After reviewing the numbers so far, I tried to come up with what I personally think is a reasonable ballpark of how I personally am expecting this virus to proceed in the US. Now, before you jump in and tell me I'm wrong, don't bother. I agree with you. I'm wrong.
The sole purpose of this is for me personally to get a ballpark idea of what seems reasonable to expect. For me. Personally. Based on present WHO data on how it's transpired so far in the world.
My bottom line is that I wouldn't be surprised if the virus numbers (confirmed and total deaths) in the US worsened for the next 2-3 weeks, and started to flatten and decline by the end of April. And I wouldn't be surprised if the US total deaths go from the present 1,000+ to between 5,000 to 10,000 before they decline. FYI, at present, Italy has reported over 8,000 deaths, China (where it all started) over 3,000 deaths, and Spain over 4,000 deaths. So I personally won't be surprised if US gets to where Spain or Italy are right now in terms of total deaths, prior to a decline by end of April as the virus dies out like SARS, etc.
My reasoning:
- Present confirmed cases in US are probably around 80k, and if we assume a ballpark death rate of around 3% that means as a minimum we can expect an additional 2,000+ deaths, raising the total from the present 1,000 to 3,000.
- Most countries have been in lockdown much of this week, and in the US I assume/hope that this means the recent transmission rates have dropped precipitously starting this week. And I'm hoping/expecting that means that new confirmed cases will start to drop sometime in late April.
- So the big unknowns are the success of the lockdown as well as the impact of not-yet-confirmed cases. And nobody knows the answer.
If China's numbers are to be believed, they have been very successful with their lockdown. Again, if they are to be believed, China is where it started, and with a population of 1.4 billion it's surprising they have had so few deaths (3,000+?). So maybe it's possible.
I'm *guessing* that Italy has suffered due partly to a timing issue, whereby they shut down later than China did relative to their transmission/infections. And I *think* the US shut down this week was relatively early in the process and therefore might be in better shape as far as new transmissions.
So given all that, I personally won't be surprised if by end of April the US sees a total death rate about where Italy is today (ie, maybe something like 8x what the US total deaths are today, or somewhere between 5,000 to 10,000 total), and after that I'm expecting the virus to follow the path of SARS and other past viruses that kinda died out.
Again, I admit this is all wrong. And if you disagree, feel free to post your own predictions, with numbers and rationale and such like I did. Should be interesting.