Posted on 02/02/2020 8:44:49 PM PST by 11th_VA
The Wuhan coronavirus spreading from China is now likely to become a pandemic that circles the globe, according to many of the worlds leading infectious disease experts.
The prospect is daunting. A pandemic an ongoing epidemic on two or more continents may well have global consequences, despite the extraordinary travel restrictions and quarantines now imposed by China and other countries, including the United States.
Scientists do not yet know how lethal the new coronavirus is, however, so there is uncertainty about how much damage a pandemic might cause. But there is growing consensus that the pathogen is readily transmitted between humans.
The Wuhan coronavirus is spreading more like influenza, which is highly transmissible, than like its slow-moving viral cousins, SARS and MERS, scientists have found...
(Excerpt) Read more at google.com ...
From your link....
....He told The Sun: ‘They kept asking if I wanted a place on a flight out but I said no. I’ll stick it out here. I am proof coronavirus can be beaten.’
Mr Reed says his boss has told him that they will get back to work in two weeks, but he is not as certain.....
Geez....hope Mr Reed doesn’t catch another round. He also mentions that Wuhan is now a ghost town with groceries and medical masks running out of stock.
Anyone else listening to Secy Alex Azar’s interview, on Varney & C0?
He keeps saying....We don’t know, what we don’t know...
Huh???
And....
Stu asks...What are we doing to keep it out of America, and, is there something more that you think we should be doing?
Azar: Risk to any American is very low.
We’re taking appropriate, measured, layered steps to keep the American public safe.
Again...we’re seeing about a 3-4% fatality rate.....
Fatality rates, severity, transmissibility and incubation times are all levels of uncertainty....that we still have to get to the bottom of.
—
Okay, whew.
I feel much better, now,
/s
Well, we’ll see...China was also slow reacting and now it’s ride it out for them. I would have preferred to be cautious and watch it play out in China for a couple of weeks.
Yipers, we need all us FReepers to remain strong (and alive)1
“Expert opinion is that those deaths were preventable”
If the 1918 deaths were from secondary bacterial pneumonia as that study suggests there weren’t a lot of options for treatment, it would be another 10 years before penicillin was discovered. But a similar outbreak today could be dealt with.
The flu may be bad from a total number of cases, I'm not sure. But from a percent of flu cases hospitalized, it's moderate.
get ugly early I’ve done that at a bar or two. Or was it “Go ugly early?”
3% death rate, but what is the infection rate?
If it infects 50% of the people in China and 3% of them die, that’s over 20 million dead in China alone.
If it infects 25% of the population and 3% die, it’s 10 million dead in China alone.
All from somebody’s stupid mistake in a germ lab.
Comparison with other viruses:
For comparison, the case fatality rate with seasonal flu is less than 0.01% (1 death per every 10,000 cases).
Mortality rate for SARS was 10%, and for MERS 34%.
They didn’t spread as fast as this CoronaVirus does.
3% death rate, but what is the infection rate?
Secy Azar said that is, currently, an unknown.
Where are the materials for antibiotics sourced from? Did I hear China and India?
How much is in-transit in the distribution pipeline? What reserves are already warehoused in the country?
How long to source materials and set up an alternative manufacture of the needed antibiotics within the country?
Antibiotics aren’t used for viruses.
There is speculation of a live test of a method to inoculate the public from a disease threat, an immunization trial gone bad because the delivery package (virus) went rogue, resultant in an unforeseen spreading infection.
Over fifty percent of patients who do die after contracting a primary viral infection, actually succumb to a secondary bacterial infection. The bodys resources are diverted to fighting a virus, providing an open field for bacterium to run free. That is the reason antibiotics are often crucial in treating a seriously ill patient suffering from a virus.
As one who lost a Grandfather and two Granduncles to the Spanish Flu..., I would only point out that it’s occurrence was prior to the advent of antibiotics.
As one who lost an uncle and all most my dad, antibiotics would not have worked then, in between and now against any virus.
Read my tagline re what happens today if you get a bad viral infection.
“Gonna get sick of dried soup, but we have a small stove with a gas unit, for an emergency.”
There are all types of canned beans, veggies, fruits and tuna/salmon, soups and other meats in small cans which don’t need refrigeration, and they are a great size for 2 people to eat a single meal often with 0 leftovers to throw away, due to no refrigeration. Cooked and dried Bacon bits in small size plastic bags have great dating.
Butter and honey can stay at room temp in jars or containers on your kitchen table. Hersey Chocolate Syrup can stay on the same table.
.
Yeah, sounds pretty simple in this day and age. I figure there is a great temptation to suppress because of the billions of dollars in lost trade everyday if they said it lived 2 or 3 weeks out of body.
This made me laugh my head off. I know I shouldn’t find it funny. But it’s hilarious. God forgive me.
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