Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – Using official
Russian government figures alone which almost certainly understate the problem,
the coronavirus pandemic is spreading more rapidly in Russia than in most other
countries with the number of infections likely to exceed 200,000 by mid-April
with 30,000 of these seriously at risk, Andrey Illarionov says.
The economist says that in all
countries, the pandemic has or will pass through six stages: initial infection
of one individual, an initial plateau, an explosion, a levelling of the curve
of growth, slow growth, and the end of the epidemic; and he classifies
countries into three groups depending on the reaction of governments and thus
the course of the disease.
None has ended the epidemic yet, Illarionov
says. But some have done better than others because their governments have
acted in a tougher manner. The Asian-German “variant” which includes China,
South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, Iran and Germany has reduced the increase to
less than 10 percent a day (echo.msk.ru/blog/aillar/2614281-echo/).
The Romano-Canadian variant (Italy,
France, Australia, Spain and Canada) have reduced the increase after the 28th
day of first infection by 10 to 18 percent. And the Anglo-Saxon variant (UK,
Australia, and the US) after the 28th day is still seeing increases of
20 to 31 percent a day, the economist continues.
As for the Russian Federation, he
says, its explosive period began on March 5. During the first 18 days after that,
the number of cases increased according to official figures by 28 percent a
day, and between the 18th and 23rd day, the numbers rose
to 33.4 percent. This is greater than even the Anglo-Saxon numbers.
Over the next two to three weeks, the increases in Russia will be “no less
than 30 percent a day.” That means there will be likely be more than 200,000
infected by mid-April. Of these, 30,000 will require hospitalization and
treatment facilities that exceed the number which exist in Russia at the present
time.
Vladimir Putin’s refusal to impose a quarantine immediately thus means
that many of these will die, that is “tens of thousands of people,” Illarionov
says. And since the figures which serve as the basis for this calculation are
likely significantly understated so too is that one.
No comments:
Post a Comment