Unfortunately the article calculates CFRs wrong as it does not take into consideration epidemic growth (one main reason S. Korea is so low - and why the displayed graph shows lower CFRs over time). This mistake leads to very wrong numbers. More here:https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/05/health/coronavirus-deaths-rates.html …
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This is also the main reason this figure shows a decrease in rates - earlier time points have most patients having known outcomes, but in the more recent estimates the dead haven't died yet. 6/npic.twitter.com/7JAzeRWR5b
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The main thing to keep in mind - while it takes ~1 week to become a case, it takes and additional 1-3 weeks to either recover or die from infection. So the denominators has to be back-dated by the "time to death". 7/n
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Just one specific S. Korea comment here - while the current rate is trending at 3-4%, this is *highly* likely to go down significantly - mainly because severe cases are typically detected first, and yes, because they have very aggressive screening. 5a/n
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What is the source for the CFR currently trending at 3 - 4% in South Korea when epidemic growth is considered? Is that your calculation, or has it been published/discussed elsewhere?
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Het laden lijkt wat langer te duren.
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