Current Affairs Coronavirus Thread - Serious stuff !!!

Status
Not open for further replies.
BERLIN — For weeks, virologists here have been asked a persistent question: Why, compared to other countries, are so few of the Germans who are diagnosed with the coronavirus dying? In Italy, 9.5 percent of the people who have tested positive for the virus have succumbed to covid-19, according to data compiled at Johns Hopkins University. In France, the rate is 4.3 percent. But in Germany, it’s 0.4 percent.

The biggest reason for the difference, infectious disease experts say, is Germany’s work in the early days of its outbreak to track, test and contain infection clusters. That means Germany has a truer picture of the size of its outbreak than places that test only the obviously symptomatic, most seriously ill or highest-risk patients. “At the beginning, when we had relatively few cases, when it came to finding them and isolating them, we did quite well in Germany,” said Reinhard Busse, head of the department of health care management at the Berlin University of Technology. “That’s the major reason.”

Other factors, such as the age of those infected and the timing of Germany’s outbreak, also play a role in the differing death rates. But testing widely has been key. Germany, with 31,150 cases at midday Tuesday, appeared to have a larger outbreak than France, with 20,149. But the higher death rate in France implies there were more undiagnosed cases there. France’s outbreak could be larger than Germany’s.
 
Today's top tip:

90836226_10222431020390874_3503227832039899136_n.jpg
 
Just got back from the Asda by us. They're letting 150 in the shop at a time and it's plenty big enough for social distancing. They have professionals on the door logging people in and out and then stopping people if it's going above 150.

It's all very professional and organised.

Still hardly any food mind

Got back from Morrisons. Same deal with a very short queue outside and loads of space inside - shelves pretty full as well, bar bog roll, nappies and wipes.
 
I wouldn't trust those. Many regulatory bodies have loosened guidelines that will allow these to get to the market, but that does not mean they meet the same standards of labs and hospitals. Actually just means they can legally bypass normal regulations that would make companies prove the tests were accurate.
I think Grayling's deffo gonna order 2 billion units a month from a mate then...
 
I wouldn't trust those. Many regulatory bodies have loosened guidelines that will allow these to get to the market, but that does not mean they meet the same standards of labs and hospitals. Actually just means they can legally bypass normal regulations that would make companies prove the tests where accurate.
?

It's a head of division at PHE. They are hardly a quack.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Welcome

Join the Everton conversation today.
Fewer ads, full access, completely free.

🛒 Visit Shop

Support Grand Old Team by checking out our latest Everton gear!
Back
Top