I wonder what's about illnesses with flue-like, common cold like symptoms. How many cases happen, and if tests could produce false positive covids from those. I read hundreds of viruses and bacteria cause flu like symptoms, it's just useless to test them since all treated the same (rest, drink fluids, if the fever goes high bring it down), and they are fairly harmless by the end of the day. Plus I'm curious about our death statistics, grouped by causes. I dl'd a preliminary report from out central statistics institution, broken down to weekly basis and age groups (but not cause of death), from 2015 January to 2021 April. Fiddled with it a bit, liek calculated averages and maximum from 2015 January to 2019 December and checked where it's higher than average after that date. Interestingly in older age groups already in 2020 January and February there were higher mortality than average. I assume however simply winter months are harder on the oldtimers, so have to check previous years too and see if it's a regular thing. But what I'm really curious about if cancer and cardiovascular death causes will feature with less numbers. They have to since those guy dies in covid chiefly (this is why we are ranked 1st in picrel, we lead cancer and such statistics too).