Cool news. Antibody testing should shed more light on the situation. I hope that the samples are not totally blinded. It is crucial to question all the positives and find out what symptoms they had over the past couple months.
one thing I am learned from all of this is - don't eat bats, koala, camel, dogs, cats, monkeys and other random animals. it could cause a virus that humans have not deal with.I don’t see environment under the restricted list of topics as it relates to a given subject: in this case epidemiology. In a broader sense, I put the article there to orient toward a sustainable global future when this discrete episode passes and to look beyond the human economy of death in which much of the urgency is located in the discourse of the present. That’s not political; it’s a life focus.
one thing I am learned from all of this is - don't eat bats, koala, camel, dogs, cats, monkeys and other random animals. it could cause a virus that humans have not deal with.
Cool news. Antibody testing should shed more light on the situation. I hope that the samples are not totally blinded. It is crucial to question all the positives and find out what symptoms they had over the past couple months.
Or prison and correctional officer populations. I have read horror stories about Rikers.I wonder what the positive size and diversity would turn out to be.
Test might be a bit more helpful in NY where the positive rate for police is 1 in 200
I read something similar a few years ago. There is also increasing research about how things in our food and water supply (fertilizers, pesticides, GMO, waste, plastic...) are suppressing our immune systems so pathogens have a greater impact.![]()
'Tip of the iceberg': is our destruction of nature responsible for Covid-19?
As habitat and biodiversity loss increase globally, the coronavirus outbreak may be just the beginning of mass pandemicswww.google.com
it's a different approach. The Oxford study came to the conclusion, that there's a possibility that we basically got over this already. Potentially up to 50% of all Brits could have been infected over the past months, meaning we'd be getting close to herd immunity already.More on the mass testing in The UK. The tests are currently being er, tested in Oxford, and if successful, will start being distributed 'within days'. Initially to health workers and then presumably other key workers and the general public.
Still not sure if it differentiates between have or have had the virus?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...home-testing-to-be-made-available-within-days
It's not the animals, that's simply an ethnocentric take. It's the lack of oversight by the relevant food and public health authorities in certain cases.one thing I am learned from all of this is - don't eat bats, koala, camel, dogs, cats, monkeys and other random animals. it could cause a virus that humans have not deal with.
Such as this outlier model:
https://www.ft.com/content/5ff6469a...egmentId=b385c2ad-87ed-d8ff-aaec-0f8435cd42d9
Edit: I accessed this before, now I can't. But this group thinks half the UK population is positive, and that the spread occurred through asymptomatics and mild symptomatics.
Sobering, but factually compelling and hard to deny.![]()
'Tip of the iceberg': is our destruction of nature responsible for Covid-19?
As habitat and biodiversity loss increase globally, the coronavirus outbreak may be just the beginning of mass pandemicswww.google.com
one thing I am learned from all of this is - don't eat bats, koala, camel, dogs, cats, monkeys and other random animals. it could cause a virus that humans have not deal with.
They've found it in sewer water in the Netherlands so maybe just by viral load in that they can make estimates of how many people have it.Primarily the anibody test will give information about how widespread the disease is and give a better idea on how deadly
Under the heading of governance (or discoordinated “just in time” management)
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Before Virus Outbreak, a Cascade of Warnings Went Unheeded (Published 2020)
Government exercises, including one last year, made clear that the U.S. was not ready for a pandemic like the coronavirus. But little was done.www.nytimes.com
Thanks for the advice. But I will stick with the CDCIt has yet to be proven the actual origin of COVID 19 - This could take the experts another year or two to find a definitive answer and it's possible they may never find a definitive answer - My advice is to ignore most of the MSM and use resources to delve further into the subject.
Thanks for the advice. But I will stick with the CDC
I think I will also go with Chris G. on this one. Stop eating bats, cats, dogs, koala, camel, peacocks etc.
https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/cases-updates/summary.html
COVID-19 Emergence
COVID-19 is caused by a coronavirus. Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses that are common in people and many different species of animals, including camels, cattle, cats, and bats. Rarely, animal coronaviruses can infect people and then spread between people such as with MERS-CoV, SARS-CoV, and now with this new virus (named SARS-CoV-2).
The SARS-CoV-2 virus is a betacoronavirus, like MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV. All three of these viruses have their origins in bats. The sequences from U.S. patients are similar to the one that China initially posted, suggesting a likely single, recent emergence of this virus from an animal reservoir.
Early on, many of the patients at the epicenter of the outbreak in Wuhan, Hubei Province, China had some link to a large seafood and live animal market, suggesting animal-to-person spread. Later, a growing number of patients reportedly did not have exposure to animal markets, indicating person-to-person spread. Person-to-person spread was subsequently reported outside Hubei and in countries outside China, including in the United States. Some international destinations now have ongoing community spread with the virus that causes COVID-19, as do some parts of the United States. Community spread means some people have been infected and it is not known how or where they became exposed. Learn more about the spread of this newly emerged coronavirus.
I wonder what the positive size and diversity would turn out to be.
Test might be a bit more helpful in NY where the positive rate for police is 1 in 200
A small interesting study done at a Brussels hospital: because they had cancelled all non-urgent appointments, there was CT-scanning capacity available. So they scanned all people coming in that were non-corona related. They found that 5 out of the 50 people they scanned showed some suspicious signs on the scan, so they had them tested, and these 5 were then found to indeed be covid-19 positive. This is of course a very small subsample, but it could indicate that a substantial portion of the population is actually infected without knowing and without showing clear symptoms. I'm sure we will be hearing about much larger studies such as this being conducted. Why haven't such tests been done in China for instance? (or have I missed those?)