Invisible Woman
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
That figures. But professors are supposed to partake of critical thinking as well, if I remember rightly.
Would you mind pointing that out to Wessely & Sharpe?

That figures. But professors are supposed to partake of critical thinking as well, if I remember rightly.
Would you mind pointing that out to Wessely & Sharpe?![]()
Currently it´s 0.9%, having gradually risen by 0.1% each of the last days.The German figures make it hard to see how the overall death rate can be much above 2-3% I would say.
@Hutan I still don't feel reassured with the way returnees are being quarantined. Quarantine to me is being in one place for 14 days under guard so as not to infect the rest of the country. And every single one of them should have been tested before leaving quarantine.It's sounding a bit hopeful in NZ though now, isn't it. Seems that the government is talking about doing random testing to try to get a better understanding of whether there are cases outside the known clusters.
Dropping social distancing would obviously produce a second wave, and the next time a third wave and on for ever. The 'second wave' though, seems to be based on some graphs from a historic flu epidemic where there was a second wave for reasons that probably had nothing to do with containment measures.
Are you referring to Germany?Currently it´s 0.9%, having gradually risen by 0.1% each of the last days.
In TV today some expert hoped for an underdetermination of 20-fold, that would mean with about 70.000 confirmed cases there would be 1.400.000 real cases (being the number of infection ca. 10 days ago).
Is this what they are referring to by 'second wave'? I'm so confused from all the conflicting information out there.
I'm wondering, everybody is talking about ventilators.
From what I understand, that's for the most severe cases.
But there are also people that only need an oxygen mask, a CPAP or just a nasal cannula (I hope I got this right). And that can prevent them from needing a ventilator if their case isn't that severe.
Are there enough of those?
Today´s numbers from the Robert-Koch-Institute (I though looked today in the morning and got older ones) areAre you referring to Germany?
10 days ago 22 Mar they had about 25000 cases, five days ago 51000 cases.
As of today they have c. 900 deaths so about 1.75% allowing for a 5 day lag.
If the true death rate is 0.66% then the underdetermination is only about 3 fold.
i.e 5 days ago they had about 150000 cases.
So would that be like the chickenpox virus that can reactivate to cause shingles yrs later, or am I displaying my ignorance lol?@Barry COVID19 is an enveloped RNA virus.
These small, enveloped RNA viruses replicate via reverse transcription of their RNA genomes; the resulting DNA establishes persistence by integrating into the host genome, from which it generally cannot be dislodged. In most infected cells in culture, such integrants continue to express genomic RNA and viral proteins, leading to the production of progeny virions. However, in some cultured cells such integrants are completely transcriptionally silent, though they can be exogenously stimulated to express viral mRNAs and resume virus production. These cells meet the molecular definition of latency.
Then there’s the fact that regardless of whether herd immunity was a primary or secondary aim, it was a policy and outcome that the uk govt actually entertained.
”Our aim is to try and reduce the peak, broaden the peak, not suppress it completely; also, because the vast majority of people get a mild illness, to build up some kind of herd immunity so more people are immune to this disease and we reduce the transmission, at the same time we protect those who are most vulnerable to it. Those are the key things we need to do.”
This was Sir Patrick Valance, England’s chief scientific adviser, speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme a couple of weeks ago:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...f-defends-uk-measures-criticism-herd-immunity
So I think we pretty much have it on record that herd immunity was the government’s primary aim.
I have read that Wuhan residents who had tested positive earlier and then recovered from the disease are testing positive for the virus a second time. Based on data from several quarantine facilities in the city, which house patients for further observation after their discharge from hospitals, about 5%-10% of patients pronounced "recovered" have tested positive again.