- Joined
- Aug 21, 2017
- Location
- Malta
IAbout this virus we will know by time, one thing which is quite sure is that loads of decisions have been made and probably will be made based on quite poor accuracy data available. None of us can know much about this virus even some virolgists would be CM members but even all they know more by time. Modelling these is shit hard and forecast things right is pretty much same than make whole summer weather forecast accurate.
It's nothing new and people with accurate crystal balls would be worth of billions, just none happen to exist yet.
There's one story about COVID forecasting failures, inlcuding link to "full opinion paper" with more details about it but think that story itself gives quite good opinion that forecasting COVID is not gonna be much better or easier than these quoted examples.
It's pitty that we onlu usually can be sure about things afterwards, would make everything easier to know in advance but it is what it is. Especially when we speak about deadly virus, not many experts want to be ones who underestimated it. Future will tell how forecasts will do this time.
It's nothing new and people with accurate crystal balls would be worth of billions, just none happen to exist yet.
There's one story about COVID forecasting failures, inlcuding link to "full opinion paper" with more details about it but think that story itself gives quite good opinion that forecasting COVID is not gonna be much better or easier than these quoted examples.
It's pitty that we onlu usually can be sure about things afterwards, would make everything easier to know in advance but it is what it is. Especially when we speak about deadly virus, not many experts want to be ones who underestimated it. Future will tell how forecasts will do this time.
Failure in epidemic forecasting is an old problem. In fact, it is surprising that epidemic forecasting has retained much credibility among decision-makers, given its dubious track record. Modeling for swine flu predicted 3,100-65,000 deaths in the UK [11]. Eventually only 457 deaths occurred [12]. The prediction for foot-and-mouth disease expected up to 150,000 deaths in the UK [13] and led to slaughtering millions of animals. However, the lower bound of the prediction was as low as only 50 deaths [13], a figure close to the eventual fatalities. Predictions may work in “ideal”, isolated communities with homogeneous populations, not the complex current global world.
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I prefer the ones with leek and ham, ofcourse cheese and eggs are standard.
I learned like most people as a toddler the oven and stove are hot 
