I’ve posted links on Facebook to a couple of articles pointing out that there’s no evidence that the lockdowns (or Coronapocalypse, if you like) have done anything to “flatten the curve”. It’s interesting to watch the reactions to these posts. Almost all have proclaimed “Of course it worked. See how the curve has flattened?”
To which I reply, “post hoc, ergo propter hoc”. Just because B follows A doesn’t mean A caused B to happen.
So for example, the cities that have high numbers of coronavirus cases, and where lockdowns have been more pronounced, also have large Neopagan communities. You can be sure the Wiccans have been gathering in living rooms (10 at a time or fewer) to cast spells to drive away the virus. And it must have worked, because see how the curve has flattened?
How would we know whether lockdowns actually save lives? Well one approach is to compare areas that did lock down against areas that didn’t. For example, what this piece in the Wall Street Journal does.
It seems that whether or not a region locked down accounts for some 5% of the variation in the number of deaths per million people. Now a lot more analysis is in order, and I have to be a little suspicious of someone who seems unable to keep the correlation coefficient and the coefficient of determination straight. But his work points in an interesting direction, and is at least an attempt to address the question in an objective manner.
Also check out this piece in the Journal, and Spiked online.
6 replies on “The party of science?”
We cannot read the journal articles without a subscription, by the way.
OK, I’ll violate some copyright. (I thought this might be among the coronavirus pieces outside the paywall.)
Do quick shutdowns work to fight the spread of Covid-19? Joe Malchow, Yinon Weiss and I wanted to find out. We set out to quantify how many deaths were caused by delayed shutdown orders on a state-by-state basis.
And the second WSJ link:
….
I was going to do this last night, but Monday’s chemo day, and Tuesday’s when I really want to get to bed early. (Today too, but not as much.)
I really would like to see some statistics and anecdotes about how Sweden is faring, because they have essentially done nothing but advise people to take common sense precautions and isolate the vulnerable.
Based on the deaths/day they appear to have peaked 1-2 weeks ago. This looks like the source document.