Tom wrote:The danger of getting infected would increase a lot. A suspected case could soon turn into a confirmed one - and who knows into what else. The consequences would be dire. Not to mention that your own nice apartment would be visited by strangers and sprayed with god knows what poison.
.Q. wrote:Tom wrote:The danger of getting infected would increase a lot. A suspected case could soon turn into a confirmed one - and who knows into what else. The consequences would be dire. Not to mention that your own nice apartment would be visited by strangers and sprayed with god knows what poison.
Wait what? Why would you spray poison on sick people?
So far, 10,000 people have died and 180,000 people have been hospitalized during the 2019-2020 flu season, according to preliminary estimates from the CDC.Jan 31, 2020
So how does coronavirus compare to the flu?
Deadliness
The severity of an illness can be measured by its case-fatality or death-to-case ratio.
In percentage terms, 0.05% of those who’ve had flu this season in the United States (based on the figures above) have died
from it.
Based on the figures so far around the new coronavirus outbreak, which causes fever and a cough, 2.2% of those with confirmed cases have died.
LaoDan wrote:It is too early to be certain, but preliminary indications are that this coronavirus may NOT be as lethal as SARS was (~4% so far compared with ~10% for SARS). We also do not know the specifics of this virus, but many viruses outside the host fall apart within hours in the natural environment, so I do not know that spraying disinfectants around compounds has much more than a psychological effect.
Trick wrote:
And by this, the restrictions of movement here is pushed up to the same as Jarek reported, only one person/household can leave the compound only once every two day.
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