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Coronavirus - International stories and thoughts

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by G8trGr8t, Jan 20, 2020.

  1. 96Gatorcise

    96Gatorcise GC Hall of Fame

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    2 more confirmed cases of reinfection

    Coronavirus re-infections raise concerns about immunity

    AMSTERDAM/BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Two European patients are confirmed to have been re-infected with the coronavirus, raising concerns about people’s immunity to the virus as the world struggles to tame the pandemic.

    The cases, in Belgium and the Netherlands, follow a report this week by researchers in Hong Kong about a man there who had been re-infected with a different strain of the virus four and a half months after being declared recovered - the first such re-infection to be documented.
     
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  2. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    There are two responses to be considered: the government response, and the citizen response. In the U.S., the government response under Trump has, in many ways, been poor. Many governors and large city mayors have screwed up as well. The citizen response in the U.S. has not been very good either, especially when you realize that the virus can remain active based on the response of the worst few percent of the population. The U.S. response has been affected by many things (not just Trump's lazy and dismissive attitude): an unwillingness to follow directions, a lack of respect for science, a tendency to fill in the gaps of scientific thought with rumors and speculation, a politically and culturally divided public, as well as the ongoing protests and violence. Comparing one country to another without considering all of the differences between the countries and crediting one leader while blaming the other is somewhat pointless.
     
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  3. duchen

    duchen VIP Member

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    The country needs to be led. And, if it isn’t led, it is rudderless. In describing the national response, you described Trump’s response. For the most part, the response beee has followed political lines. And followed stupid. What is so sad is that wearing a mask is not that hard. And mask wearing has made a big difference in Florida recently. Btw: it seems that UF athletes and football players have been very responsible. Zero cases; absolutely a tribute to every player and staff member on the team.
     
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  4. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    EU seeing an increase in cases after opening up and encouraging tourism. Increase being driven by younger crowd. Spain shutting down bars and nightclubs following Italy's lead.

    Europe Took A Holiday From COVID-19. Now It’s Paying The Price.

    In France, 4,771 new cases were recorded on Thursday — a thousand more than the previous day, and the first time since May that the country has recorded more than 4,000 daily cases.

    Germany reported 1,707 new cases on Thursday, its highest increase since April, and Spain reported 3,349 new cases. In the United Kingdom, scientists advising the government revealed on Friday that the coronavirus infection rate has risen, fueling concerns that the epidemic is growing in the country.
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2020
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  5. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    Spain opened early and fast. Now has higher new case per 100k than US. About to get much worse there again. This will happen everywhere that people think they have weathered the storm. Maybe people will come to realize that if Italy and Spain are not close to herd immunity, no place is

    ‘Here We Go Again’: A Second Virus Wave Grips Spain

    France is also surging, as are parts of Eastern Europe, and cases are ticking up in Germany, Greece, Italy and Belgium, too, but in the past week, Spain has recorded the most new cases on the continent by far — more than 53,000. With 114 new infections per 100,000 people in that time, the virus is spreading faster in Spain than in the United States, more than twice as fast as in France, about eight times the rate in Italy and Britain, and ten times the pace in Germany.

    Spain was already one of the hardest-hit countries in Europe, and now has about 440,000 cases and more than 29,000 deaths. But after one of the world’s most stringent lockdowns, which did check the virus’s spread, it then enjoyed one of the most rapid reopenings. The return of nightlife and group activities — far faster than most of its European neighbors — has contributed to the epidemic’s resurgence.
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    Explanations include a rise in large family gatherings; the return of tourism in cities like Málaga; the decision to return responsibility for combating the virus to local authorities at the end of the nationwide lockdown, and a lack of adequate housing and health care for migrants.

    The surge has also been blamed on the revival of nightlife, which was reinstated earlier and with looser restrictions than in many other parts of Europe.

    “We have this cultural factor related to our rich social life,” said Ildefenso Hernández, a former director-general of public health for the Spanish Government. “People are close. They like to get to know each other.”
     
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  6. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    India ignoring the science, and the virus, doesn't look good going forward

    India coronavirus: As daily caseload surges country presses ahead with reopening

    India is entering a new phase of reopening that will see subway trains running for the first time in months, despite skyrocketing daily coronavirus infections that are showing no sign of slowing down.
    The country of 1.3 billion people has reported more than 75,000 infections for five consecutive days -- the fastest growing caseload of any country in the world.

    It recorded 85,687 new Covid-19 infections last Wednesday, the world's highest single-day spike since the pandemic began, surpassing the previous record of 77,255 cases set by the United States on July 16.

    India's infection rate has increased exponentially in recent weeks. It took almost six months for the country to record 1 million cases, another three weeks to hit 2 million, and only 16 more days to hit 3 million.
     
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  7. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    African poverty and covid infections lends more evidence to some natural immunity for those whose immune systems have been heavily taxed. Not sure why this is different in Africa than Brazil or Mexico though where squalor and poverty has not muted the spread. Perhaps average age and obesity.

    Coronavirus in Africa: Could poverty explain mystery of low death rate?

    Even if deaths have been under-reported here - perhaps by a factor of two - South Africa has still performed impressively well, as have many other parts of the continent, where hospital beds remain stubbornly empty, and where infection graphs have almost entirely avoided the pronounced peaks and sharp angles seen in so many other parts of the world.

    "Most African countries don't have a peak. I don't understand why. I'm completely at sea," admitted Prof Karim, a leading voice on South Africa's pandemic response.

    Professor Madhi agrees: "This is an enigma. It's completely unbelievable."

    For a while now, experts have cited a youthful population as the best explanation for Africa's relatively low infection rates. After all, the average age on the continent is roughly half that in Europe.

    [​IMG]
     
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  8. OklahomaGator

    OklahomaGator Jedi Administrator Moderator VIP Member

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    Asia and Europe seem to be heading in the wrong direction.
     
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  9. BLING

    BLING GC Hall of Fame

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    Asia on the whole has never had a visible peak, though most of it now is probably India which has gotten totally out of control. I’ve read of some other countries have “tourism related” outbreaks, but the numbers are trivial relative to India.

    Europe doesn’t look terrible yet but their curve has inverted and going in the wrong direction.
     
  10. flgator2

    flgator2 Premium Member

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    What a great video
     
  11. gator7_5

    gator7_5 GC Hall of Fame

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    A small amount of people got chicken pox multiple times. Seems to be an anomaly. 3 confirmed out of millions? Keep the fear churning!
     
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  12. TrueGator

    TrueGator GC Hall of Fame

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    Just like any other virus, mutations are natural and vaccines have to be adapted each year. Just like we have to get a flu shot every fall. It's also been said that mutations more often than not become less potent, because, after all, a virus thrives better by keeping its host alive to propogatge the strain forward than it does by killing all of its hosts.
     
  13. pkaib01

    pkaib01 GC Hall of Fame

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    I think it's a bit early to reach the conclusion that this is fear mongering. We are only 6 weeks removed from our peak. The actual reinfection rate cannot be fully understood.

    Reinfection needs to be understood. Is it due to antigenic drift, drop in antibodies or something else entirely? The answer to that question may drive our subsequent policy decisions as well as vaccine considerations. To dismiss its implications outright is short-sighted, IMHO.
     
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  14. LimeyGator

    LimeyGator Official Brexit Reporter!

    FYI, it's starting to get sub-optimal again over this way. Numbers are rising again.

    Definite worry here in the UK - from Monday it's illegal to gather with any more than 6 people again - it's being mooted as the start of lockdown 2, although quite when we finished the last one I'm not sure :)

    Who ever would have thought that encouraging people back into restaurants, pubs, schools and offices would have seen the virus rise eh? But the Government is determined to blame young people, as a sweeping generalisation. That'll keep their core vote happy, at least!
     
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  15. defensewinschampionships

    defensewinschampionships GC Hall of Fame

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    My mother in law had two confirmed cases. Is that not the same as reinfection?
     
  16. chemgator

    chemgator GC Hall of Fame

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    Surprisingly, Italy is now doing very well with the virus. I am guessing that their initial scare with the 10% death rate got their attention, and they started wearing masks and social distancing religiously. They don't seem to have many coronavirus deniers at this point.

    How Is Italy Avoiding a Second Pandemic Wave?

     
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  17. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    Coronavirus: Israel tightens second lockdown to avoid 'abyss'

    Israel is set to tighten its second nationwide coronavirus lockdown, with the prime minister warning that the country is at "the edge of the abyss".
    The new measures, which parliament must approve, would see more workplaces close and movement restricted further.
    Synagogues would only be able to open for small groups next week for Yom Kippur, Judaism's holiest day, and the size of protests would be limited.
    The move came after the daily number of new Covid-19 cases exceeded 8,000.
     
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  18. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

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    For some jaw-dropping perspective, go back and read the first 10 pages or so of this thread. o_O
     
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  19. Trickster

    Trickster VIP Member

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    Did they go???
     
  20. lacuna

    lacuna VIP Member

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    No. They sensibly cancelled their plans, even before all the subsequent restrictions on travel. Airfare was fully refunded as were deposits on all their reservations, but China does not refund the cost of a visa. They purchased 10 year visas but I hope they never use them.
     
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