There are a couple of things I would like to point out regarding some of the arguments I'm seeing in this thread.
Koon - with all due respect to your physician friend, an orthopod is probably one of the worst types of physicians to discuss a pandemic issue with. They are specialists whose worldview stops at the edge of a blade, drill, or saw. Also, you are seeing this issue from an insurance company's actuarial analysis. Like I said, in certain numbers and figures, this disease does not look bad. It's not as deadly as Ebola, it's not as effective as SARS, but it's much, much worse in the "human" aspect of medicine.
We are witnessing the collapse of the illusion that first-world medicine will save all. COVID-19 is the viral version of the Powell Doctrine: it is using decisive force against its enemy and overwhelming the systems it is facing. Like Lax pointed out, the problem is that there will be a significant shortage of resources to combat this virus. Here's something close to "home":
https://www.deaconess.com/How-to-make-a-Face-Mask
That isn't some high-school project, that's a hospital asking its community for help in sewing homemade masks because it was running out of PPE. If nothing else scares and saddens you, that really should. It should also really, really anger you that our federal government has fallen asleep at the wheel in the fight against pandemic disease. Not going into the obvious political arguments, there is absolutely no reason that our Strategic Supply should be so poorly managed.
I am in charge of hospital operations, so let me tell you what this week has been like. Besides the constant planning for the impending crush, I was on a state-wide call where our hospital association told us that some facilities in Washington State were triaging vents. They are in crisis mode. Anyone over 80 y/o was not going to go on a vent; he/she was going to be discharged home because the hospitals needed to use the resource on patients with a better chance for recovery. I read through the disaster plan of a hospital on another island. Their plan calls for similar resource-saving decisions should they reach their overflow capacity. Anyone over 65 has seven (7) days to show improvements on a vent, or the vent will be pulled and redeployed to another patient. The gallows-humor of this plan is that it makes Sarah Palin's death panels come to life!
We are getting our "Dooms Day" plans in place, and we'll need to create similar policies for pulling equipment from patients who are losing the fight. We are also planning quick construction on the unit that will be our last stand. We figure we can shove 30 beds in a unit made for 20, in case we get overrun with patients. Never, in a million years, did I think my day-job would include deciding which person was going to possibly live and which person would definitely die.
So, this is the part of this whole situation that the numbers don't play out. The professionals on the front line see this for what it is: an impending tsunami of life and death that will most likely crush us because of a combination of willful stupidity and understandable ignorance. Sure, two million deaths doesn't sound like a lot. Two million deaths that you are powerless against despite your best efforts is soul crushing.