COVID-19 has its own syndromes not the least of which is survival with the same person 24/7.


COVID-19 has its own syndromes not the least of which is survival with the same person 24/7. So what do the experts think and who are the experts. The Times suggests Nuns. I normally link only or quote but given the pervasive result of lockdown I trust The Times will permit an exception with full attribution. The Times Apr 20th, 2020 https://apple.news/AN_Z4EcpLTc2oBbTI4HQk5Q https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/how-to-survive-lockdown-by-the-nuns-who-do-it-24-7-nb823d2mb How to survive lockdown, by the nuns who do it 24/7 You may be climbing the walls after a few weeks inside, but for enclosed nuns this is a way of life — so what can we … Continue reading COVID-19 has its own syndromes not the least of which is survival with the same person 24/7.

Where is the evidence to suggest that the covid peak is here?


With all the talk of opening up the economy because we have reached the peak, there is nothing to validate that statement in the data of new case growth. You don’t need to focus on any particular country to see that all are still growing in cases, and there is no perceptible new trend of a tipping point having been reached. Continue reading Where is the evidence to suggest that the covid peak is here?

Harvard research points out that physical distancing could be around until 2022 – 2024


Harvard research points out that physical distancing will be around for a lot longer even based on an antidote. It is urgent to understand the future of severe acute respiratory syndrome–coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) transmission. We used estimates of seasonality, immunity, and cross-immunity for betacoronaviruses OC43 and HKU1 from time series data from the USA to inform a model of SARS-CoV-2 transmission. We projected that recurrent wintertime outbreaks of SARS-CoV-2 will probably occur after the initial, most severe pandemic wave. Absent other interventions, a key metric for the success of social distancing is whether critical care capacities are exceeded. To avoid … Continue reading Harvard research points out that physical distancing could be around until 2022 – 2024

What is different about covid-19 and earlier pandemics


What is different about covid-19 ? There are technical differences in covid-19 which suggest it is smarter than earlier viruses in some respects. For those technical details, see the article. One result is the infection rate of covid-19 is higher than bird and swine flu. Basically R-nought is a value that indicates the numbers of people that will be infected by someone with the virus. One target is to keep this value below 1.0, however covid-19 is roughly estimated at 2.0 to 2.5. The H1N1 flu was also less contagious than the novel coronavirus. The basic reproduction number, also called … Continue reading What is different about covid-19 and earlier pandemics

Google and Apple are co-operating in a key component of covid-19


Apple and Google team up to contact trace Covid-19 Apple and Google are co-operating in a key component of covid-19 mitigation. https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-52246319 Their contact-tracing method would work by using a smartphone’s Bluetooth signals to determine to whom the owner had recently been in proximity for long enough to have established contagion a risk. If one of those people later tested positive for the Covid-19 virus, a warning would be sent to the original handset owner. No doubt the privacy brigade will have issues but this approach makes great sense to me. It does leave the question of what you are … Continue reading Google and Apple are co-operating in a key component of covid-19

Five years of innovation coming in eighteen months


Quotes and takeaways from very broad based pieces in The Times and Economist https://apple.news/ArPlIk4-8QhucrP_pgYuRAA Charles Parton, a former British diplomat, now at Rusi, a British think tank, called China’s efforts “a deep propaganda campaign” intended “to obscure the fact it caused the virus in the first place”. Emergencies “fast-forward historical processes”, says the historian and philosopher Yuval Noah Harari. “Decisions that in normal times could take years of deliberation are passed in a matter of hours.” The author Robert Kaplan adds: “Crises like wars put history on fast forward. And history is now on fast forward.” So just weeks into … Continue reading Five years of innovation coming in eighteen months

To wear a mask or not


The discussion on masks is crazy. I really do not understand why a group of intelligent people running WHO, CDC, US Government, Canadian Government, etc etc cannot come to a common conclusion for something so simple. Now they are shifting position to a yes; please wear a mask. My position is unchanged since January when I ordered masks. If I wear a mask: 1. I have some protection from other peoples nasal ’droplets’. 2. Other people have some protection from my nasal ‘droplets’. It is not perfect but it is always better than no mask. I have heard arguments such … Continue reading To wear a mask or not

Banks’ considerations for the end of covid-19 lockdown


Introduction As mentioned by Zanny Minton-Beddoes, Editor-in-Chief, The Economist, today on Fareed Zakaria, (CNN) most people understand the logic and need for the Lockdown. But she went on to say, there is no clear way out of it, and a return to normal. The defining model that shook the UK and US governments was produced by Imperial College by the team led by Dr Neil Ferguson. That document indicated with no mitigating effort, the US would see 2,200,000 deaths, and UK would see 550,000 deaths. I will not attempt to compete with the analysis of the models performed by academics … Continue reading Banks’ considerations for the end of covid-19 lockdown