You’re comparing mortality rates with lockdowns and determining that we’d be better off without lockdowns. But your benchmark then needs to be covid19 mortality without lockdowns and with potential healthcare collapse.
You're absolutely right, thankfully we have countries that didn't really do lockdowns aside from closing borders like Sweden and Netherlands, countries with similar demographics as far as genetics and comorbidity, so we can get an estimation of that number if we like.
I wouldn't argue that a European diaspora country were that culturally unrelated to a European country. Completely incomparable is a stretch.
But the culture isn't what we are comparing. What we are looking for is the comorbidities in the age range of 0-65 in both countries. They have similar climate ranges, similar eating habits, similar healthcare systems, similar genetics, etc. So we should expect that under similar covid contingencies we would get similar mortality in that age group. We wouldn't of course get exact equal values, at the very least random variance would introduce some discrepancy, but we can get a very good idea of what would've happened to that age range in Canada had there been no lockdown measures.
potential health care collapse and also more deaths due to covid in that population and more long covid symptoms that further tax the health care system not to mention quality of life moving forward. there is no way to know for sure since by nature you can't control for it and test it but I'd suspect that there was a net benefit to the lockdowns.
Hate to break the news to you but the Canadian healthcare system collapsed a long time before Corona. Just ask anyone who has been to a hospital in Toronto before Corona.
Doesn't Canada have one of the best healthcare systems in the world? If that how "collapsing" looks like to you, you might need to adjust your worldview.
The problem here is mostly the lack of available nurses and doctors, who have to pull insane shifts to compensate. Hospitals are also very concentrated in urban areas. Canada has 30% less nurses per capita than the US.
You obviously haven't been to a hospital in Toronto in the last 10 years. Go visit St Joes, you walk in and take a ticket like you're at the butchers. The ticket is to get in line for administration. After administration you wait 12 hours for someone to see you. Just peek through the emerg doors and you see people in hallways lying in beds. The Canadian medical system is shit compared to the US medical system.
I'm also an expat who's used both. No doubt the Canadian healthcare system has problems, but... I saw similar things and experienced similar wait times in American hospitals (Seattle), and then had the privilege of paying thousands of dollars for it.
I've been to hospitals in Toronto pre-covid. Nothing but good things to say. I've always been able to see a doctor quickly. When imaging was needed it was available quickly. Etc.
I'm told that the wait time for very-specialized specialists is unreasonable long (and believe it), but the general standard of care here is very good.
Unless you are about to die in the next month imaging can take month.. there is a reason why there was a pile of clinics in Buffalo that used to cater to Canadians. You drive across get your CT done get a CD then drive back. Alternatively you wait 2 month. Now you are just fucked
Or you can “know” people then you can get it done tomorrow.
I don't "know" people, connections have never played a role in the healthcare I received (except the lack of them I suppose). This is simply not my experience. I'll go over me actual experiences:
1. Potential appendicitis. Got a cat scan within hours of arriving at the hospital. Admittedly if this was actual appendicitis it would be a "about to die in the next month without surgery" situation (turned out not to be).
2. Weird long term issue relating to alcohol causing a literal pain in my side (sharp pain, relatively minor). Completely non-urgent, this existed since I first drank alcohol and the most likely explanation is that "some peoples bodies just don't like alcohol".
The doctor first asked for a ultrasound to diagnose that, no appointment necessary, literally walked into the ultrasound place, gave them the paperwork, got an ultrasound, walked out in under 20 minutes.
Ultrasound from that didn't end up turning up anything useful, so the doctor asked for a chess x-ray. This time an appointment was necessary, I made it via phone that night. A spot was available the next day. Again I walked in, got an x-ray, and left in under 20 minutes.
Various other tests (e.g. bloodwork for a few things) followed a similar pattern.
I do live in Toronto, and these experiences were downtown (the non-hospital imaging was all done in the kensington health building, I think the hospital was east general), which has a higher concentration of health services than most of Ontario/Canada.
> Hate to break the news to you but the Canadian healthcare system collapsed a long time before Corona. Just ask anyone who has been to a hospital in Toronto before Corona.
And the solution for an already collapsed health system is to overload it even more with a pandemic, right?
"A society grows great when old men plant trees in whose shade they shall never sit." It's interesting how the same crowd that once chanted this in favor of action on global warming etc. is the crowd that wanted everyone locked down or restricted until grandma's (or more recently immuocompromised or even kids) at 0% risk regardless of the second-order consequences.
That's pretty trite to state in the context of the information presented in this article. Evidently, insufficient care was given, and perhaps concern had been misplaced.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality-adjusted_life_year