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Long-Haulers Are Redefining Covid-19

4 点作者 Firebrand将近 5 年前

1 comment

xoa将近 5 年前
&gt;<i>She says that experts and officials should stop referring to all nonhospitalized cases as “mild.” They should agree on a definition of recovery that goes beyond being discharged from the hospital or testing negative for the virus, and accounts for a patient’s quality of life. “We cannot fight what we do not measure,” Alwan says. “Death is not the only thing that counts. We must also count lives changed.”</i><p>I&#x27;ve definitely wished for months now that major media at least would work to include both not just a &quot;mortality rate&quot; figure in general reporting but side-by-side a &quot;morbidity rate&quot; figure as well. It&#x27;s not as if this is some unheard of thing, the entire actuarial industry does detail morbidity rate calculations because it&#x27;s critical to calculating proper premium costs. Death is certainly not the only thing that counts even from a pure cost perspective, ongoing complications and disability is a huge deal. Military planners have long considered it as well, again for heavily practical reasons beyond common humanity: just because soldiers have &quot;survived&quot; doesn&#x27;t mean their fighting power is undiminished, or even exists at all any longer. There is a reason for the old saying that an enemy left disabled might be more militarily valuable then a dead one, since they may tie up multiple other enemy forces.<p>So it&#x27;s really kind of odd, but for whatever reason &quot;morbidity rate&quot; doesn&#x27;t seem to have entered the common discourse this pandemic. There&#x27;s a lot of &quot;1% mortality rate&quot; (or whatever figure) tossed around without further stratification, naturally implying that the other 99% aren&#x27;t a concern. But morbidity may well exceed mortality by quite a multiplier, and it&#x27;s looked for months like there&#x27;s enough evidence that at least it&#x27;d be worth funding some more rigorous and organized data collection including followup weeks&#x2F;months later. It&#x27;s unfortunate the general collection, graphs, maps and so on seem to pretty universally remain split between &quot;infected&quot; and &quot;dead&quot;.