Apparently the government's own (secret) figures suggest around 500,000 deaths, and around 8 million people in need of hospitalisation - in a country which currently has around 4,000 ICU beds, and almost no spare capacity in hospitals.
Even if the peak is spread out over nine months, that still means setting up, equipping, and staffing around a million extra beds over the next few weeks. At a time when existing medical staff are incapacitated.
This is not going to happen. The only way it might be possible is with civil conscription - literally taking people off the street and putting them through basic nursing boot camp. Even then there would be huge issues with supplies of equipment and consumables.
So the reality is that most people who need to be hospitalised in the UK (and probably the US) won't be - at least not effectively. Italy has shown what this means: without adequate care the CFR rises from 1% to 7% or so.
Which in turn means that without aggressive containment measures to slow the spread, the actual death toll will be in the millions, heavily concentrated among the over 65s.
There are around 10 million over 65s in the UK. If these numbers are right, around 10% of them will die.
I'm not trying to downplay the crisis - I'm under no illusions that that is not where we are, but a quick look at that article seems to show stuff already revealed in the news conference the other day, and some misstatements.
Just an observation on your Guardian link, not the numbers you've derived.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/mar/15/uk-coronavirus...
Even if the peak is spread out over nine months, that still means setting up, equipping, and staffing around a million extra beds over the next few weeks. At a time when existing medical staff are incapacitated.
This is not going to happen. The only way it might be possible is with civil conscription - literally taking people off the street and putting them through basic nursing boot camp. Even then there would be huge issues with supplies of equipment and consumables.
So the reality is that most people who need to be hospitalised in the UK (and probably the US) won't be - at least not effectively. Italy has shown what this means: without adequate care the CFR rises from 1% to 7% or so.
Which in turn means that without aggressive containment measures to slow the spread, the actual death toll will be in the millions, heavily concentrated among the over 65s.
There are around 10 million over 65s in the UK. If these numbers are right, around 10% of them will die.