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Unfortunately, this gives the total tests but NOT tests per capita, which is a KEY detail.If anyone is interested here is a list of number of Covid tests done per country
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Tests for COVID-19 most impacted countries worldwide 2022 | Statista
As of December 22, 2022, the United States had performed around 1.15 billion tests for COVID-19, the highest number of any country worldwide.www.statista.com
For example: Portugal has roughly 1/32 of the population of USA but has just under 1/16 of USA's amount of tests performed, so it has almost double the tests of USA and this is by the data provided in the link (April 30th).
There was never going to be a good way out of this. The economy would have suffered regardless as industry would have crumbled under an ever-increasing shortage of labour (even taking two weeks off for mild sickness). A perfect example is how many public transport drivers in the UK have died. Less drivers = less transport = no work for some = diminished output. Now spread those deaths at a far higher rate to all sectors and you have a breakdown of confidence and service, without Government assistance.
Agreed.
That's why i think New Zealand has had the best approach to this:
![www.axios.com](/forums/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.axios.com%2Fkarmf7Eh_aj7fYVoQ7yk5TyBSrI%3D%2F0x0%3A2016x1134%2F1366x768%2F2020%2F04%2F09%2F1586411900141.jpg&hash=49a2254d88ec11403d80cab07b67de35&return_error=1)
New Zealand sets sights on coronavirus elimination after 2 weeks of lockdown
New modeling shows there's a real chance of that happening.
![www.axios.com](/forums/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.axios.com%2Fimages%2Fa_favicon-32.png&hash=032b6e1361fad8f3c623cc7832fcc9aa&return_error=1)
Severe measures right @ the beginning of the outbreak lead to the measures being in place for a much shorter period, so it's actually far FAR cheaper this way.
EDIT
![theconversation.com](/forums/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.theconversation.com%2Ffiles%2F325156%2Foriginal%2Ffile-20200403-99330-1ec0ku5.jpg%3Fixlib%3Drb-4.1.0%26rect%3D0%252C240%252C960%252C480%26q%3D45%26auto%3Dformat%26w%3D1356%26h%3D668%26fit%3Dcrop&hash=a28d1d0e8e3f316c120044ac2912549c&return_error=1)
Three reasons why Jacinda Ardern’s coronavirus response has been a masterclass in crisis leadership
As someone who researches and teaches leadership, I’d argue New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is giving most Western politicians a masterclass in crisis leadership.
![theconversation.com](/forums/proxy.php?image=https%3A%2F%2Fcdn.theconversation.com%2Fstatic%2Ftc%2F%40theconversation%2Fui%2Fdist%2Fesm%2Flogos%2Fweb-app-logo-192x192-2d05bdd6de6328146de80245d4685946.png&hash=9d815de4b6c27eca8f1fc818578f5882&return_error=1)
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