Coronavirus - the killer flu that will wipe us out? (Vol. 5)

Coronavirus - the killer flu that will wipe us out? (Vol. 5)

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JagLover

42,433 posts

236 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Vipers said:
More realistic than most of the discussions in the UK media.

Alucidnation

16,810 posts

171 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Linda Lusardi has had it, and said she had symptoms of CV plus vomiting & the squits, so it appears she also had Norovirus at the same time but blaming it fully on CV.

Unless they are also symptoms of CV?


Camoradi

4,292 posts

257 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
turbobloke said:
Better viewing of late, though Sky is generally dire.

Kay Burley has just been put back in her box by the Mayor of London (which feat takes some naff journalism) and an emergency medicine doc (President of Royal College of Emergency Medicine) based at St Thomas' Hospital.

The latter is to be expected, she was dealing with a formidable and highly talented woman out of Burley's reach i.e. far and away above potted plant in a potty level.
I enjoyed watching that

to paraphrase....

KB "But are shortages of ambulances meaning that people are not getting to A & E. We have anecdotal evidence of people waiting an hour for an ambulance"

Interviewee: "That doesn't mean you don't get to A&E"

laugh

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
98elise said:
Herd immunity is the goal regardless of the strategy, be that by infection and recovery or vaccination.
It would be if we get immune to it once we had it, which is very unclear, so a strategy based on it, is not a very good one.

Puggit

48,463 posts

249 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
Linda Lusardi has had it, and said she had symptoms of CV plus vomiting & the squits, so it appears she also had Norovirus at the same time but blaming it fully on CV.

Unless they are also symptoms of CV?
When the original WHO symptom guidance came out, they were listed as symptoms in very rare occurances (likes a couple of %)

Anyway, glad she's better yum

David A

3,606 posts

252 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
EddieSteadyGo said:
El stovey said:
Exactly, the U.K. messed around with herd immunity delaying more strict social distancing rules. Hopefully it will work but it’s not what other countries did.
Worth being clear, whether you delay a lockdown or implement it more quickly, you are not changing the proportion of people in the long term who are going to be infected.

All you change is the size of any initial surge of cases.
Are you saying if you’re going to get you’re going to get it ?

Or do you mean something else ?

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
pghstochaj said:
Not really, that was also their mistake. Two wrongs do not make a right. It just changes the root cause of the mistake. It was their assumption that led to the herd immunity approach to begin with. The data was already available.

As I posted before:

I do think they were going for it (in a slow way) until they corrected the death rate assumption in the model. From that Thursday to Tuesday, a lot of damage was caused.
China data was already available, it was the italy data that turned the tide?

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
Linda Lusardi has had it, and said she had symptoms of CV plus vomiting & the squits, so it appears she also had Norovirus at the same time but blaming it fully on CV.

Unless they are also symptoms of CV?
it infects the intestines along with Lungs,heart and liver so possible.

J4CKO

41,608 posts

201 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
Linda Lusardi has had it, and said she had symptoms of CV plus vomiting & the squits
Not one of her best photo shoots then.

EddieSteadyGo

11,964 posts

204 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Thesprucegoose said:
98elise said:
Herd immunity is the goal regardless of the strategy, be that by infection and recovery or vaccination.
It would be if we get immune to it once we had it, which is very unclear, so a strategy based on it, is not a very good one.
Immunity once infected is a critical assumption I agree. If that wasn't the case, "option 1" (strict lockdown until burn out, borders closed until vaccine) or "option 2" (partial lockdown until vaccine) would be potentially better options.

98elise

26,642 posts

162 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Thesprucegoose said:
98elise said:
Herd immunity is the goal regardless of the strategy, be that by infection and recovery or vaccination.
It would be if we get immune to it once we had it, which is very unclear, so a strategy based on it, is not a very good one.
If we don't get herd immunity then we are fked.

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Wuhan is unlocked today - 76 days of lockdown and now people are out about again

Many people will be watching with interest to see if there are (m)any new cases...

Fingers crossed there aren't

EddieSteadyGo

11,964 posts

204 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
David A said:
EddieSteadyGo said:
El stovey said:
Exactly, the U.K. messed around with herd immunity delaying more strict social distancing rules. Hopefully it will work but it’s not what other countries did.
Worth being clear, whether you delay a lockdown or implement it more quickly, you are not changing the proportion of people in the long term who are going to be infected.

All you change is the size of any initial surge of cases.
Are you saying if you’re going to get you’re going to get it ?

Or do you mean something else ?
I mean the proportion of the population who are going to be infected is the same either way. It either happens as a surge, which risks completely overwhelming the healthcare systems, or it happens more gradually.

The lockdown is about buying time to build up the healthcare and testing capacity.

98elise

26,642 posts

162 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
EddieSteadyGo said:
Thesprucegoose said:
98elise said:
Herd immunity is the goal regardless of the strategy, be that by infection and recovery or vaccination.
It would be if we get immune to it once we had it, which is very unclear, so a strategy based on it, is not a very good one.
Immunity once infected is a critical assumption I agree. If that wasn't the case, "option 1" (strict lockdown until burn out, borders closed until vaccine) or "option 2" (partial lockdown until vaccine) would be potentially better options.
Vaccination is a herd immunity strategy.

andy_s

19,400 posts

260 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
EddieSteadyGo said:
Thesprucegoose said:
98elise said:
Herd immunity is the goal regardless of the strategy, be that by infection and recovery or vaccination.
It would be if we get immune to it once we had it, which is very unclear, so a strategy based on it, is not a very good one.
Immunity once infected is a critical assumption I agree. If that wasn't the case, "option 1" (strict lockdown until burn out, borders closed until vaccine) or "option 2" (partial lockdown until vaccine) would be potentially better options.
There is no 'perfect' solution. Best end state is that 80% of normal people have had it, 20% never get it, and it's over in 4 weeks or the economy will end up killing more by another 10 years of 'austerity'. Work your way out of that one.

[There have been cases of 're-infection' in China, but that was the place that used testing kits that were 30% accurate and gave many false positives...]

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
EddieSteadyGo said:
Immunity once infected is a critical assumption I agree. If that wasn't the case, "option 1" (strict lockdown until burn out, borders closed until vaccine) or "option 2" (partial lockdown until vaccine) would be potentially better options.
Immunity uncertain, no vaccine for SARS 1, so the likelihood for SARS 2 is slim. Therapeutics likely to take months or a year, so a strategy based on herd immunity is very wrong.

Testing and isolation works and lock downs. That is not herd immunity.

anonymous-user

55 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
JPJPJP said:
Wuhan is unlocked today - 76 days of lockdown and now people are out about again

Many people will be watching with interest to see if there are (m)any new cases...

Fingers crossed there aren't
You'll be lucky to ever know the true picture either way

CoolHands

18,668 posts

196 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
How has China now got no infections if they don’t have herd immunity (which they haven’t as population so massive). And it is so infectious, how has it now stopped?

zarjaz_

3,480 posts

124 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
Thesprucegoose said:
Immunity uncertain, no vaccine for SARS 1, so the likelihood for SARS 2 is slim. Therapeutics likely to take months or a year, so a strategy based on herd immunity is very wrong.

Testing and isolation works and lock downs. That is not herd immunity.
You can't just lock down indefinitely.

Ultra Sound Guy

28,641 posts

195 months

Wednesday 8th April 2020
quotequote all
CoolHands said:
How has China now got no infections if they don’t have herd immunity (which they haven’t as population so massive). And it is so infectious, how has it now stopped?
????

By isolation?

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