Thanks for the continued discussion as I am very curious about this issue.
I'm not sure I understand points 1 and 2.
For #1. While the contrast between Kentucky and Tennessee is often held out as proof that social distancing works, epidemiologists in Tennessee note that actual measures of distancing obtained from cell phone records indicate more compliance in Tennessee, yet that is the state with the higher number of cases, so they don’t buy the explanation that differences in social distancing policies are the explanation.
For #2. Nationally the measured exponential growth rate began to drop about March 25. My understanding is that the predictions of the delay between implementation of coercive social distancing measures and the drop in propagation were for a greater delay than what was observed.
I would be quite happy to see a dataset with the timing of implementation of the policies and the confirmed case rates on a state by state basis. I can always be persuaded by the data.
The NY state data is an excellent case in point. You can (and I have) compared that data to other states and also to the US as a whole, excluding NY state, which was one of the first and earliest to implement stay-at-home policies. The difference in that data is stark, and if conforms very nicely to the expected outcome.
Can you provide the data and your analysis? I have not had the time to try and pull this together myself yet but would be very happy to see it.
It is probably too early to have peer-reviewed publications on this topic, because we are still in the middle of the outbreak.
Well we have preprints on all sorts of other aspects of this. You say you’ve already performed an analysis. I imagine those who work in this area specifically have had plenty of time to do something similar. Where are those preprints? Perhaps they will be forthcoming, but until they do so, I think it is a bit premature to predict what they will say.
My suspicion is that the relationship here is more nuanced and not so obviously clear. Therefore it takes some time and effort to tease apart the various factors. This is not a physics or chemistry experiment, but rather biomedical and social science where the evidence is often much softer and difficult to interpret than in the hard sciences.
Regarding point 4. There is no good evidence, even if one considers extremely optimistic estimates of exposure rates, that herd immunity is a factor in the current progress of the epidemic in the US.
I agree that the results from the recent studies in the US strongly suggest herd immunity is likely not a factor, at least not in the normal sense.
A proper study would include validation data (something analytical chemists are quite familiar with) to ensure it is not picking up false positives from non-COVID coronaviruses, which are very common.
What did you think of the validation procedures in the recent Stanford study? They manufacturer reportedly had something like 390 negatives against sera from prior to the epidemic.
There is overwhelming scientific consensus points to the importance of physical distancing in controlling the current outbreak.
Argument from authority. I’ll be convinced by the data, analysis, and publications. Where are they?
There is virtually no disagreement (I mean, is there really ANY disagreement on this point?) that physical distancing has reduced both morbidity and mortality due to COVID-19, and publicly available data supports that claim.
Again, please provide citations. I have seen no preprints addressing this. Without citations to at least preprints, it seems unjustified to assert this.
If people are not exposed, they can't get sick and they can't die from the virus. Balancing economic and public health issues is another thing, and that is a question of ethics and sociology, not science.
Agreed the cost trade offs are not a scientific question and that in the limit distancing has to work to stop the spread. The question is whether in this case the interventions used have worked, and if so, how well.
One of my primary interests is whether the coercive orders made a difference. It is possible that people were distancing based on recommendations prior to the coercive orders, yet it may be that the coercive orders have been the primary thing causing other damage, such as deaths due to other causes and economic damage. That is a very important question from a policy perspective and measuring the relative contributions will require the type of data and analyses I have been discussing.