Hong Kong and Shanghai Disney Resorts have been shut down indefinitely.
PartyBear said:
Hong Kong and Shanghai Disney Resorts have been shut down indefinitely.
Oldbear83 said:First, I disagree about "contradiction". As you said, new information provides broader information and confirmation/refutation of prior claims.BaylorBJM said:Yes, of course its a media piece. Nevertheless, here's the official statement from the CDC as I, and I'm sure, you too, have listened to: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.htmlOldbear83 said:It does not. For one thing, your link was to a media site, not the CDC itself.BaylorBJM said:I did. Did you? Just wondering your thoughts as a lot of it seems to run counter to what you were suggesting in previous posts.Oldbear83 said:Yes they have. Did you pay attention to the facts in that release, or did you just react emotionally?BaylorBJM said:So, um, now the CDC has commented on the matter.Oldbear83 said:
Hmmmm.
Trust the doctors who spent their careers studying and fighting viruses, or trust a media known to make up stories in the interest of hype and ratings.
Thanks, I will stick with the CDC, Lancet, and the people whose interest is based on finding solutions.
But just to respond, yes there are 79k COVID-19 cases. For context, there are also between three and five million cases of influenza each year, causing between 250 and 500 thousand deaths.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/219557-3459/what-is-the-global-incidence-of-influenza
The COVID-19 outbreak is worth paying attention to, but there are a lot of bad people selling hysteria well out of proportion.
And yes, I am biased. My wife is in Hong Kong right now. Guess what? The city is doing fine, taking reasonable precautions but not going stupid like CNN.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/cdc-warns-it-expects-coronavirus-to-spread-in-u-s-11582653829
Second, I already explained the geographical spread in an earlier post, along with the declining rate of growth.
I agree with a lot of what you've posted (especially as it relates to the influenza,) and much of this relates to "scare of the day" bias. Both true.
However, a lot of what you've posted is now being contradicted by the CDC. And that's okay. Things change. And with this particular situation, things appear to be changing rapidly. But a lot of your non-expert points above are now being directly contradicted by the CDC -the very group you said you'd choose to believe above all others.
The disease, according to both prior and current CDC statements, is transmitted person-to-person, as is the case with most viruses.
The CDC is warning that there will be "community spread", which in simple language means that the disease is being spread at unknown but discernible rates. The first doctor making statements repeated that mitigation and prophylaxis are both available and effective based on documented results.
The new virus will be effectively addressed in much the same way as any flu outbreak is addressed.
This in no way "contradicts" anything I posted earlier. And while I may not be an "expert", I damn well have been paying attention to everything released on the matter, and simply paying attention qualifies any literate person to make informed decisions.
Second, while I respect the CDC, they are one of several sources I use. A number of medical journals post openly, most notably Lancet and JAMA.
Finally, if you stayed on through the Q&A session, you would have heard the doctors note that scientific discussions are often treated superficially by the media. That remains a problem rather than part of the solution.
Doubling down. Gotcha.
Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
Source? Not trying to argue, BTW. Just haven't seen those numbers.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
Mathematics. The mortality rate of Covid-19 is hovering between 2-2.5%. The mortality rate for common flu is well documented at .1%Bearitto said:Source?trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
trey3216 said:Mathematics. The mortality rate of Covid-19 is hovering between 2-2.5%. The mortality rate for common flu is well documented at .1%Bearitto said:Source?trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
Not to mention this Coronavirus is putting about 20% of patients in ICU for 3 weeks with full intubation. That would overwhelm our system
That is correct. But some of those numbers are skewed due to reporting issues (Iran reporting mortality rate of almost 20% because they're not testing enough, etc)Florda_mike said:trey3216 said:Mathematics. The mortality rate of Covid-19 is hovering between 2-2.5%. The mortality rate for common flu is well documented at .1%Bearitto said:Source?trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
Not to mention this Coronavirus is putting about 20% of patients in ICU for 3 weeks with full intubation. That would overwhelm our system
Overwhelming our system is a Chinese goal
Strain was found first in China, coincidence?
They would kill to have Trump lose but he'll be fine as it'll be gone by May to June when it warms
Incidentally the numbers I got seem higher too!? 2700 deaths of 81,000 cases is 3.3% mortality rate. Am I wrong?
OK. I went out of my way to not be a di*k to you. I wasn't questioning your math skills. I was asking for the source for the data you used to come up with that estimate.trey3216 said:Mathematics. The mortality rate of Covid-19 is hovering between 2-2.5%. The mortality rate for common flu is well documented at .1%Bearitto said:Source?trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
Not to mention this Coronavirus is putting about 20% of patients in ICU for 3 weeks with full intubation. That would overwhelm our system
Bearitto said:OK. I went out of my way to not be a di*k to you. I wasn't questioning your math skills. I was asking for the source for the data you used to come up with that estimate.trey3216 said:Mathematics. The mortality rate of Covid-19 is hovering between 2-2.5%. The mortality rate for common flu is well documented at .1%Bearitto said:Source?trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
Not to mention this Coronavirus is putting about 20% of patients in ICU for 3 weeks with full intubation. That would overwhelm our system
Again, source? And this time, I mean the definitive source for the mortality rates for the standard flu in china vs the COVID-19 flu in China, so that we are comparing apples to apples.
Thanks. I'll wait.
Thanks
Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue.
False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
** sigh **BaylorBJM said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue.
How can that be? OldBear said this is still a contained virus.
I didn't add pneumonia to the influenza numbers, because we were talking about influenza vs COVID. I imagine adding pneumonia to COVID numbers is going to spike that up to a pretty high level as well.Oldbear83 said:False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
For comparison, just in the United States, 16,000 Americans have died and 280,00 hospitalized from the "normal" flu
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/index.htm
Worldwide, COVID-19 has killed 2,770 with 81,279 known cases
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
The mortality rate for COVID-19 is an estimated 2.3% for those infected.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-72000-covid-19-patients-finds-23-death-rate
The mortality rate for influenza varies from year to year and according to demographic vectors. The average mortality rate of influenza pneumonia is between 10% and 20%.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/300455-107816/what-is-the-mortality-and-morbidity-of-influenza-pneumonia
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
The real risk of COVID-19 appears to be its unknown degree of contagion. The common influenza tends to infect about 4-8% of the population exposed to it, which is largely mitigated by vaccination. COVID-19 remains largely unknown in terms of infection, largely due to poor documentation by officials in Hubei province, which allowed patients infected to travel around the globe before the outbreak was reported. Also, countries like Italy have ignored the lead of Japanese, Thai and American medical authorities in preparing for containment through quarantine and PPE efforts, and so the disease is growing geographically even as it slows growth in overall numbers.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30134-1/fulltext
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200224-sitrep-35-covid-19.pdf
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
In summary, what is known about COVID-19 is that it behaves in a similar manner to past viruses, and so common prophylaxis is effective in preventing infection. Without such measure, COVID-19 appears to be significantly more contagious than influenza, but is much less fatal than influenza, H1N1, or SARS.
It should also be kept in mind, that a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates have already been produced and are beginning clinical trials.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-remdesivir-treat-covid-19-begins
https://medcitynews.com/2020/02/moderna-ships-first-batch-of-covid-19-vaccine-phase-i-trial-study-page-posted-on-clinicaltrials-gov/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/modernas-stock-rises-as-it-ships-the-first-batch-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-candidate-2020-02-25
https://globalbiodefense.com/2020/02/23/university-of-queensland-covid-19-vaccine-goes-into-test-production/
Also, in the CDC briefing yesterday, Dr. Nancy Messonnier observed that many viruses die out in warmer climates, which is one reason we talk about a 'flu season' in the first place, COVID-19 cases may well die out as spring arrives.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/02/what-happens-to-coronavirus-covid-19-in-warmer-spring-temperatures/
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.html
COVID-19's symptoms manifest as pneumonia. There is no COVID-19 without that aspect.trey3216 said:Oldbear83 said:
I didn't add pneumonia to the influenza numbers, because we were talking about influenza vs COVID. I imagine adding pneumonia to COVID numbers is going to spike that up to a pretty high level as well.
FALSEOldbear83 said:False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
For comparison, just in the United States, 16,000 Americans have died and 280,00 hospitalized from the "normal" flu
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/index.htm
Worldwide, COVID-19 has killed 2,770 with 81,279 known cases
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
The mortality rate for COVID-19 is an estimated 2.3% for those infected.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-72000-covid-19-patients-finds-23-death-rate
The mortality rate for influenza varies from year to year and according to demographic vectors. The average mortality rate of influenza pneumonia is between 10% and 20%.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/300455-107816/what-is-the-mortality-and-morbidity-of-influenza-pneumonia
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
The real risk of COVID-19 appears to be its unknown degree of contagion. The common influenza tends to infect about 4-8% of the population exposed to it, which is largely mitigated by vaccination. COVID-19 remains largely unknown in terms of infection, largely due to poor documentation by officials in Hubei province, which allowed patients infected to travel around the globe before the outbreak was reported. Also, countries like Italy have ignored the lead of Japanese, Thai and American medical authorities in preparing for containment through quarantine and PPE efforts, and so the disease is growing geographically even as it slows growth in overall numbers.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30134-1/fulltext
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200224-sitrep-35-covid-19.pdf
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
In summary, what is known about COVID-19 is that it behaves in a similar manner to past viruses, and so common prophylaxis is effective in preventing infection. Without such measure, COVID-19 appears to be significantly more contagious than influenza, but is much less fatal than influenza, H1N1, or SARS.
It should also be kept in mind, that a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates have already been produced and are beginning clinical trials.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-remdesivir-treat-covid-19-begins
https://medcitynews.com/2020/02/moderna-ships-first-batch-of-covid-19-vaccine-phase-i-trial-study-page-posted-on-clinicaltrials-gov/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/modernas-stock-rises-as-it-ships-the-first-batch-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-candidate-2020-02-25
https://globalbiodefense.com/2020/02/23/university-of-queensland-covid-19-vaccine-goes-into-test-production/
Also, in the CDC briefing yesterday, Dr. Nancy Messonnier observed that many viruses die out in warmer climates, which is one reason we talk about a 'flu season' in the first place, COVID-19 cases may well die out as spring arrives.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/02/what-happens-to-coronavirus-covid-19-in-warmer-spring-temperatures/
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.html
I showed my source and logic. You might try to do as much.trey3216 said:FALSEOldbear83 said:False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
For comparison, just in the United States, 16,000 Americans have died and 280,00 hospitalized from the "normal" flu
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/index.htm
Worldwide, COVID-19 has killed 2,770 with 81,279 known cases
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
The mortality rate for COVID-19 is an estimated 2.3% for those infected.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-72000-covid-19-patients-finds-23-death-rate
The mortality rate for influenza varies from year to year and according to demographic vectors. The average mortality rate of influenza pneumonia is between 10% and 20%.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/300455-107816/what-is-the-mortality-and-morbidity-of-influenza-pneumonia
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
The real risk of COVID-19 appears to be its unknown degree of contagion. The common influenza tends to infect about 4-8% of the population exposed to it, which is largely mitigated by vaccination. COVID-19 remains largely unknown in terms of infection, largely due to poor documentation by officials in Hubei province, which allowed patients infected to travel around the globe before the outbreak was reported. Also, countries like Italy have ignored the lead of Japanese, Thai and American medical authorities in preparing for containment through quarantine and PPE efforts, and so the disease is growing geographically even as it slows growth in overall numbers.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30134-1/fulltext
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200224-sitrep-35-covid-19.pdf
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
In summary, what is known about COVID-19 is that it behaves in a similar manner to past viruses, and so common prophylaxis is effective in preventing infection. Without such measure, COVID-19 appears to be significantly more contagious than influenza, but is much less fatal than influenza, H1N1, or SARS.
It should also be kept in mind, that a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates have already been produced and are beginning clinical trials.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-remdesivir-treat-covid-19-begins
https://medcitynews.com/2020/02/moderna-ships-first-batch-of-covid-19-vaccine-phase-i-trial-study-page-posted-on-clinicaltrials-gov/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/modernas-stock-rises-as-it-ships-the-first-batch-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-candidate-2020-02-25
https://globalbiodefense.com/2020/02/23/university-of-queensland-covid-19-vaccine-goes-into-test-production/
Also, in the CDC briefing yesterday, Dr. Nancy Messonnier observed that many viruses die out in warmer climates, which is one reason we talk about a 'flu season' in the first place, COVID-19 cases may well die out as spring arrives.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/02/what-happens-to-coronavirus-covid-19-in-warmer-spring-temperatures/
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.html
Those 16,000 deaths are out of 29 million cases, which is a .055% mortality rate this year.
trey3216 said:FALSEOldbear83 said:False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
For comparison, just in the United States, 16,000 Americans have died and 280,00 hospitalized from the "normal" flu
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/index.htm
Worldwide, COVID-19 has killed 2,770 with 81,279 known cases
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
The mortality rate for COVID-19 is an estimated 2.3% for those infected.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-72000-covid-19-patients-finds-23-death-rate
The mortality rate for influenza varies from year to year and according to demographic vectors. The average mortality rate of influenza pneumonia is between 10% and 20%.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/300455-107816/what-is-the-mortality-and-morbidity-of-influenza-pneumonia
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
The real risk of COVID-19 appears to be its unknown degree of contagion. The common influenza tends to infect about 4-8% of the population exposed to it, which is largely mitigated by vaccination. COVID-19 remains largely unknown in terms of infection, largely due to poor documentation by officials in Hubei province, which allowed patients infected to travel around the globe before the outbreak was reported. Also, countries like Italy have ignored the lead of Japanese, Thai and American medical authorities in preparing for containment through quarantine and PPE efforts, and so the disease is growing geographically even as it slows growth in overall numbers.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30134-1/fulltext
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200224-sitrep-35-covid-19.pdf
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
In summary, what is known about COVID-19 is that it behaves in a similar manner to past viruses, and so common prophylaxis is effective in preventing infection. Without such measure, COVID-19 appears to be significantly more contagious than influenza, but is much less fatal than influenza, H1N1, or SARS.
It should also be kept in mind, that a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates have already been produced and are beginning clinical trials.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-remdesivir-treat-covid-19-begins
https://medcitynews.com/2020/02/moderna-ships-first-batch-of-covid-19-vaccine-phase-i-trial-study-page-posted-on-clinicaltrials-gov/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/modernas-stock-rises-as-it-ships-the-first-batch-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-candidate-2020-02-25
https://globalbiodefense.com/2020/02/23/university-of-queensland-covid-19-vaccine-goes-into-test-production/
Also, in the CDC briefing yesterday, Dr. Nancy Messonnier observed that many viruses die out in warmer climates, which is one reason we talk about a 'flu season' in the first place, COVID-19 cases may well die out as spring arrives.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/02/what-happens-to-coronavirus-covid-19-in-warmer-spring-temperatures/
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.html
Those 16,000 deaths are out of 29 million cases, which is a .055% mortality rate this year.
My source was your source. Taken from the big blue box right on the CDC website that you listed as the first source:Oldbear83 said:I showed my source and logic. You might try to do as much.trey3216 said:FALSEOldbear83 said:False.trey3216 said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue. Will this be as bad as the media are making it out to be? Probably not. It doesn't seem to have a mortality rate any higher than the normal flu, so it's a safe bet that within a matter of years, most of us will have had it and it will be something we talk about having had occurred and scared people and nothing more.
The mortality rate is 20-25x normal flu
For comparison, just in the United States, 16,000 Americans have died and 280,00 hospitalized from the "normal" flu
https://www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/index.htm
Worldwide, COVID-19 has killed 2,770 with 81,279 known cases
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
The mortality rate for COVID-19 is an estimated 2.3% for those infected.
http://www.cidrap.umn.edu/news-perspective/2020/02/study-72000-covid-19-patients-finds-23-death-rate
The mortality rate for influenza varies from year to year and according to demographic vectors. The average mortality rate of influenza pneumonia is between 10% and 20%.
https://www.medscape.com/answers/300455-107816/what-is-the-mortality-and-morbidity-of-influenza-pneumonia
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
The real risk of COVID-19 appears to be its unknown degree of contagion. The common influenza tends to infect about 4-8% of the population exposed to it, which is largely mitigated by vaccination. COVID-19 remains largely unknown in terms of infection, largely due to poor documentation by officials in Hubei province, which allowed patients infected to travel around the globe before the outbreak was reported. Also, countries like Italy have ignored the lead of Japanese, Thai and American medical authorities in preparing for containment through quarantine and PPE efforts, and so the disease is growing geographically even as it slows growth in overall numbers.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(20)30134-1/fulltext
https://www.who.int/docs/default-source/coronaviruse/situation-reports/20200224-sitrep-35-covid-19.pdf
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/healthcare/biotech/healthcare/covid-19-highly-contagious-but-less-fatal-than-other-viruses/articleshow/74251393.cms
In summary, what is known about COVID-19 is that it behaves in a similar manner to past viruses, and so common prophylaxis is effective in preventing infection. Without such measure, COVID-19 appears to be significantly more contagious than influenza, but is much less fatal than influenza, H1N1, or SARS.
It should also be kept in mind, that a number of COVID-19 vaccine candidates have already been produced and are beginning clinical trials.
https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-clinical-trial-remdesivir-treat-covid-19-begins
https://medcitynews.com/2020/02/moderna-ships-first-batch-of-covid-19-vaccine-phase-i-trial-study-page-posted-on-clinicaltrials-gov/
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/modernas-stock-rises-as-it-ships-the-first-batch-of-its-covid-19-vaccine-candidate-2020-02-25
https://globalbiodefense.com/2020/02/23/university-of-queensland-covid-19-vaccine-goes-into-test-production/
Also, in the CDC briefing yesterday, Dr. Nancy Messonnier observed that many viruses die out in warmer climates, which is one reason we talk about a 'flu season' in the first place, COVID-19 cases may well die out as spring arrives.
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/2020/02/what-happens-to-coronavirus-covid-19-in-warmer-spring-temperatures/
https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2020/a0225-cdc-telebriefing-covid-19.html
Those 16,000 deaths are out of 29 million cases, which is a .055% mortality rate this year.
Further, consider this from the American Journal of Public Heath, published by the National Institute of Heath:
"The CDC4 and others26 have argued that recorded influenza deaths underrepresent influenza's true impact on mortality"
"In the United States, influenza is a seasonal illness, and virus circulation peaks at unpredictable times. Elevated mortality thus can occur across calendar years"
"The severity and clinical expression of disease depend on a multiplicity of additional factors, such as the novelty of the pathogen to the host, age, cocirculating pathogens, living conditions, physiological status, and access to treatment."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2374803/
No, I said that influenza has killed 16,000 out of 29 million cases this year, which is based on the very CDC link that you put up, also which is all I've been saying the entire time.Oldbear83 said:
So you ignore anything but what you want to see.
Noted.
You are taking a very simplistic view, and one which has nothing to do with what I have said all along regarding COVID-19.trey3216 said:No, I said that influenza has killed 16,000 out of 29 million cases this year, which is based on the very CDC link that you put up, also which is all I've been saying the entire time.Oldbear83 said:
So you ignore anything but what you want to see.
Noted.
Oldbear83 said:** sigh **BaylorBJM said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue.
How can that be? OldBear said this is still a contained virus.
I never said COVID-19 was held to one country. News flash, you cannot hermetically seal a country or region from a virus.
What I said was that a lot of the media hysteria was, and is, complete BS.
I read what you posted, but I didn't comment about it because the conversation wasn't about Dengue, Hanta, Rotavirus, etc.Oldbear83 said:You are taking a very simplistic view, and one which has nothing to do with what I have said all along regarding COVID-19.trey3216 said:No, I said that influenza has killed 16,000 out of 29 million cases this year, which is based on the very CDC link that you put up, also which is all I've been saying the entire time.Oldbear83 said:
So you ignore anything but what you want to see.
Noted.
The problem with your point is that you are looking at it without considering that demographics significantly affect the mortality rate, as does vaccination. The influenza pandemic of 1918, for example, had a mortality rate twenty times the rate of PRIOR influenza outbreaks, and infected roughly 28% of the US population.
https://virus.stanford.edu/uda/
I also listed a number of extant viruses still going around, which are much more deadly than the COVID-19, which I observe you completely ignored.
Since you cut off the rest of my statement, I'd suggest you are being dishonest.BaylorBJM said:Oldbear83 said:** sigh **BaylorBJM said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue.
How can that be? OldBear said this is still a contained virus.
I never said COVID-19 was held to one country. News flash, you cannot hermetically seal a country or region from a virus.
What I said was that a lot of the media hysteria was, and is, complete BS.
But that's not what you said. At all.
2/25/20 @ 9:47am, BearFan33: "Is it fair to say that we have lost containment?"
2/25/20 @ 10:16am, OldBear83: "No, that would not be a fair statement."
Oldbear83 said:Since you cut off the rest of my statement, I'd suggest you are being dishonest.BaylorBJM said:Oldbear83 said:** sigh **BaylorBJM said:Bearitto said:
Given the speed of transmission right now and the fact that it is not detectable when first communicable, I would suggest that it will be a matter of months before it's a world wide issue.
How can that be? OldBear said this is still a contained virus.
I never said COVID-19 was held to one country. News flash, you cannot hermetically seal a country or region from a virus.
What I said was that a lot of the media hysteria was, and is, complete BS.
But that's not what you said. At all.
2/25/20 @ 9:47am, BearFan33: "Is it fair to say that we have lost containment?"
2/25/20 @ 10:16am, OldBear83: "No, that would not be a fair statement."