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Is the PSI used by any organisations outside the CDC? Is it used throughout the US? Is it used internationally? Has any other organisation contributed to its formulation?
Its purpose is to inform everyone concerning which social isolation measures should be taken. It is designed to function like the Hurricane severity index. So if you know the coming hurricane is at one strength you as an individual might choose to act one way versus acting another way if the hurricane was a cat 5 for example. Individuals, companies and local officials will be making decisions such as stay home or not, close factory or not, close school or not. How people use scientific assessments provided by government funded experts is mostly up to them. Mandated social isolation measures like closing airports is being evaluated with computer models that show whether to do so or not is critically determined by precise details concerning the transmit-ability and lethality that are only roughly identified by this PSI. But this PSI is for public consumption. The actual mandated procedures in the case of a flu pandemic will be determined by the computer models supplied with the precise data from the scientists once they have an actual pandemic flu virus to evaluate.
WAS 4.25016:40, 7 August 2007 (UTC)reply
Okay. I'm not really trying to be rude or piss you off, but you realise that you haven't actually answered either of my questions, do you? It's purpose is already clear in the article. Is it actually functional and accepted on a semi-national/national/continental/trans-atlantic/trans-pacific/international level.--
ZayZayEM02:01, 8 August 2007 (UTC)reply
We don't have flu pandemics often enough for this to be tested by "what happened last time?" This was just invented. You are asking what the credibility of the US government experts is in the world community and I tell you that our experts are second to none and in the case of a flu pandemic will be eagerly looked to for advice. You want to improve an article on a subject that you know nothing about and don't have the faintest clue about what is a reasonable question to ask. You don't want to piss me off yet that is inevitable given that you refuse to actually read the background material about the subject you are trying to write about. You are putting effort into this I can see from your sandbox, but no amount of such effort negates ignorance. Read the source material.
WAS 4.25002:19, 8 August 2007 (UTC)reply
I tell you that our experts are second to none. -WAS
This simply isn't good enough for wikipedia. I know US experts (generally) have global influence, but we need to have this referenced from a credible second or third party source. As this is something sort-of-fresh of the table, it really begs its encyclopedic value until it actually has been tested and accepted. I get no real information about what this index is, just its purpose. I don't even get that this is a proposed scheme that hasn't even been really utilised by anyone yet. Take a look at the article on
Tropical cyclone scales, they have details like who uses them where, and when/how/why they were developed.
Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale: The Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Scale is used only to describe hurricanes forming in the Atlantic Ocean and northern Pacific Ocean east of the International Date Line.
I know this seems like I am targetting you, it's not for simple harrassment. These are valid concerns about the writing style in several articles where you are a main contributor. You must say where information comes from and provide relevent context - you cannot place government reports as facts, they are government reports regardless of their credibility.--
ZayZayEM04:18, 8 August 2007 (UTC)reply
You asked me questions. I answered your questions. I get nothing back from you but ignorant lip. I'm done with you. Look up the answers to your own questions from now on.
WAS 4.25005:24, 8 August 2007 (UTC)reply
No you didn't. You haven't answered either of my questions. All you've done is called me ignorant.
Who uses the PSI? Who has suggested the will use the PSI? Has the CDC even wholly adopted the PSI? Have any internaional CDC-equivalents adopted the CDC's PSI? Have any organisations in or out of the US criticised or supported the PSI?
The PSI is a new CDC guideline for communicating the risk posed by pandemic influenza to the US population. It is not an international classification and is not applied to any other disease. The article quite accurately describes this guideline and its proposed application. I've added a bit to the lead.
Tim Vickers18:16, 9 August 2007 (UTC)reply
that one sentance make s a big difference. thanks Tim. I still think this article could do with some expansion and more than a single reference (though the further reading helps out). I would particularly like to see some comments by non-US government associated health bodies.--
ZayZayEM02:59, 10 August 2007 (UTC)reply
Can someone provide a source for "to the US population"? As far as I know there is no such limitation. Further, common sense would indicate the desire of US officials to "indicate the risk" to US citizens and military personnel all over the world and to our friends and allies all over the world. Does anyone have a source for this unnecessary, pointless and bizarre limitation on the intended use of the PSI?
WAS 4.25018:52, 11 August 2007 (UTC)reply
CDC is a domestic organisation, none of its recommendations have international standing by themselves. But check out the USINFO source I added.--
ZayZayEM13:43, 12 August 2007 (UTC)reply
Excellent job. One index with multiple levels. I'm thinking singular when referred to as a whole while plural if referring to one of its levels. Sorry if that's an inadequate answer.
WAS 4.25018:22, 12 August 2007 (UTC)reply
Notability
I'm going to be really polite about this. I'm not trying to be a
wanker or
troll, but depsite the effort I just put into this article unless anyone can change my mind it is probably going to be nominated for
Deletion.
This is a proposed US domestic health classification guideline from that the CDC themselves have acknowledged is a work in progress. The sources I used are for the most part PR exercises loaded with public health and governmental buzzwords for media digestion. Nothing much exists (online) beyond these February press releases. The CDC churns out guidelines like these with regularity, it doesn't mean they deserve a wikipedia article.
The old inclusionist versus deletionist problem. H5N1 is notable. Efforts to plan for it are notable. This is a key piece of the US effort to plan for it. The question of exactly how much social isolation is useful or desireable in a flu pandemic is an issue governments are spending many millions on specifically and billions if looked at broadly including computer studies, historical research, published studies and practice drills. The need for an easily understandable communicatable way to communicate level of needed social isolation in a flu pandemic has been made apparent by problems in exercise drills that have been run. This is not some meaningless bureaucratic guideline. It is the outgrowth of intense study in how to avoid many millions of deaths. It's important.
WAS 4.25018:34, 12 August 2007 (UTC)reply
But it's not quite live. It's in a sort of
Beta test stage. Many computer games in Beta have article, so I suspect it will survive a VfD, but at present, I personally favour exclusion. It's not important, it could be important. It really hasn't attracted that much attention domestically or internationally from the news and sources to me. It just seems a CDC PR exercise.--
ZayZayEM00:39, 13 August 2007 (UTC)reply
http://www.pandemicflu.gov/plan/community/commitigation.html does not give me the impression that they planned to change it. Perhaps they made a comment somewhere (eg " The interim guidance will be updated when significant new information about the usefulness and feasibility of these approaches emerges.") giving themselves room to modify it if they ever felt a need and you misunderstood?
WAS 4.250 (
talk)
01:08, 20 October 2008 (UTC)reply
Stages 6 and 7 ?
On 26 April 2008, 156.34.44.68 added Stages 6 and 7 to the chart under "Guidelines," but I am unable to locate any such mention of such in the CDC references. But, if there is, I doubt the CDC would refer to Stage 7 as the religious term "Apocalypse." --
- W5WMW (
talk)
23:09, 26 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Replaced "pandemic is going to get out of control"
The language "pandemic is going to get out of control" is sensational, unencyclopedic, and at odds with the Index itself. I replaced this with "how likely a disease will spread worldwide". Only Level 5 is about a pandemic. The other four levels are all non-pandemic (or pre-pandemic), and the language of the article should reflect this. And no disease is "under control". They all spread, mutate, and eventually end outside of human control.
Interlingua12:20, 28 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Has the HHS/CDC used the PSI during the current swine flu scare? I think that is a real test of how successful they were out of moving this from a developmental "beta" project into a live indexing scheme. (Although it probably only rates a 1 at most at present, not a very high CFR as yet). I've seen quite a few references to WHO Pandemic phases, but haven't heard anyone mention a PSI on news reports I've seen.--
ZayZayEM (
talk)
22:10, 29 April 2009 (UTC)reply
I've been looking for the same thing, as I work for a bank and federal guidance indicates that I need to reference my business continuity plan to the WHO pandemic index and US Pandemic Severity Index. However, I've been searching for it everywhere and have not been able to find it. When I questioned the FFIEC (the regulatory agency who recommended the PSI usage) as to the location of the PSI, I was given the website to the original report that explains its use, not the actual index itself. ~~lsk4psu 9:20EST, 04 August 2009
Confusion with pandemic influenza phases
Maybe I'm interpreting this incorrectly, but someone appears to have confused the 2009 swine flu outbreak's rating of 5 on the WHO's pandemic influenza phase rating system with the pandemic severity index, two very different things. This may give the impression that the WHO expects greater than two million US deaths as a result of this outbreak, when, from what I've read, no one yet knows how fatal this strain will become. I'd delete it, but I haven't had my coffee yet and it'd be cool if someone else could verify this first.
173.79.50.138 (
talk)
12:37, 30 April 2009 (UTC)reply
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^Johnson NP, Mueller J (2002). "Updating the accounts: global mortality of the 1918-1920 "Spanish" influenza pandemic". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 76 (1): 105–15.
doi:
10.1353/bhm.2002.0022.
PMID11875246.
S2CID22974230.
^Schwarzmann SW, Adler JL, Sullivan RJ, Marine WM (June 1971). "Bacterial pneumonia during the Hong Kong influenza epidemic of 1968-1969". Archives of Internal Medicine. 127 (6): 1037–41.
doi:
10.1001/archinte.1971.00310180053006.
PMID5578560.
Why is 2019 coronavirus disease listed in the pandemic chart?
Why is 2019 coronavirus disease listed in the pandemic chart? As far as I am aware, the CDC (or any other source) has not declared that, and furthermore the introduction to this page says the PSI is only for flu epidemics.
I removed a listing in the table earlier since the citation given was pure original research. It might be helpful to add a code comment saying not to include it given that it isn't an influenza and hasn't been listed on the PSI to my knowledge. —
Nizolan(
talk ·
c.)14:29, 21 March 2020 (UTC)reply
It is treated like a category 3-4 pandemic (declared as such by the WHO on March 11th), not an extreme 5-6. The fatality rate can vary from nation to nation (4% in the USA, 11% in Italy and .3% in Germany), now epidemologists said if you include serological exposure studies, the total global fatality rate for Covid-19 should be 1%! The "100 year bug" pandemic many scientists knew it would happen, especially a pandemic that is a coronavirus, related to SARS-1 in 2002-04 (a smaller scale on 1-2 but with a higher fatality rate than the current progress of Covid-19) and originated in China or East Asia, was predicted to possibly sweep the world in the first 20 years (two decades) of this century/ millennia.
2605:E000:100D:C571:8921:AB9A:1584:4730 (
talk)
02:20, 25 April 2020 (UTC)reply
I reversed the edit on July 23 that listed COVID-19 as a category 5 pandemic. It should not be listed in that chart without a proper citation.
Megathon7 (
talk)
05:58, 24 July 2020 (UTC)reply
Do we need to put a note about not listing Covid-19 at this point? Every few days someone adds it back in without sources despite this not being a current metric
Ragdolcatllover (
talk)
23:09, 26 July 2020 (UTC)reply
I don't think a note should be placed in the article itself; that is more appropriate for this talk page. Several edit summaries on the page history also state that COVID-19 cannot be added without proper sources, and I suspect whichever individual(s) are re-adding it are doing so with deliberate disregard for
WP:CITE. I put in a request for temporary semi-protection on July 24, but it was declined due to insufficient recent disruption. If disruption continues, I will resubmit the request.
Megathon7 (
talk)
04:59, 27 July 2020 (UTC)reply