I think its equally important to keep the existing government operational and healthy as the healthcare workers in a situation like this.
I would put government officials secondary to healthcare workers
and those who need to interact with people, like tellers and delivery people.
If testing capacity currently is 1500 tests per day
That, too, is completely arbitrary number. There are several companies in Finland, including
Aidian, that manufacture the tests in the millions, and export them. While you do need trained technicians to run the tests, we could have crash-trained dozens of them in the past two months.
My point is, the "we can't do any more tests" claim is bullshit, just like the claim "we cannot close our borders" was. They lie, because they are unable to rationally examine the reasons for the decisions they are making.
I have had corona-like symptoms(itchy throat, slight fever, chest pain and slight difficult in breathing) since last sunday and 2 of my close acquaintances have very similar symptoms but testing wouldn't make me feel any better.
Me too, for over a week now. I am not interested in getting myself tested either.
Look. There is a concerted effort to keep the numbers artificially low, because those in charge are scared. Because they are scared, they think that they are doing a good job by keeping the numbers hidden, so that people won't panic. Unfortunately, as we are seeing in Helsinki region -- much of the rest of the Finland is doing much better, over half of the cases are within Helsinki-Uusimaa region --, the numbers shown are so small
people do not think there is any reason for them to behave any different, and in doing so, they are spreading the virus at a rapid rate.
We won't know how bad the situation is, unless it is revealed by the number of dead (and it is possible to suppress those numbers too), or if we get incredibly lucky and the strain affecting Helsinki-Uusimaa regions happen to be less lethal than others.
To put it bluntly, I have already estimated about 2,000 dead in Helsinki-Uusimaa (HUS) before May. This is based on
just 15% of the region getting infected, and on just 1% fatality rate. The only thing that makes me think this is a very unreliable estimate is the fact that I do not know the statistics on the typical duration (from infection till death), and have assumed it is on the order of 30 days.
If Finns were told point blank that we expect a couple of thousand to die before the summer, backed by wider testing numbers and statistics from other countries, don't you think more people would take the social isolation more seriously? I do.
Instead, I predict that the tampering with the official figures is ignored, and the sudden start of deaths will be claimed to be "unforeseeable".
If the purpose is to suffer through this disease there is no point to try to slow it down too much. Delaying tactics until vaccination don't seem probable.
Except for the number of dead that would have remained alive with intensive care, of course.
There are only 228 intensive care beds, and a theoretical conversion capacity to around 400. When we have that number of cases in intensive care, people start to die because of lack of intensive care. Not just from Covid-19, but from other causes as well, because in triage -- choosing who gets the care -- misjudgements will be made.
I do believe that the Finnish path has two fatal errors. First is the refusal to act early and strongly (and lack of enforcement of isolation). We can't do anything about that anymore. Second is the "finessing" of the official numbers to make this seem less dangerous than it is. This is typical of Finns, and occurred even during the Tsernobyl incident; Finns were kept unaware of it as long as possible, because some idiots thought it would be better as people might panic otherwise. This latter is what I think is something we could change. Increasing the testing capacity so we had
proof, so we could stop idiots from believing they can just go on as usual -- this being
Somebody Elses Problem --, is the only way I see the change could happen.
TL;DR: It is the statistics from the tests that are important. Right now, they are kept artificially low in Finland, leading to ignorance, and actually hastening the spread of the virus. While it may help the epidemic to pass faster, a lot more people will die to lack of hospital resources that way, and not just from Covid-19, but from anything requiring intensive care resources.