I thought it was 12 day.
Originally Posted by gnadfly
According to the CDC, 2 days to 14 days with 5 days being typical.
Only deaths matter. In Texas again Dallas county reported 1 death yesterday and Tarrant county 0 deaths.
Originally Posted by gnadfly
The mandate went into effect a month ago, so it may be too early to see the effect on death rates. I've got no idea whether the time line in the link below represents good estimates. But, assuming a 5 day incubation period before symptoms appear, they say death can take anywhere from 19 days to 75 days from exposure.
https://elemental.medium.com/from-in...s-199e266fd018
If this is correct, we wouldn't be to peak deaths yet.
The IHME forecast which was harshly criticized here for being too pessimistic around April or May, but which turned out to be wildly optimistic, predicted peak deaths would occur in Texas on August 14 when it was last updated, around July 26. That's IF universal masking occurs. And universal masking isn't occurring where I live. It's defined as 95% compliance.
https://covid19.healthdata.org/unite...-america/texas
Which mandate? Destroy your business? 6 feet distance which hardly anyone is following? Wear a mask that has marginal effectiveness? Clean flat surfaces that seems to have gone by the wayside? Wash your hands? Total shutdown for two weeks so we can "reset?" Don't send kids to school?
Originally Posted by gnadfly
I favor a mandate for masks and strong encouragement to distance and wash hands. Cleaning surfaces isn't a bad idea either. That's the best way to avoid mandates to destroy peoples' businesses, totally shut down, etc.
The IHME link above has a forecast for an "easing" scenario, which I believe is the one you favor. At the end of their forecast, on November 1, they show 348 estimated deaths. (For comparison, about 600 people used to die in Texas on an average day.) On October 20, they show Texas being short 4200 hospital beds and 1600 ICU beds. If they're right and if we "ease", whatever that means, Abbott etal probably are going to shut down businesses and schools again.
The cost and hassle of wearing masks, maintaining social distance, and washing your hands is insignificant compared to the cost of jobs and businesses lost if we don't do that.