ORIGINAL: Kull
I just lost a long post and have no desire to re-do it. The highlights:
- The CDC (forget interpreters like Bloomberg - go right to the source) says you get it from walking through the six foot cloud hacked up by a symptomatic carrier (see my earlier posts for links). There is no proof that any other form of transmission has happened.
- "Extensive testing" is not required, and any testing could cause worse problems depending on how it's administered. Also, just because the test says you don't have it today, that doesn't mean you won't get it tomorrow, and the "I'm clean" thought process could lead to all sorts of bad behaviors. Testing has a role, but it's NOT the one the media and politicians have been flogging.
Nothing about the statement I made or the article challenge statement number one you make above. I said people will get it from other people. Wherever they are. Not just in a hospital, and hopefully less often if they’re paying attention to guidelines here at least to call a hotline and stay at home if you have some of these flu-like symptoms.
The purpose of using good articles is that those professionals look at more data than we have time to search effectively and can present the essentials concisely in layman’s terms. This article does that.
There is danger in not acting to prevent spread of this disease. But you’re arguing that everyone in the media is blowing it out of proportion to the risk. if it transmits almost as well as the flu the risk of critical cases and mortality could be 5-10 times that caused by the worst flus, and maybe worse is once no one is vaccinated and hospitals could not cope with the number of critical cases caused by even the low estimates of mortality rates (.5%)
What is the risk in the media over-playing it other than being annoyed and running out of TP?
"Success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm." - Winston Churchill