3. The (economical) impact would be huge, but the impact is already enormous. It's hard to swallow but we should. Governments will do their utmost best to support business and households. We are in this together. Accept this is a life changing era.
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4. We still have to deal with the huge amount of infected people and ill people on ICU's. Today it would still be within the margins of what our system can handle, so we are on time. We should give hospitals all equipment needed for their own protection. They are crucial for us.
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5. After the lockdown, when new infections have slowed down, life can slowly come back to normal. Movement is only allowed within geographically borders and will increase over time when
#covid19Nederland is under control. This also allows for relaxation of interventions.1 reply 0 retweets 3 likesShow this thread -
6. In the mean time we have to dramatically increase testing facilities so we can keep the testing as fast as possible and do contact tracing. Testing, tracing, testing. And more testing.
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7. When people get infected after the lockdown put them—and the people they have had direct contact with—in quarantine and immediately test them. Keep doing this until a vaccine is developed.
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This is some good material to read: https://necsi.edu/review-of-ferguson-et-al-impact-of-non-pharmaceutical-interventions … https://www.imperial.ac.uk/media/imperial-college/medicine/sph/ide/gida-fellowships/Imperial-College-COVID19-NPI-modelling-16-03-2020.pdf … https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2020/world/corona-simulator/ … https://www.ted.com/talks/bill_gates_the_next_outbreak_we_re_not_ready?language=en …
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How do you feel about this?
@Reinier@jelleprins@ThijsNiks@rickpastoor@jaspervankuijk@jelmerdeboer@JoshSchoen@jaapstronks4 replies 0 retweets 2 likesShow this thread -
Hope
@rivm and@MinPres read this and consider. I think we can delay a lockdown, but not prevent it. Death toll will reach too high from exponential growth. + focus on aggressive testing measures. That's what SK did, and that's what Switzerland and Denmark are doing right now2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @mathurgaurav @Piels and
Denmark took stronger measures on day 14 (11th March), and for them the curve is already 'flattening' - look at the how the gap is changing versus NL (https://nyheder.tv2.dk/samfund/2020-03-11-mette-f-forsamlinger-over-100-mennesker-skal-forbydes …)pic.twitter.com/F0ygQ33kKe
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Netherlands is barely testing so super hard to compare countries on absolute case numbers
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Replying to @thijsniks @heleenkuiper and
The direction of the graph and the growth curves is more informative
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