ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
From Worldometers today:
[sarcasm mode engaged]
Luxembourg has tested >60,000/M people for the virus! They're doing a great job! South Korea only 11,000/M! By comparison they don't know WTF they're doing! They really need to up their testing game just looking at the raw numbers. I'd say that they should quintuple their testing program at the very least before we have enough information to say whether their efforts have been successful. MORE TESTING! [8|]
[/sarcasm mode disengaged]
At least in terms of Europe I think there may be a big distinction between proactive testing and reactive testing. In terms of deaths/M some EU countries are doing far better than others. Luxembourg is one of them. Germany is probably the one that has had the most attention. Portugal is another country doing really well - worthy of mention given that Luxembourg and Germany are two of the richest countries in the EU whereas Portugal is the poorest in Western Europe (i.e. west of the old communist bloc).
I think that much of their success may be due to them testing in large numbers early on, isolating pockets of the virus, and slowing the spread amongst the wider national population. As opposed to Spain/Italy/France where you have high numbers of tests per capita but I would suggest that this is because they have lots of people who are sick that they are then testing.
Would you say that that approach will only work very early in the spread of the virus and that the ship has passed for the US and for European countries like Italy/Spain/France/UK?






