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The Next Pandemic: SARS-CoV-2/COVID-19


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49 minutes ago, GG said:

Except the virus did not first enter the densest area.  

 

But when the virus did enter the densest area, we were told to go to a parade and enjoy a dinner and a movie.  

 

It didn't primarily enter America through the greater metropolitan area of NYC from Europe?

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11 hours ago, Cinga said:

For the latest weekly update on the death toll from Rona. 

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/covidview/index.html

 

What this chart shows is that we have achieved NORMALCY so enough of this fear bullschiff!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

This graph shows pneumonia and influenza (P&I) mortality data provided to CDC by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) Mortality Reporting System.

 

This seems noteworthy

8 hours ago, Rob's House said:

 

 

This is an epic gaslighting campaign that politicians and the media are embarking upon.

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39 minutes ago, MILFHUNTER#518 said:

Get an antibody test, it will tell you if you have had it in the past

 

When the antibody test is at least close to 100% accurate, your statement will be true.

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8 hours ago, Big Blitz said:

You just knew this was coming.  He's setting it up for his low info voters (and the media will oblige) that the excuse will be when the numbers go up, its because of Florida and California.  

 

This is the pandemic I'm supposed to take seriously.  Then they say things like this.

 

 

“You’re going to see our numbers and the Northeast numbers probably start to increase because the virus that you see now in the South and the West — California has real trouble — it’s going to come back here,” Cuomo said Friday in a radio interview. “It is going to come back here. It’s like being on a merry-go-round. It’s totally predictable. And we’re going to go through an increase. I can feel it coming. And it is so unnecessary and so cruel.”

 

https://www.dailywire.com/news/new-york-city-reports-zero-covid-19-deaths-but-governor-says-things-will-worsen-soon?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=dwbrand

 

Whatever reemergence they go through won't whiff what they went through before.  There may be a surge of infections but the deaths won't be a 1/10th of what it was.

30 minutes ago, plenzmd1 said:

Look at this article about the Houston Chronicle. All over twitter they had a 43 page obituary section on Sunday due to the huge surge in cases. And here is the headline in Newsweek

 

https://www.newsweek.com/texas-newspaper-prints-43-page-obituary-section-coronavirus-deaths-soar-1517297

 

But here's the rub

 

My lord, does the press have no shame anymore?

 

And i can almost guarantee the "covid party death, last words were I think i made a mistake " gaining steam is a fake as well...

 

Shameful.  But what do you expect from the media when they are trying to out-stupid each other with panic porn.

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41 minutes ago, MILFHUNTER#518 said:

Get an antibody test, it will tell you if you have had it in the past

 

When the antibody test is at least close to 100% accurate, your statement will be true.

 

When Trump claims that the coronavirus is the fault of Obama and Biden for stopping the testing process, before the virus existed, how does one not understand that he is either making things up or unbelievably stupid?

How can someone agree with that Trump statement and not be backing up the lie or unbelievably stupid?

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Yesterday, Monday, only Texas registered over 50 Covid related deaths. Forty states were in single digits or reported zero. The media’s fixation on cases is missing the real story, like always. Where are all the deaths? Without deaths, this isn’t a pandemic....is it?

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5 minutes ago, Magox said:

 

 

 

Shameful.  But what do you expect from the media when they are trying to out-stupid each other with panic porn.

Gets even worse today..from the WAPO( yes i still get it cause i like the local reporting and arts and food section)

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/child-care-centers-have-already-been-reopening-the-results-are-troubling/2020/07/13/3ce91a00-c53b-11ea-b037-f9711f89ee46_story.html

 

Just click that link or even read it here..."child care centers are reopening and the results are troubling"

 

Any normal, intelligent human being would think she was going to provide some reporting on outbreaks of Covid or transmissions of the virus from kids to teachers/aides etc.

 

But no, it is  a treatise on why child care facilities need more money to stay open, never doing the analysis to say , when people are locked down and eithe unemployed or working from home, and schools are not open, there is no need for childcare"

 

And no, not one mention of anything scientific about the virus or transmission rates or kids being affected by social distancing etc. Just a plea for more government money.

 

Unbelievable

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11 hours ago, 123719bwiqrb said:

 

Trumpster and his evil R henchmen are fudging the death numbers.  I hear Florida is hiding the dead in sinkholes.

 

11 hours ago, Cinga said:

For the latest weekly update on the death toll from Rona. 

https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/covidview/index.html

 

What this chart shows is that we have achieved NORMALCY so enough of this fear bullschiff!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

 

This graph shows pneumonia and influenza (P&I) mortality data provided to CDC by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) Mortality Reporting System.

 

I've been watching this too but I wonder how much their lag is on this given this warning.  

 

Weekly mortality surveillance data include a combination of machine coded and manually coded causes of death collected from death certificates. Percentages of deaths due to PIC are higher among manually coded records than more rapidly available machine coded records. Due to the additional time needed for manual coding, the initially reported PIC percentages may be lower than percentages calculated from final data.

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19 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

It didn't primarily enter America through the greater metropolitan area of NYC from Europe?

 

The first recorded case was in CA, and the first major outbreak was in WA.  NY got the more deadly Wuhan strain through the EU.

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3 minutes ago, plenzmd1 said:

Gets even worse today..from the WAPO( yes i still get it cause i like the local reporting and arts and food section)

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/child-care-centers-have-already-been-reopening-the-results-are-troubling/2020/07/13/3ce91a00-c53b-11ea-b037-f9711f89ee46_story.html

 

Just click that link or even read it here..."child care centers are reopening and the results are troubling"

 

Any normal, intelligent human being would think she was going to provide some reporting on outbreaks of Covid or transmissions of the virus from kids to teachers/aides etc.

 

But no, it is  a treatise on why child care facilities need more money to stay open, never doing the analysis to say , when people are locked down and eithe unemployed or working from home, and schools are not open, there is no need for childcare"

 

And no, not one mention of anything scientific about the virus or transmission rates or kids being affected by social distancing etc. Just a plea for more government money.

 

Unbelievable

No, it’s a good point, it’s going to take some serious money to open up child care and schools. Israel saw a huge spike after they reopened. Masks, more staff, testing, setting up safe places etc will cost money 

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1 minute ago, GG said:

 

The first recorded case was in CA, and the first major outbreak was in WA.  NY got the more deadly Wuhan strain through the EU.

You can’t say Wuhan! (That’s just one of a bunch of words you can’t say anymore.)

1 minute ago, Tiberius said:

No, it’s a good point, it’s going to take some serious money to open up child care and schools. Israel saw a huge spike after they reopened. Masks, more staff, testing, setting up safe places etc will cost money 

And the alternative is the huge amount of money to get every kid equal ‘access’ to an education from their home?

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9 minutes ago, plenzmd1 said:

Gets even worse today..from the WAPO( yes i still get it cause i like the local reporting and arts and food section)

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/child-care-centers-have-already-been-reopening-the-results-are-troubling/2020/07/13/3ce91a00-c53b-11ea-b037-f9711f89ee46_story.html

 

Just click that link or even read it here..."child care centers are reopening and the results are troubling"

 

Any normal, intelligent human being would think she was going to provide some reporting on outbreaks of Covid or transmissions of the virus from kids to teachers/aides etc.

 

But no, it is  a treatise on why child care facilities need more money to stay open, never doing the analysis to say , when people are locked down and eithe unemployed or working from home, and schools are not open, there is no need for childcare"

 

And no, not one mention of anything scientific about the virus or transmission rates or kids being affected by social distancing etc. Just a plea for more government money.

 

Unbelievable

 

I've railed on the media for years, but it's gotten disastrously bad and is now is irreparable.  The mask is completely off now in the age of "Resistance journalism".

 

Are you familiar with the story of Ted Bundy?  Even though he murdered many people while behaving like your typical sociopath over many years, he at least pretended in public to be a normal likable guy.   Then once he was caught and then escaped and fled to Florida and went on that murdering rampage at the Chi Omega sorority in Tallahassee.  He became a complete animal and at that stage, he knew the jig was up and he was just going to unleash his inner animal for all to see.

 

That's how I view the media.  They pretended to be the friendly sociopath and when the jig was up, they took off the mask and out came the psychopath Tallahassee Ted Bundy.  

Edited by Magox
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3 minutes ago, GG said:

 

The first recorded case was in CA, and the first major outbreak was in WA.  NY got the more deadly Wuhan strain through the EU.

 

So, you agree with me that the reason NYC was hit so hard  is because of population density and comparing it to other parts of the country is ridiculous. From a previous post of yours, I thought you held a different opinion.

4 minutes ago, Magox said:

 

I've railed on the media for years, but it's gotten disastrously bad and is now is irreparable.  The mask is completely off now in the age of "Resistance journalism".

 

Are you familiar with the story of Ted Bundy?  Even though he murdered many people while behaving like your typical sociopath over many years, he at least pretended in public to be a normal likable guy.   Then once he was caught and then escaped and fled to Florida and went on that murdering rampage at the Chi Omega sorority in Tallahassee.  He became a complete animal and at that stage, he knew the jig was up and he was just going to unleash his inner animal for all to see.

 

That's how I view the media.  They pretended to be the friendly sociopath and when the jig was up, they took off the mask and out came the psychopath Tallahassee Ted Bundy.  

 

Curious as to whether you think Fox, Breitbart and similar media are also disastrously bad.

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53 minutes ago, plenzmd1 said:

Look at this article about the Houston Chronicle. All over twitter they had a 43 page obituary section on Sunday due to the huge surge in cases. And here is the headline in Newsweek

 

https://www.newsweek.com/texas-newspaper-prints-43-page-obituary-section-coronavirus-deaths-soar-1517297

 

But here's the rub

 

My lord, does the press have no shame anymore?

 

And i can almost guarantee the "covid party death, last words were I think i made a mistake " gaining steam is a fake as well...


Beef tongue belongs in the category of foods that you wonder, why on earth someone would want to eat it, and once you taste it, you hate yourself for not having tried it sooner.

 

To my total surprise, cooking beef tongue is the easiest thing in the world. Even easier than cooking with regular beef. You simply need to add a few herbs and slow cook it for a few hours. That’s it. Whenever you want to serve it, simply slice it into smaller pieces, sprinkle some salt on it, and brown it in a hot pan. What you get is a piece of meat that has a rich beefy flavor, a crispy crust, and a buttery texture.

 

Beef tongue is definitely something I’ll add to my daily recipe list. Because:

 

It’s cheap. I got a 3-pound beef tongue for $15, which is good for 2 to 3 very tasty meals for two of us.


It’s so easy to prepare. You only need 5 minutes to prep it. That’s all.


It stays good in the fridge for a week, so you can use the leftovers to cook other cool things.


It’s even tastier than beef (try it once and you’ll believe me). The science behind this – beef tongue has a very good ratio of protein to fat (Its fat content per ounce is double the amount found in beef brisket and one third that in foie gras). You will render some extra fat after boiling it, and even more after searing. In the end, you can get a very crispy crust and melt-in-your-mouth texture.

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2 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

So, you agree with me that the reason NYC was hit so hard  is because of population density and comparing it to other parts of the country is ridiculous. From a previous post of yours, I thought you held a different opinion.

There’s more going on here than density. San Francisco is very dense with a population that relies heavily on mass transit and yet they’ve had a grand total of 50 Covid deaths through all of this compared to THOUSANDS in NYC.

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https://www.cleveland19.com/2020/07/10/year-old-port-clinton-war-vet-dies-covid-complications-fourth-july/

Evil masks

2 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said:

There’s more going on here than density. San Francisco is very dense with a population that relies heavily on mass transit and yet they’ve had a grand total of 50 Covid deaths through all of this compared to THOUSANDS in NYC.

 

Two different strains in all probability and comparing the population density of those two cities is quite the stretch, not to mention that when it hit NYC masks were not being worn and social distancing wasn't even a concept, yet..

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2 minutes ago, Kemp said:

https://www.cleveland19.com/2020/07/10/year-old-port-clinton-war-vet-dies-covid-complications-fourth-july/

Evil masks

 

Two different strains in all probability and comparing the population density of those two cities is quite the stretch.

Have you ever been to San Francisco? It’s not as dense as NY for sure but my god look at the difference in death count! They’re not in the same universe. 

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7 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

So, you agree with me that the reason NYC was hit so hard  is because of population density and comparing it to other parts of the country is ridiculous. From a previous post of yours, I thought you held a different opinion.

 

Curious as to whether you think Fox, Breitbart and similar media are also disastrously bad.

 

They are all bad.  FOX and Breitbart are a counter creation because of the media.  Without a biased mainstream media, you wouldn't have FOX or Breitbart.    Now they are a necessary evil to counter balance the media.   

 

The whole institution needs to be ripped from its roots.

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8 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

So, you agree with me that the reason NYC was hit so hard  is because of population density and comparing it to other parts of the country is ridiculous. From a previous post of yours, I thought you held a different opinion.

 

 

 

NY got hit hard for 3 reasons - deadly virus strain, densely populated area that is highly dependent on mass transit AND highly incompetent leadership that didn't take the threat seriously and then screwed it all up.

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2 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said:

Have you ever been to San Francisco? It’s not as dense as NY for sure but my god look at the difference in death count! They’re not in the same universe. 


A bologna sandwich is a ho-hum but ubiquitous lunch option, but there are ways to make it a bit more interesting. In the South, for example, cooks give this sandwich a bit of a twist by frying the bologna first. They simply place the bologna slices onto a lightly buttered griddle or nonstick pan and fry them up until they are browned. The thicker the cut of Bologna, the better, so ask for the bologna from the deli counter instead of buying it prepackaged.


A fried bologna sandwich makes a powerful statement so any side dishes served along with are definitely not the main attraction. But what they can do is balance out the heaviness—and the guilt—of this sandwich.
Good choices are cream or vinegar slaw, homegrown tomatoes (if they are not on the sandwich), pasta salad filled with veggies, or potato salad.

Less healthy but tasty options are french fries or potato chips—kettle cooked sea salt and vinegar, sea salt, and pepper, or plain are the best choices.


For a more upscale version of this humble sandwich, use artisan or French bread or a brioche bun instead of white bread. You can also grill the completed sandwich in a bit of butter for a crispy exterior and even more decadent lunch.

12 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

 

 

Curious as to whether you think Fox, Breitbart and similar media are also disastrously bad.


crickets 

 

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4 minutes ago, GOBUFFALO716 said:


A bologna sandwich is a ho-hum but ubiquitous lunch option, but there are ways to make it a bit more interesting. In the South, for example, cooks give this sandwich a bit of a twist by frying the bologna first. They simply place the bologna slices onto a lightly buttered griddle or nonstick pan and fry them up until they are browned. The thicker the cut of Bologna, the better, so ask for the bologna from the deli counter instead of buying it prepackaged.


A fried bologna sandwich makes a powerful statement so any side dishes served along with are definitely not the main attraction. But what they can do is balance out the heaviness—and the guilt—of this sandwich.
Good choices are cream or vinegar slaw, homegrown tomatoes (if they are not on the sandwich), pasta salad filled with veggies, or potato salad.

Less healthy but tasty options are french fries or potato chips—kettle cooked sea salt and vinegar, sea salt, and pepper, or plain are the best choices.


For a more upscale version of this humble sandwich, use artisan or French bread or a brioche bun instead of white bread. You can also grill the completed sandwich in a bit of butter for a crispy exterior and even more decadent lunch.


crickets 

 

I use to love fried bologna sandwiches! 

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6 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said:

Have you ever been to San Francisco? It’s not as dense as NY for sure but my god look at the difference in death count! They’re not in the same universe. 

 

Been to SF many times when I lived in L.A.

 

Not nearly as dense.

 

Probably a less lethal strain.

 

They knew to wear masks and social distance after NYC went through their nmightmare.

8 minutes ago, GG said:

 

NY got hit hard for 3 reasons - deadly virus strain, densely populated area that is highly dependent on mass transit AND highly incompetent leadership that didn't take the threat seriously and then screwed it all up.

 

The leadership in NY had no idea in the beginning what they were up against. By the time they figured it out, it was too late.

Sadly, at the national level it has still not been figured it out. Or worse.

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23 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

So, you agree with me that the reason NYC was hit so hard  is because of population density and comparing it to other parts of the country is ridiculous. From a previous post of yours, I thought you held a different opinion.

 

Curious as to whether you think Fox, Breitbart and similar media are also disastrously bad.

they are

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30 minutes ago, Tiberius said:

No, it’s a good point, it’s going to take some serious money to open up child care and schools. Israel saw a huge spike after they reopened. Masks, more staff, testing, setting up safe places etc will cost money 

Please provide the link to Israel spike and childcare  and schools being linked. I can only find articles that state child care is closing due to a spike in positives..which is not the same thing. Be interested to see if their data is different than other countries.

 

 

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31 minutes ago, Tiberius said:

No, it’s a good point, it’s going to take some serious money to open up child care and schools. Israel saw a huge spike after they reopened. Masks, more staff, testing, setting up safe places etc will cost money 

 

Then the headline should preview the content of the article and mention $$; not leave people who breeze through to think the “troubling” part has anything to do with kids getting sick.

 

 

 

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22 minutes ago, Magox said:

 

They are all bad.  FOX and Breitbart are a counter creation because of the media.  Without a biased mainstream media, you wouldn't have FOX or Breitbart.    Now they are a necessary evil to counter balance the media.   

 

The whole institution needs to be ripped from its roots.

 

<----was ahead of you by decades. The press is the enemy of the people.

 

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4 minutes ago, plenzmd1 said:

Please provide the link to Israel spike and childcare  and schools being linked. I can only find articles that state child care is closing due to a spike in positives..which is not the same thing. Be interested to see if their data is different than other countries.

 

 

https://www.thedailybeast.com/israeli-data-show-school-openings-were-a-disaster-that-wiped-out-lockdown-gains?ref=home 

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22 minutes ago, Kemp said:

 

The leadership in NY had no idea in the beginning what they were up against. By the time they figured it out, it was too late.

Sadly, at the national level it has still not been figured it out. Or worse.

 

Not quite correct.  The treatment procedures were still being figured out in March & April, but containment protocols were pretty clear, especially after what happened in Italy.  Yet, NY repeated all of Italy's mistakes.

 

Starting from the cluster of not taking the threat seriously enough through March, infighting between Cuomo and the big idiot, then cross contaminating multiple hospitals drove the carnage in NY.   If you care to look at the numbers, no states other than NJ are approximating NY's deadly results.   

 

The other states have certainly figured out how to minimize the severity of the outbreak and reduced deaths dramatically.

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18 minutes ago, GG said:

 

Not quite correct.  The treatment procedures were still being figured out in March & April, but containment protocols were pretty clear, especially after what happened in Italy.  Yet, NY repeated all of Italy's mistakes.

 

Starting from the cluster of not taking the threat seriously enough through March, infighting between Cuomo and the big idiot, then cross contaminating multiple hospitals drove the carnage in NY.   If you care to look at the numbers, no states other than NJ are approximating NY's deadly results.   

 

The other states have certainly figured out how to minimize the severity of the outbreak and reduced deaths dramatically.

 

Not saying that Cuomo didn't make mistakes. He did and then corrected them, but too late for too many.

 

It might have helped if the federal government had taken it seriously and provided any kind of guidance instead of pretending there wasn't even a problem,  even though they absolutely knew the storm was coming.

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CDC: COVID-19 Deaths for Week Ending June 27 Down 91.9% From Mid-April Peak
 

In the week that ended on June 27, there were 1,363 deaths in the United States involving COVID-19, which was a 91.9 percent drop from the peak of 16,895 COVID-involved deaths reported for the week that ended on April 18, according to the provisional COVID-19 death counts published by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), which is part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
 

The numbers updated by NCHS on July 13 show the weekly COVID-involved death count, based on death certificates, has been steadily dropping since the mid-April peak, even as the number of cases is rising, especially in Sunbelt states of Florida, Texas, Arizona and California.
 

The NCHS reports COVID-involved deaths weekly, updating the numbers as more death certificates come in. Based on the July 13 data, COVID deaths for the week ending June 27 (1,363) dropped 50.1 percent from the 2,733 posted for the prior week of June 20.
 

</snip>
 

June 27 is the most recent week to fall within that two-weeks-ago reporting period.
 

Preliminary data for the weeks ending July 4 (469 COVID deaths reported) and July 11 (137 COVID deaths reported) show the downward death count continues, even if those preliminary numbers will increase in the weeks ahead.
 

</snip>

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We've been talking about this for a few months but this is a nice Atlantic on Herd immunity:

 

In a pandemic, the heterogeneity of the infectious process also makes forecasting difficult. When you flip a coin, the outcome is not affected by the flips prior. But in dynamic systems, the outcomes are more like those in chess: The next play is influenced by the previous one. Differences in outcome can grow exponentially, reinforcing one another until the situation becomes, through a series of individually predictable moves, radically different from other possible scenarios. You have some chance of being able to predict the first move in a game of chess, but good luck predicting the last.

 

That’s exactly what Gomes’s work attempts to do. She describes a model in which everyone is equally susceptible to coronavirus infection (a homogeneous model), and a model in which some people are more susceptible than others (a heterogeneous model). Even if the two populations start out with the same average susceptibility to infection, you don’t get the same epidemics. “The outbreaks look similar at the beginning. But in the heterogeneous population, individuals are not infected at random,” she told me. “The highly susceptible people are more likely to get infected first. As a result, the average susceptibility gets lower and lower over time.”

 

Effects like this—“selective depletion” of people who are more susceptible—can quickly decelerate a virus’s spread. When Gomes uses this sort of pattern to model the coronavirus’s spread, the compounding effects of heterogeneity seem to show that the onslaught of cases and deaths seen in initial spikes around the world are unlikely to happen a second time. Based on data from several countries in Europe, she said, her results show a herd-immunity threshold much lower than that of other models.

 

“We just keep running the models, and it keeps coming back at less than 20 percent,” Gomes said. “It’s very striking.”

 

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5 minutes ago, bilzfancy said:

A question for anyone who cares to answer... If vaccines for this virus becomes mandatory, will you get one?

 

Depends on it's efficacy.

37 minutes ago, Joe in Winslow said:

 

<----was ahead of you by decades. The press is the enemy of the people.

 

 

I'll take the press over government 10 out of 10 times.

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7 minutes ago, bilzfancy said:

A question for anyone who cares to answer... If vaccines for this virus becomes mandatory, will you get one?

 

Asked this before. Most people who post here aren't interested in taking the vaccine. 

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