Covid 9/24: Until Morale Improves
Last Two Weeks: Covid 9/17: It's Worse, Covid 9/10: Vitamin D
There is a pandemic. It is not going anywhere.
The news, on the other hand, is ready to move on. There is a supreme court seat open. There is an election coming soon, complete with a first debate. There are protests and presumably riots flaring up once again, this time regarding there no direct charges to any police officers in the death of Breonna Taylor.
Oh, and the President of the United States said yesterday, and I quote:
"Well, we're going to have to see what happens. You know that I've been complaining very strongly about the ballots and the ballots are a disaster," Trump said, when asked if he could commit to the peaceful transition.
"(G)et rid of the ballots and you'll have a very ... there won't be a transfer, frankly. There'll be a continuation."
If you are going to vote for Biden, vote in person. Make sure your vote counts and reduce the chances of chaos breaking loose before that happens.
If you’re going to vote for Trump despite everything, at least have the decency to vote by mail. That way, to count your vote, we’ll have to... count the votes.
Who cares about the pandemic? No one, it seems. That’s old news. The pandemic is now merely one more prop, albeit a big one, in the political game.
I can’t even argue. I too am more worried about the election than the pandemic, at this point.
We all grow tired of this pandemic. The damage accumulates. Economies and lives and reputations and credibility get destroyed week in and week out, and nothing good seems to come of any of it. Solutions get ignored, and the situation fails to improve. The same scolds keep saying we need to keep holding out, while scolding anyone attempting to solve the problem. Same covid time, same covid channel. If I didn’t have people thanking me every week for doing these, it would be difficult to keep going.
As usual, most of the Covid news falls into our existing patterns. When no one cares enough to do anything, but they do care enough to make sure no one else does anything, each week’s news is going to look like the previous week’s news.
And yet, if we look, there is always something worth talking about. Including one piece of genuinely great news.
Let’s run the numbers.
Positive Test Counts
That looks bad, but the change is more than all accounted for by increased testing. It’s actually fine.
Deaths
A worrisome uptick continues in the Northeast region. We see improvement in the other three. There was a large jump last week in the Midwest, so the modest pullback still isn’t great. But the South and West numbers are definitely encouraging. New York’s was as well, down to a new low of 27 deaths all week for the whole state.
Positive Tests by Region
Last week looks very scary here. This week looks good. The South is now doing better than it has in some time as is the West, and the Northeast is pulling back from the dramatic rise last week. I suspect some amount of negative tests were held back last week for whatever reason, and got dumped into this week, so things should look smoother than they do.
Still this is a great relief. Last week looked like we might be about to ramp up once again, potentially quite rapidly. Now it seems much less likely that is going to happen. That assumes of course that we want less cases now rather than more cases - I actually think it’s reasonable at this point to want to get it over with, if it wouldn’t cause additional lockdowns, but I do think it would case additional lockdowns, so I’d prefer to avoid it.
Test Counts
Welcome back, testing, to levels seen in mid-July. Hopefully this is the start of a trend or at least a new normal, rather than a blip. The positive rate is clearly an improvement as well, assuming the extra tests aren’t negative tests are new tests, rather than being dumped onto the system from previous weeks.
It is telling that this week we saw a bunch of headlines about the ‘rising number of cases’ when that is obviously not what this chart says at all. The previous week was a scary increase. This week’s headline numbers are obviously good news. Yet even now, in September, the whole ‘do less testing so it looks less bad’ strategy is the correct strategy if you want good media. And what we incentivize, we are likely to get. Hate the player if you wish, but first hate the game.
By the way, if you’re in New York City and need a rapid test, a friend reports this as a good source.
For Relief That Lasts
In a surprise to few who read this column, the newest potential solution to Covid-19 is essentially an attempt at regulatory arbitrage.
Nasal solution may stop spread of COVID-19, study finds.
It’s still early and the results were in a lab, so not that great a chance it works. But we’re all excited, because if it works the Very Serious People might be forced to let us use it.
Every now and then, ask what regulatory behaviors would look like if they wanted us all to lose our jobs, starve to death, get sick and die.
And be thankful they have not yet closed all their loopholes.
The Vaccine Protocols
They look good. The trials are way too small, of course. Why do 30,000 when you can do 300,000? It’s not like these vaccines are that dangerous. But given size limitations and the standards we live by, these seem... fine?
They don’t look remotely optimized, of course. The actual sensible thing would be to continuously check the results via computer and report if thresholds are ever crossed (and have higher thresholds to compensate for that). It’s also not clear to me what kind of logic is behind the thresholds involved here. The p-values necessary for a positive finding keep getting larger as the study continues. There’s no evidence of any attempt to do a Bayesian analysis. So what’s really going on here?
There’s some psychological story behind this design. I’m curious what it is, but I have at best small pieces of that puzzle.
In any case, how fast we get results will depend on the rate of infections in the trials. The better the vaccine, the slower we get the results, but only by a factor of 2-3 at most since there’s a control group, and results are expected this year. Each trial has at least 30,000 people, who they presumably are testing continuously. They need roughly 150 infections to finish, so a 1% infection rate in the control group would do it, or 0.5% from the combined group. How fast will we get there?
If you go by actual positive tests in the USA, that’s ten weeks to get 1% infected. Those who volunteer for a trial could be more or less at risk modulo the vaccine itself, and it’s not obvious to me which way that goes. Nothing we can do but wait.
The Correct Vaccine Protocols
Challenge trial! Actual first world government funded challenge trial!
Celebrate, good times, come on!
We need to do it bigger, faster, better. But something is so so much better than nothing.
CDC Accidentally Tells Truth, Profusely Apologizes
This column strongly believes in good incentives and in redemption. If the CDC or anyone else comes around way too late to the truth and/or the right strategy, we will applaud them for doing so sooner rather than later. The ‘what took you so long’ approach helps no one.
Unfortunately, that is not this story.
This week, the CDC came out with new guidelines that said the Covid-19 virus is airborne. You can be infected by breathing in air that contains the virus.
No. Shirt. Sherlock.
Let it sink in that now, in September, the CDC finally got around to admitting the most important single fact about Covid-19 - that the virus is airborne. That’s the primary mode of infection.
Then the WHO called, and asked what the CDC was doing saying the virus was airborne. Because the WHO has yet to admit this one. They are continuing to lie to all of us.
The CDC, being called out for accidentally speaking truth to the public, moved quickly to correct the situation. They declared that the new guidelines were only a draft, and rescinded them.
Without saying anything remotely like: Yes, obviously the Covid-19 virus is airborne. We’re a bureaucracy and we haven’t gotten the wording right yet, so those guidelines aren’t official yet, but
So the headlines are now that the CDC retracts guidelines saying Covid-19 is airborne.
This is like if Google Maps had people driving into a river, then changed to a new map that didn’t do that, but realized the new map misspelled the town’s name, so they restored the old version of the map until they could fix the problem. Which doesn’t seem realistic, so to fix that, let’s substitute Apple Maps.
What is the game, at this point? Why hold to this lie?
Because (if my explanations in previous columns and posts haven’t made this clear yet, if they have you can skip this) it’s the foundational lie behind the idea that there are ‘safe’ and ‘unsafe’ configurations and actions. That if you stay six feet away, and Sacrifice to the Gods with frequent ‘deep cleaning,’ you’ll be safe. So in order to protect arbitrary guidelines, to get people to latch onto simple heuristics that they think will cause the public to do what’s good for them, the science has to say that which does not correspond to physical reality. I can’t even say “to say that which is not” because that implies they know the difference. They certainly don’t much care.
So. Yeah. CDC Delenda Est.
That’s the shot. Now for the chaser.
CDC Announces They Have Antibody Results, Provides #Analysis
Here’s a news report on the latest announcement. I encourage reading it before reading my take on the new information.
The first thing to note is that the CDC director is directly conflating has not yet had the virus with susceptible, and also conflating tested positive on the serology test with has had the virus:
The head of the Centers for Disease Control told Congress on Wednesday that preliminary data from nationwide testing shows that over 90 percent of Americans have not contracted the Coronavirus, as top federal health officials continued to implore Americans to take precautions in order to slow the virus outbreak.
“More than 90 percent of the population remains susceptible,” Dr. Robert Redfield told a Senate hearing, saying serology tests have shown clear trends in the spread of the virus.
This makes three implicit claims which imply a fourth claim.
Claim 1: If and only if you have had Covid-19, your serology test will be positive. Modulo small false positive and false negative rates due to measurement error, which I agree are small enough we can mostly ignore both of them once we get to the 10% level.
Claim 2: If and only if you have a positive serology test, you are not susceptible to Covid-19. Again, modulo a false result that can mostly be ignored in both directions.
Claim 3: Before having Covid-19, everyone is susceptible to Covid-19.
Claim 4 (From Claim 1 + Claim 2): Having Covid-19 and recovering makes you permanently immune to Covid-19 reinfection. Or, at a minimum, makes you immune for a period of no less than seven months.
(There’s also the tidbit that >25% of infections are ages 18-25. That’s quite a narrow range, and one at very low risk.)
So first off, I’d like to congratulate Redfield for acknowledging that immunity is long lasting. It’s not like there was any real doubt, but scaring people with ‘who knows how long it lasts and it’s gonna end Real Soon Now’ remains a key part of the Very Serious People scare tactic policy portfolio.
Then I’d challenge the other two claims rather strongly.
There are some strong claims out there that lots of people are not susceptible to Covid-19, or are highly varying degrees of susceptible. Those claims may or may not be right. But the idea that no one is effectively immune without first gathering enough direct antibodies to test positive on the serology test seems like obvious nonsense. That’s not how the immune system works.
Second, we have lots of screaming that ‘immunity fades’ because antibody levels fall over time. So people who would have tested positive on serology, stop testing positive, yet these cases have near-zero reinfection rates. It seems obvious we both have some people who are immune without being infected and producing antibodies in the first place, because of cross-immunity or other lines of defense, and that we also have some people who no longer show antibodies but are still immune because of other lines of defense and the ability to remember and produce the antibodies again if needed.
The question is whether there are only a few such people, or there are lots of such people.
If we took the CDC’s data at face value, what would that mean? They say ‘Over 90%’ so that’s a claim that under 10% tested positive. How far under 10% should we assume? Given the incentives and other actions of the CDC, let’s assume this means something like 9%, versus a nationwide 2.1% rate for positive test results from PCR tests.
The peak of rates in the study was 24%, presumably for New York City but perhaps not. That’s higher than previous measured antibody results, but lower than plausible infection rates - my model has New York State at around 25%, and the city is far higher than the rest of the state. Our go-to outside machine learning plausible guess puts USA overall rate at 16% (which implies a measured death rate of roughly 0.4%), but has only 21% for New York State. That still is substantially higher than 24% being the highest observed local rate would imply. Note that the machine learning model has Arizona at 24.6%, substantially higher than New York, and many southern states in the 21% range.
On its own these are more data points, and they are useful parts of the puzzle. The way it is presented, however, strikes me as another attempt to have it both ways, and describe everyone as in danger as often as possible to try and get people to behave the way the CDC wants.
This week’s other interesting serology test news is this study from Japan: Dynamic Change of COVID-19 Seroprevalence among Asymptomatic Population in Tokyo during the Second Wave. Those numbers are rather boggling. I don’t know what to make of them and am curious what others think. To avoid anchoring too much, I won’t say more.
In Other Sort-Of News: Links That Tell The Same Old Story
Because we’ve decided that every test needs to be as effective as our best test, or we can’t use it, even though that is mind-bogglingly murderously dumb. I’d explain, but I’d only be repeating myself.
This keeps happening. There’s an activity that it seems plausible would have unacceptably high risk of Covid-19 infection. For example, you might want to play professional sports, or you might want to treat patients in a hospital. Safety protocols are implemented, including masks and frequent testing and hyper-awareness of the dangers.
In the case of airlines, lots of attention is also paid to air flow.
Then the tests come in, and despite more vigilance and testing, and therefore much higher probabilities of finding each case, the case rates end up lower than the general population. In this case, the positive rate for flight attendants is under 1%, whereas the confirmed positive test rate for the USA is above 2%.
The pattern is clear. Risky things are risky, but risky things done with a real dedication to safety, and a willingness to endure major costs to get that safety, are actually net safer than the background risk level.
Does this mean it is ‘safe to fly’?
No. It means that if one takes professional-level precautions, flying can be put into the ‘safe’ bucket. But that’s true of most things that aren’t about packing people into tight spaces so they can share an experience with each other.
SARS-CoV-2 positivity rates associated with circulating 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels
Yet another correlational study about Vitamin D. The correlational verdict is so beyond in that, as the person who linked me to this put it, there really isn’t much point. Figured I’d throw it in, but it doesn’t change anything.
USPS Had Plan to Send Everyone Face Masks
Plan was rejected by the Trump Administration in order to ‘not cause panic.’ Also perhaps to avoid giving people the impression that the Postal Service was competent and important and could do other things like let people vote. Either way, I consider this a positive update. Our civilization did figure out a good plan to do something important. Yes, it didn’t happen because someone actively decided to stop it, but I’d rather be competent and up against malice than be incapable at all.
Our Antigens, Our Selves - Marginal REVOLUTION
Another story from Marginal Revolution about how the FDA puts insane restrictions on how people might gain information about themselves and their health, because if someone had information they might change their behavior based on that information, and information can sometimes be wrong or misinterpreted, so information should be regulated as a high-risk medical device.
I violently agree that all of that is bonkers - FDA is the original member and still captain of the Delenda Est Club. I only have one bone to pick, which is with the term ‘Unintended’ Consequences.
Unintended?
I say intended. One hundred percent intended. The intention was to prevent people from having access to the information they need to make decisions to protect their health. People dying is not an unintended consequence of that.
You stop systems from functioning, they stop working. You refuse to tell people when they’re sick or how to get better, and they die more often. This isn’t complicated or hard.
I wasn’t intending to get fat, I just wanted to eat lots of giant meals and delicious desserts every day and never exercise. Don’t look at me like that.
I mean, officer, I only intended him to stop moving so I could take his wallet. That’s why I shot him in the face. I didn’t intend to kill him.
There are frequently unintended consequences of regulation. They are usually but not always destructive. There are also frequently fully intended, and fully predictable, destructive consequences of regulation. When you regulate something and it gets more expensive, lower quality, less innovative, subject to an oligopoly or monopoly and increasingly nonsensical and maze-like, and those subject to the regulations capture the regulatory body and sculpt it to their own ends... You do not get to say these consequences are unintended.
You can say those consequences are worth it. You can say that the world with the regulations is better than the world without them, in spite of those consequences. You can’t call them unintended anymore.
See everyone next week. Now more than ever, I hope things stay quiet.