https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/...transmissible-
Basically to sum it up, the author, an assistant professor of statistics at NYU, is questioning whether the new variant is really any more transmissible. This new variant happens to by chance easier to detect in testing and is identifiable using existing PCR testing whereas other variants aren't. In other regions in the UK this variant has been present but hasn't taken off like it has in London and south east. Leading the author to conclusion that there likely was some behavioural, social, or chance reason why this strain has become dominant rather than it being 70% easier to transmit as is being routinely reported by the media.
When the story of the new Covid-19 variant broke, my initial reaction was scepticism. I thought this new strain could just be a random genetic marker that coincided with an outbreak of cases that was caused by behaviour (or even “chance”) rather than by any important biological differences. We have more sophisticated measurement capability for biological data than for social data, and I worry that not enough has been done to rule out social explanations.
So if the new Covid-19 strain is more transmissible, why isn’t it taking over in every region?
Basically to sum it up, the author, an assistant professor of statistics at NYU, is questioning whether the new variant is really any more transmissible. This new variant happens to by chance easier to detect in testing and is identifiable using existing PCR testing whereas other variants aren't. In other regions in the UK this variant has been present but hasn't taken off like it has in London and south east. Leading the author to conclusion that there likely was some behavioural, social, or chance reason why this strain has become dominant rather than it being 70% easier to transmit as is being routinely reported by the media.
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