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Re: Coronavirus
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/li...latest-updates Quote:
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Re: Coronavirus
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There is clinical evidence that patients who tested positive and recovered tested positive again but it is not clear if this is a reinfection or a reactivation of the virus. There are growing suspicions that the sensitivity of commercial tests might be causing at least some cases of reoccurring infections (link) There are a lot of unknowns here and when there are unknowns, there are risks |
Re: Coronavirus
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Re: Coronavirus
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Considering the death rate we have that would be a lot more deaths. Also to know if we have reched anything like the percentage required we would have to test the whole population. The best way is to develop a vaccine and then vaccinate everybody. Until then restrictons wil continue, but i think restrictions will gradually be lifted but vulnerable peple and those that interact with vulnerable people will have to be very careful. |
Re: Coronavirus
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We are fighting against nature here and on this one, nature is winning. Of course I understand that the lockdown was designed to relieve pressure on the NHS. I've acknowledged that throughout. However, what nobody seems to be coming to terms with is that lockdowns in themselves don't prevent deaths, they delay them. Germany has just relaxed its lockdown, and guess what? Infection rates are on the rise again. This will keep happening until either we find a vaccine that works and distribute it to everyone or herd immunity is achieved over this elongated period we are now looking at. It is interesting that you say there is no guarantee that herd immunity will work, and so completely dismiss it. Then in the next sentence, you say there is no guarantee that a vaccine will work, then you embrace it as a solution. I know that this is not easy, and everyone wants to do something, even if it won't work. Our choice really is whether to stop the lockdowns, let the virus spread while protecting vulnerable people OR have lockdown after lockdown (or one continuous lockdown) until a vaccine becomes available and distributed. That could be one or two years away. Sooner or later, the government has a tough decision to make, but if they leave it too long, the public will make it for them. The lockdown cannot last too much longer now. As for having multiple lockdowns ahead, forget it. There is no way we can keep paying people from our rapidly depleting government funds. Not only that, but businesses will start to fail in ever increasing numbers as the weeks go by, so we will end up with mass unemployment and no ability to pay dole money. Just think it through - we cannot let this go on and on. |
Re: Coronavirus
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Show me the evidence that you have that says herd immunity is going to work I think we all agree that lockdowns don't prevent death, but they ensure that there are lower deaths over a given time period compared to if we let the virus continue unabated. If you actually seriously think that we would have the same tally of deaths lockdown vs normality you're seriously seriously wrong. I don't embrace either as a 100% solution YET, they both have chances of success or failure. But a vaccine combined with lockdown(s) is our best way of minimising deaths. How do you protect the vulnerable when some of those included are ones that you professed won't stick to the rules of a lockdown? Multiple lockdowns will happen, just look at Germany. A country whose R0 number has increased since they eased. The government are preparing for a 2nd lockdown should the RO continue to increase. This is the Germany BTW that managed their outbreak far far better than we did. Would you rather be dead? Or alive but worse of financially? Oh, btw from various news snippets this morning it looks like the lockdown will continue until June with only minimal changes. If you think that life is going to go back to normal in the next 12-24 months then you're off your rocker. |
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Re: Coronavirus
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What numbers of deaths, and for what length of time, do you believe are delayed? The Imperial College paper that convinced the Government to go to lockdown/social isolation, shows that the forecast number of deaths (between 410,000 and 550,000, depending on the R factor (higher the R factor, the more infections)), shows on pages 13 and 14, tables 4 and 5, that the deaths were forecast to be reduced, not delayed. Table 5 shows that, depending on the R factor and variation on the "off" trigger, deaths over 2 years could be reduced from between 85,000 and 100,000 to between 8,700 and 51,000 - reduced, not delayed. Of course, if you have any scientific forecasts showing that the deaths are delayed, not reduced, that would be very useful/helpful in the discussion. |
Re: Coronavirus
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It's also unlikely the virus would ever have a likelihood of a 'major mutation which will put us back to square one.' It could mutate enough that it breaks though existing antibody responses but your immune system can adapt to variants of a disease. Quote:
The longer we delay that spread the better the chances of more effective treatment courses being found as well. You want to catch this a year from now rather than now if given the choice. Chances are we'll be better at this, saving more lives, the more we learn. |
Re: Coronavirus
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Re: Coronavirus
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In other news South Korea have no new cases of domestic cases and reinfection appears to be a false positive of tests. Quote:
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Re: Coronavirus
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https://www.clinicalcorrelations.org...es-a-weakness/ Most influenza viruses are warded off by the immune system before they gain a solid foothold in the lungs, halting the virus in the upper respiratory tract. Scientists believe that what made the influenza of 1918 unique was the virus’s ability to make its way down the respiratory tract to the epithelial cells of the alveoli. Killer T-cells then became active. The capillaries surrounding the alveoli dilated and poured out fluid composed of white blood cells, antibodies, and cytokines. Cytokines and enzymes effaced the capillaries. More fluid poured into the lung. The cells lining the alveoli were damaged, and hyaline membranes formed. Surfactant production ceased. The body produced fibrous connective tissue, entangling the lung in debris, fibrin, and collagen. Burnet himself noted that “continued exudation of fluid in areas where blocking of smaller bronchi had occurred would produce eventually airless regions.” There was no space for oxygen exchange to occur. The body effectively drowned itself, and death quickly ensued. ---------- Post added at 16:35 ---------- Previous post was at 16:34 ---------- Quote:
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