or peer support? People who look at school and thin it can be taken offline have never been. Our education system has become nothing more than a way for the privileged percent of kids to learn English and Maths. Paranoid parents who pulled their kids out of school and now want everyone to follow suit so their kid can get an education I can understand a 4 week school shut down in hard hit regions at a strategic time. But a state wide shut down when we barely have a problem is only going to write off an entire term for every kid trying to study this year. And if people can get refunds for services they aren't paying for then what does that mean for money currently supporting our education system? It would have been better for Australia to keep school holidays for another 2 weeks and extend the school term (last 2 weeks is prep for next year anyhow) than to implement learning from home. This can be managed through strict social distancing policies, rules of sending any kid who so much as sneezes home, and keeping teachers in the vulnerable age group at home. And since schools are local based enrolments any virus breakout would be local I pity anybody child who wanted an education this year A couple of things. Education is an essential service (in the long run). In the short run, we can adapt. It's horrendous. With the right resources and approaches, a few months interruption is no reason why a student reach their goals. Also, I should have said - I think the government should have shut down schools. I agree with Professor Sharon Lewin from the Doherty Institute on that. Several weeks ago - so much was unknown and the government needed to scramble to increase ICU capacity, to acquire ventilators (or to have them produced), etc. The degree to which children are infectious was unknown (still is, I gather). At that point, there were too many unknowns and it was necessary to err on the side of caution (as Professor Lewin said). Obviously, the closing of schools has varied from state and territory to state and territory. But perhaps you and I have common ground insofar as I think we're nearing the point where it would, in any case, be fine for schools to reopen (with the measures in place which you have mentioned). Since the necessary scrambling has taken place. As you say, education is an essential service. The idea was never to keep schools closed forever. It was simply to buy time so as to avoid the situation that has occurred elsewhere in the world.
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Gyfox
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Group: Forum Members
Posts: 13K,
Visits: 0
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+x+x+x+x+x+x+x+xSurely the gig will be up soon. We keep hearing about the tens of thousands of potential cases undetected in the community ... and the dangers these pose. Yet there’s still no surge in serious cases and hospitalisation (which in fact are going down). The government will have us believe that whereas a few hundred cases on cruise ships resulted in tens of serious/critical cases, hospitalisation and deaths, the many thousands of hidden/undetected cases in the community result in virtually no serious/critical cases. It is not believable. A far more believable scenario is that we’ve largely tamed this, there are bugger all cases in most communities, our hospitals are nowhere near maxing out, and the majority of us should be able to go back to a semi-normal life. Yes all that but then look at what's happening in the UK. 12000 deaths. (Possibly 16k). That could just as easily be us if we take the foot off the pedal. That’s not quite the way it works.
For a start the UK had a “herd immunity” strategy then pulled a massive u-turn when they realised the number of deaths would be too high.
Once the virus is contained then you can take the foot off the pedal without risking the UK outcome - WA, SA and NT must be very close to going that. QLD is not far behind but keeps importing cases from NSWs so harder to do until NSWs gets a better grip.
That's a misinterpretation of the sequencing of events. Both the UK and Australia had an unofficial herd immunity approach until around the same time. Strictly speaking, the UK introduced stricter social distancing measures before Australia did. While the UK was being (rightly) accused of pursuing a thinly-veiled herd immunity policy... Australia had much the same approach at that point. This Q&A episode aired exactly a month ago. Professor Bill Bowtell, from the Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity, accused the Federal Government of taking the herd immunity approach. Behind closed doors, the government was prepping in this way. At the same time that this episode aired (mid-March), a team from Imperial College in London, headed by Neil Ferguson, published modelling which suggested that COVID-19 would overwhelm the UK's ICU capacity. They argued that the virus is too infectious and that countless people would die of the virus (and other things, too) owing to a lack of beds and ventilators. Here's the report. After being presented with this modelling, thankfully, Boris pulled the massive u-turn which you mention. Australia followed suit. But the notion that Australia is different to the UK because it wasn't pursuing the herd immunity approach while the UK was... that's wrong. The difference, thankfully, is that we're further behind the epidemic curve. So our adoption of the necessary social distancing measures wasn't too late. Fair enough. I’m probably appearing too kind to Australia who, had they have shut the borders two weeks earlier and handled cruise ships properly, would have saved much of the current mess - although with tourism, University’s and exports flogged it would still hurt. From the outset though people have looked for generic responses to what is a bespoke crisis by country. Australia has been on its own “curve” since this began and looks to be adopting a more cautious exit approach than many harder-hit European countries and certainly the USA. Yeah 100%. I think Australia's strategy has been good ( except I think I'd probably shut schools, but that's about it). Overall, it has been good so far. Education is an essential resource like police, fire, or hospital. Yet people seem to think "ZOMG!!! hundreds of kids associating with each other lets close it down!!!" First of all our approach is pre-emptive rather than reactive. 3 new cases in total over night in Victoria, less than 200 kids Australia wide infected in total (and some no doubt overseas cases), only 2 or 3 news articles about kids at school with the infection. Yet most kids (well over 90%) are now learning from home Secondly do you think online learning programs whipped together in 3 weeks are effective? What about disadvantaged kids, those with learning disabilities, kids from non supportive home environments, indigenous or kids from ethnic origins, etc.... Also how are kids supposed to replicate science labs, wood shops, electronics, home economics etc... from home? What about group learning or peer support? People who look at school and thin it can be taken offline have never been. Our education system has become nothing more than a way for the privileged percent of kids to learn English and Maths. Paranoid parents who pulled their kids out of school and now want everyone to follow suit so their kid can get an education I can understand a 4 week school shut down in hard hit regions at a strategic time. But a state wide shut down when we barely have a problem is only going to write off an entire term for every kid trying to study this year. And if people can get refunds for services they aren't paying for then what does that mean for money currently supporting our education system? It would have been better for Australia to keep school holidays for another 2 weeks and extend the school term (last 2 weeks is prep for next year anyhow) than to implement learning from home. This can be managed through strict social distancing policies, rules of sending any kid who so much as sneezes home, and keeping teachers in the vulnerable age group at home. And since schools are local based enrolments any virus breakout would be local I pity anybody child who wanted an education this year A couple of things. Education is an essential service (in the long run). In the short run, we can adapt. It's horrendous. With the right resources and approaches, a few months interruption is no reason why a student reach their goals. Also, I should have said - I think the government should have shut down schools. I agree with Professor Sharon Lewin from the Doherty Institute on that. Several weeks ago - so much was unknown and the government needed to scramble to increase ICU capacity, to acquire ventilators (or to have them produced), etc. The degree to which children are infectious was unknown (still is, I gather). At that point, there were too many unknowns and it was necessary to err on the side of caution (as Professor Lewin said). Obviously, the closing of schools has varied from state and territory to state and territory. But perhaps you and I have common ground insofar as I think we're nearing the point where it would, in any case, be fine for schools to reopen (with the measures in place which you have mentioned). Since the necessary scrambling has taken place. As you say, education is an essential service. The idea was never to keep schools closed forever. It was simply to buy time so as to avoid the situation that has occurred elsewhere in the world. The AHPPC received specialist advice in giving its advice from the CDNA which has at its membership a medical representative from each of the 9 commonwealth, state and territory health department plus representatives with professorial status from the Australian Society for Infectious Diseases, the Australian Society of Microbiology, the National Centre for Epidemiology and Public Health and the Kirby Institute for Infection and Immunity in Society plus various other organisations. Why would you believe that Lewin's views are more relevant than the advice given by the CDNA?
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