Last Tuesday as rumors of new guidelines asking everyone to wear facemasks spread, I decided to watch the Task Force briefing. There was no such guidance at that time, but I was impressed by how the reporters never seem to listen to the speakers. Are they distracted by the opportunity to ask their prepared questions and ability to get airtime? I spent a good deal of the time telling the TV, “They just said that!”
In any case the first question was about one of the graphs projecting 100,000 to 240,000 deaths, even with full mitigation. This was a modeling result and was in no way guaranteed. No one asked about confidence in the model or how it could change. They just focused on the numbers, because they are scary numbers. The primary reason for the question appeared to be to get the president to say the number, so they could pin it on him. He handed it off to Dr. Birx to show the chart again and repeat the projection.
The next day those scary numbers were all over the news. CBS said, "The White House projects 100,000 to 240,000 Americans will die from coronavirus if ‘full mitigation’ measures are taken.” NBC called it a “dire warning” and only used the upper limit of the projection. ABC chimed in with, “Grim Trump, doctors say prepare for potential 100K to 240K deaths.” That story emphasized the president “abruptly” changing his mind when given new information – I wonder what ABC does when they get new information.
I cite the mainstream media here, because so many editorials like to pick only on “cable news” when criticizing incomplete or slanted coverage.
Now let’s do what neither the media nor the task force made an effort to do, put it in perspective.
First, are all these incremental deaths? – Probably not. Some of the people who die from the virus would likely have died anyway, especially those in nursing homes. In addition, with so many people staying home, traffic deaths and other accidental deaths may be avoided, but all deaths will be recorded as virus-related and extraordinary.
Second, America is a land of big numbers. The government just passed a law to spend a huge amount, over $2 trillion! Each year Americans drive over 3 trillion miles, personal and commercial, and 2.8 million babies are born. It wasn’t too long ago we were stressing over news like this, “more than 130 people in the United States die of an opioid overdose every day.” And today: “School closures due to coronavirus have impacted at least 124,000 U.S. public and private schools and affected at least 55.1 million students.” The CDC considers over 107 million American adults obese. In America, charities, activists and politicians wanting to raise money, awareness or votes easily find such big numbers to elicit support.
The CDC estimates 24,000 to 62,000 deaths from the flu this last season, and that’s with a vaccine available. In 2018, the number was 55,672 from flu and pneumonia. If we had 100,000 deaths from coronavirus in 2018 (the last year with complete numbers), it would have ranked seventh among leading causes of death just ahead of Diabetes.
Relative to some of these numbers, 100,000 across the entire population is not that large; but taken by itself it can be scary. The task force uses it without perspective to motivate people, to shock them into doing the right thing. The media piles on by using it without perspective to attract viewers and to sell newspapers.
We should be able to cooperate in the containment effort without fear and be able to stay calm knowing the media agenda is to upset us enough to ensure we buy more of what they are selling. But that's not what's happening.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Click again on the title to add a comment