fuzzy wrote:anyone who like doomer prn will connect this:
https://www.nature.com/news/inside-the- ... ns-1.21487
Now that would be really quite funny if that's where it comes from.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
fuzzy wrote:anyone who like doomer prn will connect this:
https://www.nature.com/news/inside-the- ... ns-1.21487
Interesting. Raises various possibilities, but we probably won't ever know if there was human involvement in the origin of this virus.fuzzy wrote:anyone who like doomer prn will connect this:
https://www.nature.com/news/inside-the- ... ns-1.21487
We now know, for sure, that it is significantly infectious and may be very infectious. We know it is 88% genetically similar to SARS, and is producing SARS-like symptoms. SARS killed 9% of infected patients, and over 50% of people over the age of 60. There's no hope of a quick vaccine being produced -- minimum is 12 months for this sort of virus.Little John wrote:
But let's be honest. It's probably going to kill a few and then that will be that.
There is a big question over whether the deaths were caused by the flu, or by the treatments to a possibly compromised population.Little John wrote:It'll get interesting when the mortality rate matches that of Spanish Flu which killed between 10% and 20% of people infected.
Possibly. More likely IMHO that it will pass, but one should be prepared for this being the "big one"UndercoverElephant wrote:Could this be the big one?CUHK professor Guan Yi speaking to Caixin Media interviewee (my best attempt at verbatim, source: http://www.caixin.com/2020-01-23/101507670.html) :
"This time it is different from SARS. There is no comparison. 60-70% of SARS infectees caught the virus from a few individual super-infectors. The chain of infection was clear, and all that had to be done was to block these few people.
This time, the infectors have spread all around at this point. We can no longer conduct an epidemiological survey.
A conservative estimate would be that the scale of the infection is 10 times as that of SARS. I have experienced this much, but never have I been this scared. Most (of other epidemics) could be controlled, but this time I am frightened."
I agree.clv101 wrote:This already seems more poorly contained than SARs, with SARs the majority of cases came from a small number of super-infectors. That made the tracking and containment easier. Seems we are already past that point. I expect we're going to see more deaths than SARs and this will be a globally significant event.
The main impact most people will notice, won't be actually getting sick, but the breakdown of civil society.
National Risk Register:
"Normal life is likely to face wider social and
economic disruption, significant threats to the
continuity of essential services, lower production
levels, shortages and distribution difficulties. "
Mrs Elephant has just ordered a month's worth of dried and canned food supplies.clv101 wrote:This already seems more poorly contained than SARs, with SARs the majority of cases came from a small number of super-infectors. That made the tracking and containment easier. Seems we are already past that point. I expect we're going to see more deaths than SARs and this will be a globally significant event.
The main impact most people will notice, won't be actually getting sick, but the breakdown of civil society.
National Risk Register:
"Normal life is likely to face wider social and
economic disruption, significant threats to the
continuity of essential services, lower production
levels, shortages and distribution difficulties. "
Little John wrote:https://www.thestandard.com.hk/breaking ... d-in-China
Takes a while to sink in. This is like deciding to try to quarantine the whole of London, just before Christmas. And it feels like an exercise in shutting the stable door after the horse has bolted.TO CONTAIN AN OUTBREAK, IS THIS KIND OF TRAVEL BAN USUALLY EFFECTIVE? WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS AND SOME OF THE PITFALLS?
A: To my knowledge, trying to contain a city of 11 million people is new to science. It has not been tried before as a public health measure, so we cannot at this stage say it will or will not work. If this is happening we will note carefully to what extent it is maintained and how long it can take.
Perfect example of being behind the curve. If they are serious about stopping this, they need to quarantine more than just Wuhan. And what is going to happen if, as seems very likely, ten more Chinese cities have outbreaks like this? Are they all going to be quarantined??Online, people expressed doubt about whether the quarantine came in time to check the disease's spread. Influential bloggers have been calling on the mayor of Wuhan, Zhou Xianwang, to step down after he admitted the city government's initial public health responses "were not sufficient." The disease has spread to virtually all other Chinese provinces as well as Hong Kong, none of which has been quarantined.
The sudden decision to lock down the city of 11 million residents, who were given less than eight hours' notice of the suspension of public transportation, suggests the severity of the outbreak has alarmed China's leaders. Wuhan's lockdown comes only two days before the official start of Lunar New Year, a major, weeklong holiday during which hundreds of millions normally travel within and outside China.
Very sensible. Even if this epidemic turns out to be of little importance, it is prudent to have supplies for any unrelated disaster.UndercoverElephant wrote:Mrs Elephant has just ordered a month's worth of dried and canned food supplies.clv101 wrote:This already seems more poorly contained than SARs, with SARs the majority of cases came from a small number of super-infectors. That made the tracking and containment easier. Seems we are already past that point. I expect we're going to see more deaths than SARs and this will be a globally significant event.
The main impact most people will notice, won't be actually getting sick, but the breakdown of civil society.
National Risk Register:
"Normal life is likely to face wider social and
economic disruption, significant threats to the
continuity of essential services, lower production
levels, shortages and distribution difficulties. "