Umm, this sounds wrong? If the vulnerable are isolating and not becoming part of the herd the death rate surely wouldn't be as high? Or have you took that into account and are saying 1/200 healthy young people die from covid? I don't know the stats, but I thought the young/healthy demographic had an absolutely tiny death rate?
Edit: just had a check and UK morality rate is at around 12%? Some of that is to do with the way we initially reported deaths though. Studies seem to think it is 3-4%. So feck knows what I was babbling about.
I said it early on, the lockdown should have been for vulnerable people / people who were worried. Those that weren't worried should have been able to carry on like normal and catch it to achieve herd immunity quicker. Easier said that done though, and not guaranteed to work as we don't really know about reinfection yet.
I personally wouldn't have minded catching it, isolating for 14 days then going about business as usual, it in my mind is a risk I'd be willing to take, my own dumb risk but my own decision too. However I've been pretty good regarding social distancing and all that stuff, hasn't been difficult if I'm honest, just a ball ache shopping and the opening times / restrictions in certain places.
Slightly different topic, I seen covid tests are picking up the dead virus, is there a chance they are also picking up our normal winter flu too or is that highly unlikely?