In the USA, we have 34,273 deaths out of 3,723,634 tested.
That's a one percent death rate (well, actually less than that) out of symptomatic patients who met the testing criteria of fever and difficulty breathing - a credible candidate for a test in the judgement of medical professionals who have gotten a lot of experience by now.
Even if deaths double from this amount, which is what the IHME model essentially predicts - that will be a 2% death rate among symptomatic patients. However, some small antibody studies, such as in California, state this:
"These prevalence estimates represent a range between 48,000 and 81,000 people infected in Santa Clara County by early April, 50-85-fold more than the number of confirmed cases."
If true we are looking at a death rate about the same as the flu.
.02/50 = 0.0004
Expressed as a percentage 0.04%
Death rate per 100,000 people who get it: 40 people, probably old and sick already.
If everyone in Texas gets infected: 30,000,000 x 0.0004 = 12,000 deaths.
IHME is predicting about one thousand deaths in Texas.
So, have we temporarily forestalled 11,000 deaths of old and sick people but sacrificed herd immunity and sacrificed our way of life? Given up the freedoms our forefathers died to get for us?
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1...Ccg_ohr2FE_hZU
Potential flaws in my estimates:
1. I don't know how many are asymptomatic that were tested.
2. I don't know who received multiple tests.
3. Assumes robust and accurate testing and reporting.
4. Poor selection criteria (i.e. improperly randomized and representative) in Santa Clara County.