FrankPintor
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Ok, but what's your point? Slower infection has nothing to do with the number of cases, it has to do with the slope of the curve. The slope of Argentina's curve is less than Chile's, so Argentina has slowed infection compared to Chile. The difference between the two countries is striking, with the resources at hand, Argentina has done very well.We now have 4000 - 5000 new cases a day up from a few hundred per day during the first months of quarantine? To me, that indicates the number of cases (not the R factor) is still accelerating and Argentina just kicked the can down the road, along with the risk of pressure on the health system. How can this happen if the quarantine we have had all along (and very similar to that of Peru) really worked as effectively as it could have or actually has an exit strategy to be sustainable? That is something we still need more time to see, but at this stage I am doubtful of a clear success story resulting in most places on earth, perhaps however with the countries that end up holistically "best off" in the long run having taken more precise and pragmatic approaches that used time effectively.
By the way, Chile's statistics are a hot mess, they tried to hide Covid deaths by not giving it as the cause of death if it could possibly be avoided, they tried to exclude asymptomatic cases, they delayed reporting, and even now I believe they complicate reporting so as to hide Covid deaths. Chile's health minister had to step down because of his part in that fraud. Argentina's rules for reporting Covid deaths are a model of transparency, I'm sure I can find the Pauta (Chilean) magazine link comparing the rules. It's also much more difficult to report yourself as a Covid infection in Chile, you need to drag yourself to an emergency room at a hospital, whereas here I understand you dial 107 and if you test positive they'll also test all your neighbours?
And never mind Peru, please, if Chile only did virtually everything wrong, Peru really managed to do everything wrong, again there was no lockdown, men and women could go out on alternate days (wtf, men don't infect men, women don't infect women...?), people could continue to use public transport, and as a consequence, bodies have been piling up in the streets. To top it off (Peru is always a standout), they think they have 900 missing women, no accurate number, there's no missing persons' register, of course, victims of domestic violence or whatever it is kills people there to add to their excess death toll.
The basic statistics as reported by Argentina and Chile are here:
COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
COVID-19 pandemic in Chile - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
And the excess mortality, which does an end-run around manipulation of the data, particularly Chile which was reporting 50% of their real numbers, is here:
Coronavirus tracker: the latest figures as countries fight the Covid-19 resurgence | Free to read
The FT analyses the scale of outbreaks and tracks the vaccine rollouts around the world
www.ft.com
I hope it will be updated soon, and I wish they would include Argentina as well. If Chile is now looking better, it's only because they killed off so many people before locking Santiago down.