So are we equating New York to the rest of the country?
Don't know who 'we' is.
As in so many things, NYC is where things tend to be most concentrated. Be it crack cocaine or covid. From folks I trained with who are in King County and Chicago, it isn't a picnic there either.
But in many parts of the US, not so.
Not yet. As I noted further up in the thread, our hospital and our county have been testing aggressively in the last couple of weeks and until last saturday, we hadn't seen a single case. In the days since, this has changed and the beds in the dedicated covid floor are starting to fill. As the US didn't do the chinese thing and just put soldiers on checkpoints around King County and NYC, this will move in waves moving out from NYC, Seattle etc. The waves are not concentric as they follow things like interstates and family connections rather than the physics of a seismic wave. This will get to every state and most counties eventually, heck it even got to West Virginia.
I've been reading today about many hospitals laying off staff in significant numbers. Seems everyone believes hospitals are only to be used for Covid19.
Right now they are. Our hospital stopped doing all but the most urgent surgical cases and shut down most outpatient imaging over the course of the past two weeks. Doing so, allowed them to free up capacity for the arrival of the 'wave' and hopefully allow us to get through this without ever capping out on vent beds and personal protective equipment. I dont know whether we have any staff on furlough yet, I believe so far those who are idled are asked to take PTO. The experience from other hospitals shows that as this hits, you go from 'too much staff' to 'too little staff' in about 3 days as you end up with key employees in quarantine or sick.
In 2019 NY had 18,000 flu hospitalizations. Just this February in one week NYC had 8,602 flu cases. We didn't see South Dakota shutting down because of it.
You are making my point. 8602 weekly flu cases in a regular season cause a bump in hospitalizations and a few hundred ICU admissions. They dont outstrip the ability of the NYC health system to treat them.
In the past week, Covid created 21877 cases which caused 4632 hospitalizations.
18,000 flu hospitalizations are throughout a season that runs from November through March, not in a week or two.
And your "10 times as deadly" doesn't fly, the numbers have been proving that is false.
Babbling on about the 'denominator' doesn't make it go away. I know I know the data from 'Vo' and 'Iceland' are different, but they aren't comparable to the flu data either. We dont go around and test everyone in a jurisdiction with a Influenza array. We test those who present to their doctor with 'flu like illness' and whom the provider considers sufficiently high risk to get seriously ill. Those who have good immunity against this years Influenza strain (e.g. because they had their flu shot), just get a upper respiratory infection and tough it out. We never know whether they had influenza A or B or one of the other 100 respiratory viruses.