murchr wrote:masukuma wrote:Shak wrote:wukan wrote:Bigchick wrote:@Prophet Wukan.Where are we going from here?Am getting anxious but still hopeful.
The virus sets the timetable. It took only 12 days to get to 2m confirmed cases. Good news is the more it infects the less it stings. It shall pass.
I'm corona fatigued. Currently enjoying the return of Nairobi of the 80's, clean fresh air, smartly dressed folks, less congested streets. Only thing missing is clubs playing super soul

Let's enjoy it before shagz modoz come back.
Read about the Spanish flu. You'll think we've turned the clocks back to 1918. Looks like it'll have to run through the world population until it runs out of people to infect.
the logic behind "flattening the curve" was not to reduce the total number of infections but to buy us time in order to
1) not flood the hospitals (Italy Style)
2) give scientists time to conjure a vaccine.
Really? A vaccine is a year away. And isn't No1 just the same as reducing the no of infections?
Yes - that was the
classical view. The reasoning was that hundreds of thousands of infections will happen — but they don't all have to happen at once.
Consider the area below the curves below - both areas are the same.

What differentiates the two curves is the infection rate - this determines the shape each takes.
It could be a steep curve, in which the virus spreads exponentially and the total number of cases skyrockets to its peak within a few weeks. Infection curves with a steep rise also have a steep fall; after the virus infects the susceptible population - it drops off.
The key observation is that the faster the infection curve rises - the quicker the health care system gets overloaded beyond its capacity to treat people. Choking the system.
A flatter curve, on the other hand, assumes the same number of people ultimately get infected, but over a longer period of time. A slower infection rate means a less stressed health care system, fewer hospital visits on any given day and fewer sick people being turned away.
The truth is this disease will not go away easily... it will be endemic in some population pockets (thinking failed states like Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria, South Sudan, Libya) where it will burn through they populations and aid workers going to work there will have problems.
All Mushrooms are edible! Some Mushroom are only edible ONCE!