- Joined
- 18 September 2008
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I'm wondering how the formerly most richest man on the planet once again ends up in the biggest industry ...
No need to wonder. His involvement is through his charitable foundation that has spent billions of his money (and that of others) trying to eradicate diseases in the poorest countries of the world. They have made significant progress with regards to malaria. The only people who doubt his honourable intentions are the usual conspiracy theory nutters.
BTW. The video has a lot of cuts. The impression I got was that he was just stating the truism, that both he and Fauci believe, and that is governments have the choice of waiting for a vaccine to be developed and fully tested so that it has no (or minor) side-effects or start distributing newly developed vaccines before they have been properly tested and risking serious side effects down the track. The video was edited to make it seem that he was advocating the latter, which I didn't hear him specifically say or at least not in its full context. I would like to hear the full video.
We will realise if we look at figures in a year that they fared as good bad as everyone else but just without lockdown...on Sweden, anyone?
Unfortunately frog Covid doesn't seem to follow seasonal variation. Compare Brazil and Sweden's numbers population proportionately.https://www.sonichealthplus.com.au/health-hub/flu/item/2019-flu-season-2nd-worst-on-record
To always keep in perspective
Last year 800 lives lost to common flu in Australia
Covid is a nasty strain so we can reasonably expect more than this and still be within seasonal variation
Another 2 months of winter to go for the south of the country before it gets better
Believe me it does, which is why europe is over, as is US btw if you look at the death curve,Unfortunately frog Covid doesn't seem to follow seasonal variation. Compare Brazil and Sweden's numbers population proportionately.
We have to learn to live with it.
And live with its consequent economic implications.
gg
Nope:Believe me it does, which is why europe is over, as is US btw if you look at the death curve,
You are dangerously wrong.Believe me it does, which is why europe is over, as is US btw if you look at the death curve,
and Brazil and Australia getting worse
Brazil in winter is not all copa cabana...
The majority of people will barely notice it. I think CDC estimates about 40% of people won't even know they have it.The divergence between deaths & cases is because young(er) people are now going back to work & getting the virus and it's much more survivable if you're young.
It still KO's you for however long you take to recover, but the death rate is orders of magnitude lower.
This is still a huge cost for business and the individual though so anything which can be done from home/without human contact, is.
Look at location of cluster in italy france and spain, how do you explain itYou are dangerously wrong.
It is not showing itself to be seasonal. Tin Hat stuff.
gg
More unsubstantiated claims from @qldfrog which are contradicted by real world evidence.You can get the flu in summer, you can get covid in summer but it will have a lower R factor
The issue of the danger COVID 19 represents to community is far bigger than simply mortality. The longer term effects of the illness on people who are severely affected is becoming clearer.
Most Covid-19 patients admitted to a Sydney hospital in March still have symptoms
Exclusive: more than three months after being discharged from St Vincent’s hospital, some 80% continue to experience symptoms, doctors say
Prof Gregory Dore, an infectious diseases physician at the hospital, said because reports from around the world seemed to suggest the fatality rate among those infected was around 1%, that “some people therefore think that well, 99% of people get out without any trouble”.
“Well, that’s absolutely not the case,” he said. “When you have 10% or more people hospitalised, when you have even more that are managing with the virus out in the community, a proportion of those people having ongoing, debilitating symptoms.
“This is a scary virus in the way it can affect people. There is a significant minority of people who have this ongoing – if you want to call it – syndrome of debilitating symptoms, so we’re sort of looking very closely at that group, both in terms of evaluating their quality of life and mental health fatigue, looking at the neurocognitive function, and then looking immunologically at whether there are any markers that would predict a symptom. So those are devastating symptoms.”
https://www.theguardian.com/austral...-sydney-hospital-in-march-still-have-symptoms
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