DIY-HP-LED
Well-Known Member
I agree, but the point you are attempting to make is that "lock downs" don't work, they do work, but at an economic cost. Every expert agrees, testing on a massive scale is required and a plan to isolate the infected, also serological tests to determine who can work again and donate plasma. Getting plasma donation up and running while we await the results of larger scale studies is essential, there is an extremely high probability it will be a successful treatment. We can tolerate a much higher hospitalisation rate with a working treatment and this one can be deployed quickly and leverage existing blood donor and plasma making infrastructures, even in a place like the philippines. If we can lower the mortality rate to flu levels and there is every possibility of doing that over the next 3 months, it will do more than any government edict to get the economy back up and running.6,337 new cases on Tuesday
7,468 new cases yesterday
11,525 new cases today
"flatten the curve" is not a sufficient national strategy. It's not working. If we don't do more to expose infection chains and get the spread under control, at this rate, we'll exhaust healthcare resources and worse, crush the economy, risking worsening the situation in a myriad of ways long before there's a vaccine.
If you put water on the crops, they'll grow.
Abandon the situation is dynamic and there is a viable treatment option that can be scaled and deployed, we just need the testing, volunteers will not be an issue, we just need to identify them and draw off a pint. People can tolerate being sick as a dog, they can't tolerate death and policy changes depend on these factors as much as data.