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Tags Coronavirus , diseases

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Old 25th June 2020, 12:48 AM   #1
Bob001
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The One Covid-19 Science and Medicine Thread Part 2

Mod InfoContinuation thread. As ever feel free to quote and reference from first part http://www.internationalskeptics.com...6#post13136936 but don't forget the mod box below about keeping this thread to the science.
Posted By:Darat



Latest prospective covid treatment: Xrays.
Quote:
Radiation, instead, attempts to prevent cytokines from being overproduced in the first place, by targeting lymphocytes.
https://slate.com/technology/2020/06...-underway.html

Last edited by Darat; 25th June 2020 at 02:28 AM.
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Old 25th June 2020, 01:51 AM   #2
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Mod WarningWandering a little too bit away from the direct science discussions, let's get this thread back on track. There are at least two threads dedicated to political discussions about the virus, use those for the political stuff. Thanks.
Responding to this modbox in thread will be off topic Posted By:Darat
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Old 25th June 2020, 12:06 PM   #3
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Speaking of science, Germany's been doing some - on the subject of why meat plants are so effective at spreading the virus. The answer appears to be in the air conditioning. The idea of recirculated air causing infection has been around for a while.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...s-expert-warns
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Old 25th June 2020, 12:20 PM   #4
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What is the evidence to support the 2-metre social distancing rule to reduce COVID-19 transmission?

Very long survey of scientific reports relative to droplet/aerosol spreads:

Quote:
A one-size-fits-all 2-metre social distancing rule is not consistent with the underlying science of exhalations and indoor air. Such rules are based on an over-simplistic picture of viral transfer, which assume a clear dichotomy between large droplets and small airborne droplets emitted in isolation without accounting for the exhaled air. The reality involves a continuum of droplet sizes and an important role of the exhaled air that carries them.
https://www.cebm.net/covid-19/what-i...-transmission/

The Atheist's post above re meat packing plants is a unique example of ventilation spread which has caused thousands of infections. High volume of air flow. Recirculation with little or no outside air, and low temp ( 10C ) may make these facilities special cases. Be interesting to see what published studies come out.
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Last edited by marting; 25th June 2020 at 12:37 PM. Reason: add meat packers
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Old 25th June 2020, 12:28 PM   #5
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Originally Posted by CEBM
Smaller airborne droplets laden with SARS-CoV-2 may spread up to 8 metres concentrated in exhaled air from infected individuals, even without background ventilation or airflow. Whilst there is limited direct evidence that live SARS-CoV-2 is significantly spread via this route, there is no direct evidence that it is not spread this way.

Hi, everyone. I'm still in this thread and didn't get scared off by y'all after I asked questions about the environmental engineer guys and the virus guys and their invention of the 2 meter rule.
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Old 25th June 2020, 01:15 PM   #6
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So here's a new one (at least, it is to me, and I can't seem to find anything about it on the web).

I went to Worldometer and looked at global COVID deaths for the last 63 days. Totalling global deaths by day of the week produces

Monday - 30,717
Tuesday - 33,106
Wednesday - 47,900
Thursday - 46,165
Friday - 48,629
Saturday - 46,860
Sunday - 41,115

The US follows a similar pattern over the last 63 days

Monday - 6,153
Tuesday - 7,391
Wednesday - 13,178
Thursday - 13,307
Friday - 13,612
Saturday - 10,548
Sunday - 10,454

Looking at the last 28 days for the US, thinking that we've clearly gotten better at keeping deaths down and this might have some effect,

Monday - 1,610
Tuesday - 2,105
Wednesday - 3,941
Thursday - 3,683
Friday - 3,908
Saturday - 3,698
Sunday - 2,998

and if anything the Monday/Tuesday effect has become more pronounced

I like to think of myself as pretty good at coming up with explanations for weird behavior, but this has got me stumped. Two days out of the week have death rates about 30% below the other five days. What's so special about Monday and Tuesday that people are not dying?

Any suggestions?
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Old 25th June 2020, 01:57 PM   #7
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Just wondering - in addition to masks, why not full-face motorcycle helmets as an alternative? People could then see your face and you could even install a little filtered fan for some air circulation (with some other minor modifications). Plus, it's great protection for if you fall down!

OK, they're much more expensive, but plenty of people have them already. I've seen people wearing ski or airsoft masks, but those still obscure your mouth and nose.
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Old 25th June 2020, 01:59 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by WhatRoughBeast View Post
So here's a new one (at least, it is to me, and I can't seem to find anything about it on the web).

I went to Worldometer and looked at global COVID deaths for the last 63 days. Totalling global deaths by day of the week produces

Monday - 30,717
Tuesday - 33,106
Wednesday - 47,900
Thursday - 46,165
Friday - 48,629
Saturday - 46,860
Sunday - 41,115

The US follows a similar pattern over the last 63 days

Monday - 6,153
Tuesday - 7,391
Wednesday - 13,178
Thursday - 13,307
Friday - 13,612
Saturday - 10,548
Sunday - 10,454

Looking at the last 28 days for the US, thinking that we've clearly gotten better at keeping deaths down and this might have some effect,

Monday - 1,610
Tuesday - 2,105
Wednesday - 3,941
Thursday - 3,683
Friday - 3,908
Saturday - 3,698
Sunday - 2,998

and if anything the Monday/Tuesday effect has become more pronounced

I like to think of myself as pretty good at coming up with explanations for weird behavior, but this has got me stumped. Two days out of the week have death rates about 30% below the other five days. What's so special about Monday and Tuesday that people are not dying?

Any suggestions?
I believe that is has been mentioned many times before...

The people that prepare the statistics don't work on weekends and public holidays, so days following those events are lower.
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:03 PM   #9
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Looking at the posted daily new cases for the USA it looks like the USA doesn't have a handle on anything...

23 June 2020: 34.7k
24 June 2020: 34.5k

USA deaths: 122,481
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:06 PM   #10
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Originally Posted by WhatRoughBeast View Post
So here's a new one (at least, it is to me, and I can't seem to find anything about it on the web).

I went to Worldometer and looked at global COVID deaths for the last 63 days. Totalling global deaths by day of the week produces

Monday - 30,717
Tuesday - 33,106
Wednesday - 47,900
Thursday - 46,165
Friday - 48,629
Saturday - 46,860
Sunday - 41,115

The US follows a similar pattern over the last 63 days

Monday - 6,153
Tuesday - 7,391
Wednesday - 13,178
Thursday - 13,307
Friday - 13,612
Saturday - 10,548
Sunday - 10,454

Looking at the last 28 days for the US, thinking that we've clearly gotten better at keeping deaths down and this might have some effect,

Monday - 1,610
Tuesday - 2,105
Wednesday - 3,941
Thursday - 3,683
Friday - 3,908
Saturday - 3,698
Sunday - 2,998

and if anything the Monday/Tuesday effect has become more pronounced

I like to think of myself as pretty good at coming up with explanations for weird behavior, but this has got me stumped. Two days out of the week have death rates about 30% below the other five days. What's so special about Monday and Tuesday that people are not dying?

Any suggestions?


All the statistics sites list "deaths reported that day." "Reported" means reaching the final stage of the information being received and listed by the relevant state agency and then getting passed on to whomever's posting the graphs. The weekly patterns relate mostly to which hospital departments and public health departments and intermediate state agencies are closed on weekend days, meaning not many of them reach the final tally point on Sun. or Mon.

In their internal reports, Massachusetts back-dates each death to the date it actually occurred, and also back-dates each new case (new positive test result) to the date the swab was taken. That makes the time series a lot smoother (though there's still a lull in new cases each Sun-Mon because fewer tests are actually performed on those days). But the Massachusetts data you see at Google or Worldometer doesn't show the back-dating. They want one number per measure per day (new deaths reported, new cases reported) and don't want to have to change the numbers from previous days. So you're seeing the crude sloppy data, and you can't easily discern trends on time scales shorter than weekly.
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:30 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by WhatRoughBeast View Post
I like to think of myself as pretty good at coming up with explanations for weird behavior, but this has got me stumped. Two days out of the week have death rates about 30% below the other five days. What's so special about Monday and Tuesday that people are not dying?
Who's in the mood to do much of anything on a Monday or a Tuesday?
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:39 PM   #12
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The latest from the CDC:
- the US is likely only testing 5 to 8 percent of those infected.
- 3% of US counties currently have a high transmission rate
- conditions giving a high risk of a serious case are: chronic kidney disease, serous heart disease, sickle cell disease, COPD, weakened immune system from organ transplant, type 2 diabetes, and a BMI > 30 (60% of American adults have at least 1 of these!)
- conditions that possibly give a high risk of a serious case are: asthma, high blood pressure, stroke, pregnancy, and dementia

https://www.washingtonpost.com/healt...-times-larger/
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:40 PM   #13
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Originally Posted by alfaniner View Post
Just wondering - in addition to masks, why not full-face motorcycle helmets as an alternative? People could then see your face and you could even install a little filtered fan for some air circulation (with some other minor modifications). Plus, it's great protection for if you fall down!

OK, they're much more expensive, but plenty of people have them already. I've seen people wearing ski or airsoft masks, but those still obscure your mouth and nose.
I see a number of folks (10% at a swag) around here using face shields like this one, without a cloth mask under. Seems to be acceptable to the local authorities.
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Old 25th June 2020, 02:52 PM   #14
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Originally Posted by pipelineaudio
Or Hawaii, as blue as it gets, with the highest RT in the nation
It is strange.

Before the 19 June rt.live major update, the HI estimate for Rt had such large confidence intervals (CI) that I felt it wasn't very informative (same with a half dozen or so other states with low numbers of cases and deaths). After that update, the CI is greatly reduced ... it's still larger than most other states', but not by as much.

Maybe someone who understands this better could comment?
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Old 25th June 2020, 03:03 PM   #15
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Originally Posted by Pope130 View Post
I see a number of folks (10% at a swag) around here using face shields like this one, without a cloth mask under. Seems to be acceptable to the local authorities.
Yeah, but a helmet looks so much cooler!
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Old 25th June 2020, 04:51 PM   #16
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Originally Posted by William Parcher View Post
Hi, everyone. I'm still in this thread and didn't get scared off by y'all after I asked questions about the environmental engineer guys and the virus guys and their invention of the 2 meter rule.
Because it's better than the 2 foot rule, and 3 meters ain't gonna happen..
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Old 25th June 2020, 07:09 PM   #17
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Originally Posted by alfaniner View Post
Yeah, but a helmet looks so much cooler!
Hmm... maybe it'd be easier to get Americans to wear helmets instead of face masks? Like Stormtrooper or Darth Vader helmets? Tell them it's the cool look this year!
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Old 25th June 2020, 07:43 PM   #18
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The CDC has also come out and stated they believe infections are under-stated by a factor of 10, with 20M Americans having had Covid to date: https://www.npr.org/sections/coronav...-at-highest-ri

I think we can be fairly confident that the same applies everywhere, giving a likely mortality rate of 0.5% overall.
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Old 25th June 2020, 08:39 PM   #19
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
The CDC has also come out and stated they believe infections are under-stated by a factor of 10, with 20M Americans having had Covid to date: https://www.npr.org/sections/coronav...-at-highest-ri

I think we can be fairly confident that the same applies everywhere, giving a likely mortality rate of 0.5% overall.
Just a follow-up comment from a slightly different news source:

Info from the CDC:

Coronavirus may have infected 10 times more Americans than reported, CDC says (Reuters)

Yeah, a lot of us guessed that was the case a long time ago, but they have evidences.

Quote:
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Government experts believe more than 20 million Americans could have contracted the coronavirus, 10 times more than official counts, indicating many people without symptoms have or have had the disease, senior administration officials said.

The estimate, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is based on serology testing used to determine the presence of antibodies that show whether an individual has had the disease, the officials said.

The officials, speaking to a small group of reporters on Wednesday night, said the estimate was based on the number of known cases, between 2.3 million and 2.4 million, multiplied by the average rate of antibodies seen from the serology tests, about an average of 10 to 1.

“If you multiply the cases by that ratio, that’s where you get that 20 million figure,” said one official.
The way that's worded is confusing to me. Can't you estimate the prevalence in the population from the serology testing alone?

So unnamed "senior administration officials" briefed "a small group of reporters" for this story. Why not go on the record?
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Old 25th June 2020, 08:43 PM   #20
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If true, the good news of course is that it points to a lower IFR by a factor of 10. However, that seems to be already factored into many estimates.
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Old 25th June 2020, 09:30 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
Just a follow-up comment from a slightly different news source:

Info from the CDC:

Coronavirus may have infected 10 times more Americans than reported, CDC says (Reuters)

Yeah, a lot of us guessed that was the case a long time ago, but they have evidences.



The way that's worded is confusing to me. Can't you estimate the prevalence in the population from the serology testing alone?

So unnamed "senior administration officials" briefed "a small group of reporters" for this story. Why not go on the record?
The NPR story Atheist linked names Redfield

Quote:
Redfield estimates that between 5% and 8% of the U.S. population has been exposed. He points to results from communitywide antibody tests and other surveillance measures that point to this range.
Comes out to an IFR of between .4 and .7%
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Old 26th June 2020, 01:44 AM   #22
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
The CDC has also come out and stated they believe infections are under-stated by a factor of 10, with 20M Americans having had Covid to date: https://www.npr.org/sections/coronav...-at-highest-ri

I think we can be fairly confident that the same applies everywhere, giving a likely mortality rate of 0.5% overall.
I think that estimate is reasonable. In Australia there have been 7,595 cases with 104 deaths. This gives a death rate of 1.37%. If the USA had the same death rate and the number of deaths is just as accurate as Australia's deaths then the USA would have about 10 million cases. This is 3.7 times the official figure. I think this would be the lower limit of the number of cases. If Australia failed to diagnose some cases (possible, especially in the early days) then this would make the USA cases even higher. Also my estimate would be the number of cases from a few weeks ago.
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Old 26th June 2020, 03:16 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
The CDC has also come out and stated they believe infections are under-stated by a factor of 10, with 20M Americans having had Covid to date: https://www.npr.org/sections/coronav...-at-highest-ri

I think we can be fairly confident that the same applies everywhere, giving a likely mortality rate of 0.5% overall.
9800 tests show 1 positive here today.
This does not compute with theories of mass infection.
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Old 26th June 2020, 04:27 AM   #24
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Originally Posted by Samson View Post
9800 tests show 1 positive here today.
This does not compute with theories of mass infection.
Where?
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Old 26th June 2020, 11:33 AM   #25
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Pool Testing in the US
Now the talk is about pooling up to 25 individual tests into one batch to speed up testing. But this will only work in areas that have a low 1 to 2 percent positive individual test results. More that that positive, will result in doing lots of individual retests (don't know if they retain the individual samples). This will just slow down isolating positive individuals.
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Old 26th June 2020, 12:13 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
Where?
New Zealand
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Old 26th June 2020, 01:18 PM   #27
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Originally Posted by Samson View Post
9800 tests show 1 positive here today.
This does not compute with theories of mass infection.
I don't think there is mass infection, but the fact that we're catching 1-3 daily at the border now they're testing means some infected people must have got back into the community before testing commenced.

The point has already been made that most people don't infect anyone, and the evidence is very strong that 90% of cases are so mild, or asymptomatic, that they're not found until serology testing takes place.

I'd say we continue to be lucky. If one of the people going out of quarantine untested had been a super-spreader we'd be headed back to level 3 about now.
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Old 26th June 2020, 02:19 PM   #28
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
I don't think there is mass infection, but the fact that we're catching 1-3 daily at the border now they're testing means some infected people must have got back into the community before testing commenced.

The point has already been made that most people don't infect anyone, and the evidence is very strong that 90% of cases are so mild, or asymptomatic, that they're not found until serology testing takes place.

I'd say we continue to be lucky. If one of the people going out of quarantine untested had been a super-spreader we'd be headed back to level 3 about now.
Very lucky, I think we got away with it.
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Old 26th June 2020, 04:10 PM   #29
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First I've seen of age v being symptomatic.

Age is a strong factor influencing probability of being asymptomatic after covid infection.

Below age 40, probability of being asymptomatic is 80%
Above age 60, probability of being asymptomatic is 50%

https://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/2006/2006.08471.pdf

My comment: These numbers are consistent with the Diamond Princess where approx 50% were asymptomatic. But it's the first breakdown relative to age.

Also of note is the study is base on close contacts of Covid-19 patients. Testing showed that 51% of the close contacts had acquired Covid-19.


Here's an interesting study out of China (financed in part by the US NIH) that showed about half secondary transmission was from people that were pre-symptomatic.

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journ...20)30471-0.pdf
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Old 26th June 2020, 04:24 PM   #30
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Only 1 out of 123 children that lived with a Covid-19 infected person got the bug in a Swiss study. May be a lot safer to open up schools than we had previously thought.

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journ...20)31304-0.pdf
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Old 26th June 2020, 05:41 PM   #31
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Originally Posted by marting View Post
Only 1 out of 123 children that lived with a Covid-19 infected person got the bug in a Swiss study. May be a lot safer to open up schools than we had previously thought.

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journ...20)31304-0.pdf
I wonder though what happens if a kid does get infected at school. How likely is the child to infect others in his family or community? What about adults working at the school?
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Old 26th June 2020, 06:31 PM   #32
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Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
... Can't you estimate the prevalence in the population from the serology testing alone? ...
We could except for a few problems.

The serology tests don't yet have a good reliability record.

And there haven't been enough well designed population studies to get an accurate look.
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Old 26th June 2020, 06:44 PM   #33
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Outgoing Chief Medical Officer in Australia Brendan Murphy said estimates on both infections and deaths worldwide are underreported/underestimated.

The ratio has been approx:
80% mild cases;
20% serious cases;
0.1%-1.5% deaths.

(No idea on the least developed countries.)

Originally Posted by marting View Post
Only 1 out of 123 children that lived with a Covid-19 infected person got the bug in a Swiss study. May be a lot safer to open up schools than we had previously thought.

https://www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journ...20)31304-0.pdf
That's an example of why I think we also need to factor in the pre-existing health of the population/individuals.

It still looks to me like we will all get the virus before any vaccine.

The alarming thing to me is not that.

It's how many die from it. Is there a way to completely prevent someone getting it who is at very high risk?

We've learnt a lot so far, and our healthcare systems have been adjusting.

One cool thing I saw:

Mercedes Formula 1 team designed a new CPAP ventilator for COVID-19 ICU patients and made the design open-source. Mercedes have been making 1,000 ventilators a day for the UK.
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Old 26th June 2020, 06:52 PM   #34
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Originally Posted by jadebox View Post
I wonder though what happens if a kid does get infected at school. How likely is the child to infect others in his family or community? What about adults working at the school?
Sweden has kept preschools and primary schools open and it has basically not seen any signs that children spread the disease to any significant degree either among themselves or to adults. Teachers and other school staff members are far more likely to infect each-other than being infected by the kids.

There has so far only been one single significant outbreak at a school where a lot of teachers were sick and one of them ended up dying, which eventually had to close prematurely for the summer due to a lack of sufficient teachers. I live fairly close to this school and it was a very exceptional event especially given the low rate of infection in this region.

Teachers are not any more likely to be infected than anyone else.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:02 PM   #35
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Originally Posted by Arcade22 View Post
Sweden has kept preschools and primary schools open and it has basically not seen any signs that children spread the disease to any significant degree either among themselves or to adults. Teachers and other school staff members are far more likely to infect each-other than being infected by the kids.
That's consistent with the Swiss study. Frankly, I was surprised by the almost non-existent transmission to children. Even in families where a person had Covid-19. There's clearly something different going on.

OTOH, for people 20 or more it seems they are all pretty susceptible to getting the bug. Even though it impacts older people far harder.

Elsewhere it's been reported that pregnant women don't transmit it to their newborns. Even when they may get it themselves. Curious.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:11 PM   #36
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Originally Posted by Skeptic Ginger View Post
We could except for a few problems.

The serology tests don't yet have a good reliability record.
Some do many don't. The FDA has been coming down a some of the hundred plus purveyors of antibody tests that haven't even applied for an emergency authorization. Many of those are crap. Some tests deployed in Japan in a large group that hasn't had Covid-19 has a positive rate of under 0.1% so at least that test had decent specificity. Sensitivity, OTOH, is harder to quantify as there are fewer known positives to test against.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:22 PM   #37
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Originally Posted by marting View Post
Also of note is the study is base on close contacts of Covid-19 patients. Testing showed that 51% of the close contacts had acquired Covid-19.
I'd be interested to know what "close" is - 51% is a lot.

I'm getting the opinion that asymptomatic people aren't doing much infecting at all. Including this:

Originally Posted by marting View Post
Only 1 out of 123 children that lived with a Covid-19 infected person got the bug in a Swiss study. May be a lot safer to open up schools than we had previously thought.
Yeah, kids just don't pass it on, which is exactly unlike every other bug in existence. They mostly don't have symptoms, and it doesn't appear that those asymptomatic cases are even passing it on in the family.

Originally Posted by marting View Post
That's consistent with the Swiss study. Frankly, I was surprised by the almost non-existent transmission to children. Even in families where a person had Covid-19. There's clearly something different going on.
Bingo!

There is something going on, and we've been saying it from the start - kids should be highly susceptible to a novel virus and they just aren't.

I was reading yet another piece today about other vaccines conferring protection from completely different viruses, in particular, the polio vaccine.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/24/w...ronavirus.html

Quote:
Dr. Voroshilova established that the live polio vaccine had an unexpected benefit that, it turns out, could be relevant to the current pandemic: People who got the vaccine did not become sick with other viral illnesses for a month or so afterward. She took to giving the boys polio vaccine each fall, as protection against flu.
Much earlier, we had MMR and BCG as potential candidates, so maybe it's just being vaccinated more recently is the key? The wide majority of kids have had all their shots, and obviously, the older a person is, the longer it was since they had any vaccine other than 'flu.

Needs more work.

Originally Posted by marting View Post
Elsewhere it's been reported that pregnant women don't transmit it to their newborns. Even when they may get it themselves. Curious.
Babies being born with high antibodies would fit into the same scenario above - that being protected from other viruses confers protection.

I gotta admit, I'd enjoy the humour if this could all be solved by giving people a vaccine for something else.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:41 PM   #38
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It looks like we're about to see how unhindered transmission of Covid goes. USA, India, Brazil, Mexico and many others are returning wildly increasing infections and don't have any more lockdowns to give.

I think the next couple of months may make the first three months look quite tame.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:46 PM   #39
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
I'd be interested to know what "close" is - 51% is a lot.
The link is the full pdf of the study. IIRC, the "close" was people that had spent over 15 minutes closer than 2m as well as people in the same household.

The reference individuals were people that had symptoms, tested positive and were asked to quarantine at home. I suspect most of the "close" peeps were people in the home they stayed in. Details are in the study. I believe few, if any, of the known references were asymptomatic.
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Old 26th June 2020, 07:55 PM   #40
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Originally Posted by The Atheist View Post
It looks like we're about to see how unhindered transmission of Covid goes. USA, India, Brazil, Mexico and many others are returning wildly increasing infections and don't have any more lockdowns to give.

I think the next couple of months may make the first three months look quite tame.
I think otherwise. At least in the USA. There's been a big shift towards the younger crowd out having fun at bars. Older folks are still being cautious for the most part. Very different from the early days where a lot of the cases were older people who probably get a more serious case, spread it more easily, and didn't know the consequences at the time.

Now they do. Fewer going to church. Singing in choirs, or playing bingo indoors.

That said, there will still be some crossover where younger people infect their elders. But I believe that will create a smaller death spike than we saw a few months back. Not to say it won't be significant. I expect it will. Just less than the initial spike. And we also have a small benefit from pharmaceuticals. Maybe 25% less deaths between the two known effective agents.
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