@Flyy1220 wrote:
This is apples to oranges. They didn't tell people to stay home. They gave them masks and told them to stay away from people.
Hmmmm, this is a good point, Flyy1220. It looks like we're both only partially right.
Here is the original research paper. I had only read the articles referencing them at first:
[
papers.ssrn.com]
It's downloadable for free and about 50 pages.
In the study, NPI stands for non-pharmaceutical interventions. The authors write:
@ wrote:
NPIs implemented in 1918 resemble many of the policies used to reduce the spread of COVID-19, including school, theater, and church closures, public gathering and funeral bans, quarantine of suspected cases, and restricted business hours. . .
For city-level NPIs, we rely on data from Markel et al. (2007), who gather detailed information on NPIs for 43 major U.S. cities from municipal health department bulletins, local newspapers, and reports on the pandemic. NPI measures consist of school closure, public gathering bans, and isolation and quarantine.
So, there is some overlap between the 1918 and 2020 responses, but not entirely, as they also write:
@ wrote:
The public health policy response in 1918 resembles the current response in the COVID-19 pandemic in many ways, although measures in 1918 were not as extensive in terms of closing non-essential businesses.5
In footnote 5 after this sentence, they note:
@ wrote:
Rather than closing businesses altogether, staggered business hours were introduced to avoid crowding in public transport.
So, yeah, you're right that there isn't a perfect apples-to-apples comparison. Non-essential businesses did not close altogether - some just had changed business hours. Although, we do see some overlap, such as banning public gatherings***, closing schools, closing theaters, closing dance halls, social distancing, etc. noted later in the study.
***I'm not sure how encompassing the term "public gatherings" is, as wouldn't some businesses essentially require public gathering?
So, yeah, we're both off. They did ask people to "stay home" in some cities (although, we can actually do stuff in 2020 too like get groceries, exercise, and see a doctor), but it wasn't as "extensive" in the closing of non-essential businesses.
Edited 2 time(s). Last edit at 05/31/2020 03:29AM by shoptastic.