Originally posted by Bryn
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Coronavirus
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Originally posted by Bryn View Post
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI wonder what proportion of 'pensioners' have upgraded their smartphones (if they have them) in the past 5 years?
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View PostThe answer is you need an immunisation fraction of 1-1/R where R is the expected number of infections from any 1 individual - if R is very high then this approaches 1 ie 100% immunisation - if R = 3 then you need 66% - the maths is just based on the probability that an infected person will find a non-immunised person to infect
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I'm going to look into the criteria of this new App. Can I rely on the 2 metre proximity criteria - what if it proves to be unreliable and it could be 4 metres? I presume that the 15 minute criteria should be reliable, as the timer function is inherent within the mobile system.
Per the Times today one in three people told to isolate will be a false positive but clinicians express they are ino unduly concerned " .....They are all still people who have been close to people with confirmed coronavirus, so their risk is still higher.”
I wonder if this is a scatter gun approach, pitching excess numbers into isolation whilst the numpties out there merrily carry on super spreading......
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Originally posted by Cockney Sparrow View PostI wonder if this is a scatter gun approach, pitching excess numbers into isolation whilst the numpties out there merrily carry on super spreading......
However, with around 6000 cases mentioned yesterday, if that trend continues at about that level (not increasing significantly) it would take around 20 years to get so-called herd immunity. A quick and dirty calculation suggests that to get the job done quickly (i.e. within a year or two) there would need to be around 100,000 cases per day, which is perhaps something I don't want to contemplate.
Even now there is still an enormous amount of confusion.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postwith R less than 1 the virus dies out exponentially.
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Underwhelmed is my first take. Loaded it up yesterday (Android). At home all day. This morning, early trip to the tip then to the garage to get petrol. Phone inside the car all the time. When I got back into the car after paying for the fuel, I noticed that I had some notifications. Although I didn't have my reading specs, habit made me drag the screen down to see amongst the notifications a heading - Exposure Notification. But when I went to try and read it, it promptly disappeared (no...not fat finger syndrome). Nowhere in the app can I call it back up which seems to me a design oversight.Fewer Smart things. More smart people.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI thnk that super spreaders do exist, though there are still questions about that.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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This is quite "fun" though deals specifically with England and BJ's team, I think. https://www.politico.eu/article/how-...e-has-changed/
I wonder if there are similar articles which have timelines for Scotland, Wales or Ireland.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThere are various studies that speak of 'super spreader events' rather than individual 'superspreaders'. I took it to mean that there is little evidence that a super spreader is in some way biologically different from others, merely that their social behaviour results in the spread. So if one infected person goes into a pub and ten people develop symptoms, then ten people breathed in the virus, or at some point came in contact with it, touched a counter, picked up a glass and drank from it?
Also, for historical "super spreaders", it doesn't look as though mechanisms were investigated very thoroughly, but investigations were rather more of the post hoc ergo propter hoc variety.
Events certainly seem to be one initiator of many infections, for example nightclubs and choirs. These have been well documented in the coronavirus context, though it's not certain whether those were "simply" due to many people meeting, or due to the presence of one or two "super spreader" individuals in those locations at those events.
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