@Cultured_Bogan said in [Coronavirus Outbreak](/post/1255261) said:
Death lag has finally subsided in the US, 870 deaths today, over 1,000 the last two days.
Yeah unfortunately. I said at the beginning, end of March time or early April, that the US will hit 100M infected and 1M dead by Christmas. Given the exponential rise in cases in October and the US heading into Winter, I may not be far off.
Yeah, even with the Victorian outbreak, I think Australia handled it quite well during the winter season. Granted we took much more serious measures to control spread and have invested quite a lot of resources into contact tracing, but it has paid dividends and saved many lives. I think Europe and the USA are going to be an exercise in what relaxed border control and lack of control of spread will lead to.
I think it also has todo with their medical system run by insurance companies. Covid19 requires a socialist medical response which is something the US just can’t comprehend.
I agree the medical system in the US is a bad joke, but the situation is now also spiraling out of control in countries with good health systems, like the UK and France.
There was a point a few months ago where it seemed like the world was getting on top of it, but the last couple of weeks have been frightening.
Once health systems reach saturation point, which at half a million new cases a day, they definitely will, then you will start to see a spike not just in covid deaths, but deaths from a whole range of causes of people who can't be adequately looked after.
US health system is terrible. Can't comment on France, but UK is not particularly good. Public health system (NHS) has been gutted over the last couple of decades.
No doubt they've swung the axe a bit in recent years, but surely the NHS is still light years ahead of what America has?