Update on chinese Coronavirus issue

Doomsday Prepper Forums

Help Support Doomsday Prepper Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
shit, GaRp, the way they handle the staff at the ward, I figure I protect myself as much as possible, there are boxes of N95 masks collecting dust in the supply room and I'm the only one carrying 1 on me all the time now...even my co-workers don't seem to realize there's a danger,or choose to ignore it,I won't..
might be stressed,on the brink of exhaustion but I value my life
 
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/13/us/coronavirus-quarantine-tests.html/?2020-02-14T00:54:14 00:00
Some Wuhan Evacuees Ask Why They Aren’t Being Tested for the Coronavirus
LOS ANGELES — When 195 Americans, including diplomats, were evacuated from Wuhan, China, last month, they were tested for the coronavirus on arrival at a California military base. Health officials swabbed the throats and noses of everyone in the group — the first to be evacuated from Wuhan — and they were relieved when all of their tests came back negative.
But as more government-arranged flights evacuated Americans from China in the days that followed, the federal health authorities adopted a new protocol: Only people who showed symptoms of illness during a 14-day quarantine period would be tested. For some among the more than 600 people who are still waiting to be cleared to go home from military bases in three states, the new rule has left them worried — and angry. Some are pleading with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to test them for the coronavirus.
Then put that together with the next post...
 
Last edited:
https://nypost.com/2020/02/13/coronavirus-can-be-spread-by-people-who-dont-show-symptoms-cdc-warns/
Coronavirus can be spread by people who don’t show symptoms, CDC warns
Coronavirus can be spread through people who aren’t exhibiting symptoms of the illness, the director of the Centers for Disease and Control and Prevention said Thursday.
Dr. Robert Redfield confirmed reports out of China that the virus can spread when the person is still asymptomatic, according to CNN.

And you get a huge security flaw!
 
So, my son and daughter in law spent 5 days at Disney and universal in Orlando about 10 days ago. Today my son told me he is starting feeling bad. Sore throat, swollen lymph nodes and sickly feeling. Of course the alarm bells go off for this new virus.... with Disney and universal both being world vacation destinations. Seriously, I’m not too worried about it but honestly that’s the first thing that came to mind of course.
 
well, Kim jon ping pong just executed one dude who left the quarantine to take a swim in a public bath from what I read...they must be struggling
but don't tell about it..

Africa must already have many many cases but is like a black hole for now..
 
this thing is no more contagious than the normal flu, SARS had an infection rate of around 20%, MERS 35% the Corona virus has an infection rate of around 2%, you are seeing more cases in China because there is a higher population 1.1 Billion, , outside of China most countries have 1 or 2 cases, 9 cases in UK, not sure how many in US.
 
this thing is no more contagious than the normal flu, SARS had an infection rate of around 20%, MERS 35% the Corona virus has an infection rate of around 2%, you are seeing more cases in China because there is a higher population 1.1 Billion, , outside of China most countries have 1 or 2 cases, 9 cases in UK, not sure how many in US.

Where are you getting your 'infection rate'? And how do you define that? I've read the R0 is in the 4.7-6.6 range, it's huge.
 
>NEWS
Deutsche Post stops sending packages to China
http://archive.is/H0EkM

Vietnam quarantines 10,000 people
http://archive.is/1y9S9

Infection could reach 60% of world population
http://archive.is/Xcxwm

CDC mistakenly released infected patient in California
http://archive.is/9BLj9

Wartime conditions in China
http://archive.is/YN0Cb

>RESEARCH
Testicular damage
http://doi.org/10.1101/2020.02.12.20022418

Reinfection possible and even deadlier
http://archive.is/Iw58p

r0 between 6.11 and 8.18, higher than expected
http://doi.org/10.1101/2020.02.12.20022434

Incubation period of 24 days, longer than expected
http://archive.is/8dsa9

Infected come out negative 50 to 70% of the time
http://archive.is/yyGJm#selection-1183.0-1183.112

>REMINDER
CDC: Test kits in the U.S and 30 countries are flawed
http://archive.is/cLmse

Japan confirms China doesn't count suspected in death toll
http://archive.is/H1Bm1

Crematorium: 127 bodies, 48 suspected and only 8 confirmed
http://archive.is/Lb6ry

>"DETECTED" CASES
C: 67,269 ◄ D: 1,528 ◄

>LATEST
10:05: 1 new death in France
09:05: 8 new cases in Japan
08:47: 67 new cases in the Diamond Princess
07:03: 2 new cases in Japan

>CHINA
C: 66,580 ◄ D: 1,524 ◄
http://news.qq.com/zt2020/page/feiyan.htm

>WORLD
C: 689 ◄ D: 4 ◄
Death Princess 285 Singapore 67 Hong Kong 56 (-1) Japan 52 (-1) Thailand 34 South Korea 28 Malaysia 21 Taiwan 18 Germany 16 Vietnam 16 Australia 15 United States 15 France 11 (-1) Macau 10 United Kingdom 9 Canada 8 United Arab Emirates 8 Italy 3 India 3 Philippines 3 (-1) Russia 2 Spain 2 Belgium 1 Egypt 1 Sweden 1 Cambodia 1 Finland 1 Nepal 1 Sri Lanka 1
 
Can UV Light Be Used to Kill Airborne Flu Virus?
FROM THE WEBMD ARCHIVES
By Robert Preidt

HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Feb. 12, 2018 (HealthDay News) -- As a particularly nasty flu season rages across the United States, scientists have found a powerful new disinfectant that makes "light" work of the virus.

Researchers say a certain spectrum of ultraviolet light -- called far-UVC -- easily kills airborne flu viruses while posing no risk to people.

It could offer a new, inexpensive way to eliminate airborne flu viruses in indoor public spaces such as hospitals, doctors' offices, schools, airports and aircraft, said the team from Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.

The disinfecting success of initial experiments still need to be confirmed, said lead research David Brenner.

But he believes "the use of overhead, low-level far-UVC light in public locations would be a safe and efficient method for limiting the transmission and spread of airborne-mediated microbial diseases, such as influenza and tuberculosis."

As the researchers explained, broad-spectrum UVC light kills viruses and bacteria, and it is currently used to decontaminate surgical equipment. But this type of light can cause skin cancer and cataracts, so it's not used in public spaces.

However, Brenner and his colleagues wondered if a much narrower spectrum of ultraviolet light, far-UVC, might be a safer option.

In prior studies, they found that far-UVC light killed methicillin-resistant S. aureus (MRSA) bacteria -- a common and dangerous "superbug" -- without harming human or mouse skin.

In this new study, they found that far-UVC light also killed airborne H1N1 virus, a common strain of flu virus.

"Far-UVC light has a very limited range and cannot penetrate through the outer dead-cell layer of human skin or the tear layer in the eye, so it's not a human health hazard," said Brenner, who directs Columbia's Center for Radiological Research.


However, "because viruses and bacteria are much smaller than human cells, far-UVC light can reach their DNA and kill them," he said in a university news release.

Lamps with this type of UV light currently cost less than $1,000, Brenner said, but that price would likely fall if the lamps were mass-produced.

"And unlike flu vaccines, far-UVC is likely to be effective against all airborne microbes, even newly emerging strains," he said.

Two flu experts were encouraged by the findings.

"The prospect of reducing the transmission of influenza and other respiratory viruses using far-UV radiation is very exciting," said Dr. Michael Grosso, chief medical officer at Huntington Hospital in Huntington, N.Y.

"Though hand-washing remains critically important, it does not prevent every instance of transmission," Grosso said. "Immunization and antiviral medications are also important, but again, have limitations. It appears that low-dose far-UV light is safe and effective, and has the advantage of inactivating a wide range of disease-causing viruses."

Dr. Len Horovitz, a pulmonary specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, agreed.

He noted that the technology's cost "is not prohibitive, and it is safe. This use can sterilize the air in a public space, reducing the spread of respiratory droplets containing flu viruses and other bacteria and viruses."

The findings were published online Feb. 9 in the journal Scientific Reports.
 
Where are you getting your 'infection rate'? And how do you define that? I've read the R0 is in the 4.7-6.6 range, it's huge.
sorry got the wording wrong, its 2% "mortality" rate not infection.
a scientist has just said there could be 400,000 British deaths from this thing, that's a lot less than 2%.
and so far every death outside China has been linked to someone who has travelled from China, remedy would seem to be obvious, quarantine everyone who travels back from China no exceptions.
 
Last edited:
sorry got the wording wrong, its 2% "mortality" rate not infection.
a scientist has just said there could be 400,000 British deaths from this thing, that's a lot less than 2%.
and so far every death outside China has been linked to someone who has travelled from China, remedy would seem to be obvious, quarantine everyone who travels back from China no exceptions.


but we know all,authorities won't quarantine those people, "infringes to their rights" will be the scream...
 

Latest posts

Back
Top