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UK scientists call for debate on allowing ‘big wave of infection’

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    #11
    My point is that Covid is far deadlier than the flu, and spreads better (even before new variants).

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      #12
      Originally posted by AtW View Post
      My point is that Covid is far deadlier than the flu, and spreads better (even before new variants).
      Yes, that bit is a mystery. Somewhere along the line, Covid jumped five stages of mutation in the wild before it got to Covid-19. All the WHO has to do is to discover the previous five mutations to find the origin. I wonder where they could be.
      "A people that elect corrupt politicians, imposters, thieves and traitors are not victims, but accomplices," George Orwell

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        #13
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        My point is that Covid is far deadlier than the flu, and spreads better (even before new variants).
        My point was the spanish flu was far deadlier that Covid but mutated within a few years to seasonal flu.

        The same thing is likely to happen to Covid, it will mutate to something less deadly that hangs around for a long time..
        Last edited by Fraidycat; 13 February 2021, 19:55.

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          #14
          Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
          My point was the spanish flu was far deadlier that Covid but mutated within a few years to seasonal flu.

          The same thing is likely to happen to Covid, it will mutate to something less deadly that hangs around for a long time..
          We don't have enough data to say that.

          A rather very likely reason why flu is not as deadly than it was in 1918 is because it killed off lots of people who were susceptible to it.
          Last edited by AtW; 13 February 2021, 20:04.

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            #15
            Originally posted by AtW View Post
            We don't have enough data to say that.

            A rather very likely reason why flu is not as deadly than it was in 1918 is because it killed off lots of people who were susceptible to it.
            If a virus kills of all its hosts before they have a chance to infect others the virus doesn't survive. So it is better for the virus to mutate to a form that doesn't kill of its hosts but can infect more people.
            "You’re just a bad memory who doesn’t know when to go away" JR

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              #16
              Originally posted by SueEllen View Post
              If a virus kills of all its hosts before they have a chance to infect others the virus doesn't survive.
              But if it's highly infectious AND kills plenty of hosts (just not enough to fizzle out on its own) then it's a BIGLY problem.

              Say SARS-2 new variants are so infectious that even if 10% of infected people died it would still spread out massively (without mitigation).

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                #17
                Originally posted by AtW View Post
                We don't have enough data to say that.

                A rather very likely reason why flu is not as deadly than it was in 1918 is because it killed off lots of people who were susceptible to it.

                Covid-19, the worst is behind us (now that we have vaccines)

                The more worrying thing is that we had 3 coronavirus outbreaks since 2000. And a total of 8 epidemic/pandemics since 2000.
                It looks like, based on probability, we might get the deadly ones emerging more often than they happened in the past.

                There are 7 known human coronaviruses and 3 of them (MERs, SARS, Covid-19) emerged in the last 20 years.

                One interesting thing i just read:
                The Russian flu of 1890 was originally thought to Influenza type virus but many experts now think it was a new Coronavirus (one of the 7 known human ones), which jumped from Cows to humans around that time.

                That pandemic 1890 and killed 1 million people (5 million in todays population), and infected around half the worlds population.

                The symptoms of Russian flu were similar to Covid 19.

                Its thought that coronavirus that caused Russian flu (if was indeed a coronavirus) is HCoV-OC4, and is still around today and is one of the many viruses that causes the common cold.

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                  #18
                  Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
                  Covid-19, the worst is behind us (now that we have vaccines)
                  Yeah, in just 100 years it will be just another common cold.

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                    #19
                    Originally posted by AtW View Post
                    Yeah, in just 100 years it will be just another common cold.

                    I suspect it will be more like within 5 years.

                    And dont underesimtate common colds:

                    "a cold can also have more severe symptoms in the very young and the very old. Older people are more likely to develop a more serious infection compared with adults or older children.

                    Another group of people who are more severely affected by infection with cold-causing viruses are people with an existing lung condition. They can include people with asthma, cystic fibrosis or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Infection with a virus that causes inflammation of the airways can make breathing much harder"
                    Last edited by Fraidycat; 13 February 2021, 21:45.

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                      #20
                      Originally posted by Fraidycat View Post
                      I suspect it will be more like within 5 years.
                      Are you prepared to bet your life on it?

                      Boris sure is.

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