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Herd Immunity vs Lockdown


frantick

Herd Immunity vs Restricted Rights by Age Group  

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Why wasn't there a lockdown on socializing at the height of the (untreatable) HIV epidemics? A whole segment of the population was being culled by a contagious microorganism. Why wasn't homosexuality banned, repressed and suppressed? What was so different from covid (apart from the age group of the casualties)? 

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4 minutes ago, JackGats said:

Why wasn't there a lockdown on socializing at the height of the (untreatable) HIV epidemics? A whole segment of the population was being culled by a contagious microorganism. Why wasn't homosexuality banned, repressed and suppressed? What was so different from covid (apart from the age group of the casualties)? 

Less was known - the extent of spread was unknown. But ultimately ‘innocents’ (yes I know a debatable phase given the specific topic) were not impacted, it was possible to avoid catching HIV, just like its possible to avoid contracting Malaria (with antimalarial medication) and there is an Influenza vaccine etc... there is nothing at the moment to stop the spread of Covid-19 other than isolation. 

Edited by richard_smith237
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14 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

As I understand it this was the initial policy until the statistics started to present a horrific and devastation potential that the combination of infection rate and number of serious cases would overwhelm the healthcare systems such that the Case Fatality Rate (deaths) are exaggerated due to a poor response. 

 

The only solution was to react to the numbers and limit the rate of infection - governments the world over have recognised.

Fair comment but the Scandinavian countries like Sweden, Norway and Denmark see this differently. Who is right and who is wrong. I suspect that the UK has it wrong.

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2 hours ago, scubascuba3 said:

sure? South Korean expert reckons a vaccine is 18 months away if lucky

 

 

 

The best takeaway from this was : This is science ... you have to be humble ...

 

Always great to listen to somebody who has no political or ideological 'angle' .....  Much respect.  We all have to see how this all will pan out in the end ...   

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13 minutes ago, jimn said:
29 minutes ago, richard_smith237 said:

As I understand it this was the initial policy until the statistics started to present a horrific and devastation potential that the combination of infection rate and number of serious cases would overwhelm the healthcare systems such that the Case Fatality Rate (deaths) are exaggerated due to a poor response. 

 

The only solution was to react to the numbers and limit the rate of infection - governments the world over have recognised.

Fair comment but the Scandinavian countries like Sweden, Norway and Denmark see this differently. Who is right and who is wrong. I suspect that the UK has it wrong.

 

Interesting point: Perhaps population density comes into the fray. 

 

UK: 274 people/km2

Denmark: 138 people/km2

Sweden: 64 people/km2

Norway: 15 people/km2

 

Norway (March 15th) and Denmark (March 14th) closed their borders (Ports and Airports to non residents) and have also taken strong measures. 

Sweden did not react as quickly and are facing growing domestic criticism. 

 

All countries have asked people to stay at home, especially over 70’s, they have closed schools etc. 

 

So I’m not sure how different their response is, other than the ‘enforcement’ of quarantine and isolation measures. Perhaps their communities are more community minded and simply follow the right thing to do without feeling the need to revolt against authority. In fact, particular the citizens of Denmark have been complimented (globally) on following the social distancing measures asked of them. 

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You enjoy your life so you want to mess up tens of thousands of other peoples.

 

What exactly is the urgent task you guys have to do?  Sit at a bar.  Bore someone.  Sit in traffic for 4 hours.

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7 minutes ago, Slosheroni said:

Let's do an experiment.  You go mouth to mouth with an infected hooker, contract covid, and report via video on a daily basis on how it's going for you.  Serious proposition.  We'll use your experience to decide how much a "meh" virus this is and how much of a manly man you are. 

 

Thanks in advance.

I'm up for it if you're footing the bill, and it's a nice one.

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37 minutes ago, jimn said:

Fair comment but the Scandinavian countries like Sweden, Norway and Denmark see this differently. Who is right and who is wrong. I suspect that the UK has it wrong.

Denmark was one of the first in Europe to close schools, restaurants and ban gatherings of more than 10 people. Norway has quite heavy restrictions. In Sweden, people have basically been following social distancing guidelines etc. without being pushed. 

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As I see it there were three options. 1) Do nothing 2) Full lock down 3) Partial lock down.  Most governments were clueless in deciding what to do....even with multiple national pandemic plans and exercises under their belt. We must also concede governments are trying to balance political, economic, and health care consequences. Most countries decided "flattening the curve" was the best approach (full and partial lock downs), primarily to save overwhelming their healthcare systems and the political fallout from mass deaths (US was projected at between 1.25 and 2.25 million deaths alone) so some sort of stay-at-home orders were put in place. May not be the best economic decision but it does help the health care/mortality totals and possibly some political benefit. Would a one-time one month worldwide lock down have worked in Feb? Possibly. Would a "do nothing" approach with say 5-10-15 million dead have been acceptable? What about the next one...what will its mortality rate be, rate of infections, who it targets? Maybe we will get better responding to these over time....be better prepared....share information faster....understand the virus quicker....but we aren't there yet and no one can say which approach is the best one, right now, given the conflicting interests trying to be balanced. We all have personal opinions but that won't translate into national policies.

Edited by Silencer
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I'm 60 so tough call

 

I think one reason the government's don't go with here immunity at least yet is because it will be such a 5hit show. They will fail so miserably. Then people will start asking hard questions about their money and their officials

Edited by Number 6
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7 minutes ago, Silencer said:

As I see it there were three options. 1) Do nothing 2) Full lock down 3) Partial lock down.  Most governments were clueless in deciding what to do....even with multiple national pandemic plans and exercises under their belt. We must also concede governments are trying to balance political, economic, and health care consequences. Most countries decided "flattening the curve" was the best approach (full and partial lock downs), primarily to save overwhelming their healthcare systems and the political fallout from mass deaths (US was projected at between 1.25 and 2.25 million deaths alone) so some sort of stay-at-home orders were put in place. May not be the best economic decision but it does help the health care/mortality totals and possibly some political benefit. Would a one-time one month worldwide lock down have worked in Feb? Possibly. Would a "do nothing" approach with say 5-10-15 million dead have been acceptable? What about the next one...what will its mortality rate be, rate of infections, who it targets? Maybe we will get better responding to these over time....be better prepared....share information faster....understand the virus quicker....but we aren't there yet and no one can say which approach is the best one, right now, given the conflicting interests trying to be balanced. We all have personal opinions but that won't translate into national policies.

The partial lockdown will come when they are confident they have the necessary facilities Systems in place to deal witH a influx. The current lockdowns are giving governments the opportunity to prepare. I believe the idea is to keep all high risk people in lockdown while gradually letting more people go back to work etc so not to overwhelm the health system while allowing selective immunity to develop 

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Regardless if there's a vaccine or not, yearly there are hundreds of thousands of flu deaths. Those people were infected by a carrier. Do you know 100% that no one ever picked up a bug from you going on or coming off a cold? Stranger at a coffee shop counter, screamer at a concert, co-worker's mother in law, etc.

 

Why are the flu fatality numbers pre-Covid-19 acceptable to you when you could also reduce those by staying in your rooms all day and wearing your mask 365 days a year? (Remember, vaccines don't work 100% of the time so you can't blame it on the dead.)

 

I'll answer that for you. Everyone has a number, you're not more caring and compassionate.

 

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 Germany opens for business:

 

Germany has lifted its ban on seasonal farm workers entering the country, announcing that farms can bring in 80,000 people after an outcry from the agricultural lobby

 

 It highlights growing concern across Europe that the current lockdown measures will have a devastating impact on the agricultural sector

 

Horst Seehofer, German interior minister, said: “We must keep the state and the economy going despite the pandemic.

 

Under the new plan, German farms will be allowed to bring in a total of 80,000 workers during the months of April and May. In addition, the government is calling for another 20,000 workers to be recruited from the ranks of the unemployed, students, asylum seekers and furloughed workers. Berlin estimates that farmers need at least 100,000 extra people to work in the fields over the coming months.

 

https://www.ft.com/content/871b6d39-4497-49c5-856c-549cb42e67ce

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9 hours ago, Brewster67 said:

Carry on with these restrictions and I guarantee the cure is going to be worse than the virus.

 

I assume many others who are happy to ride this out may change their minds if overnight their pension fund collapses.

 

Yes... I have read up a lot on the pension risks at the moment.

Well hopefully still alive to receive it, and as there will be less receivers the fund will survive. lol

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That did not last long, did it? It would appear that economic realities will dictate the agendas of politicians, who will be open to their respective lobby groups.

 

We can look forward to the lockdowns being perforated stab by stab, little by little, until they are like a Swiss cheese.

 

All this talk about overcrowding hospitals and saving patients lives will just be so much hot air. The living have to live and they have to work.

 

The reality of this will sink in.

 

At least with those who have to make the calls. See Germany above.

 

 

 

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28 minutes ago, Logosone said:

That did not last long, did it? It would appear that economic realities will dictate the agendas of politicians, who will be open to their respective lobby groups.

 

We can look forward to the lockdowns being perforated stab by stab, little by little, until they are like a Swiss cheese.

 

All this talk about overcrowding hospitals and saving patients lives will just be so much hot air. The living have to live and they have to work.

 

The reality of this will sink in.

 

At least with those who have to make the calls. See Germany above.

 

 

 

Good on Germany. Someone's gotta do it or nobody eats and then everyone dies.

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The plan probably  is :

 

Stage 1 : Nothing is gonna happen.
Stage 2 : Something maybe is gonna happen but we should do nothing about it.

Stage 3 : Maybe we should do something about it but there is nothing we can do.

Stage 4 : Maybe  there was something we could have done but it is to late now.

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5 hours ago, frantick said:

Regardless if there's a vaccine or not, yearly there are hundreds of thousands of flu deaths. Those people were infected by a carrier. Do you know 100% that no one ever picked up a bug from you going on or coming off a cold? Stranger at a coffee shop counter, screamer at a concert, co-worker's mother in law, etc.

 

Why are the flu fatality numbers pre-Covid-19 acceptable to you when you could also reduce those by staying in your rooms all day and wearing your mask 365 days a year? (Remember, vaccines don't work 100% of the time so you can't blame it on the dead.)

 

I'll answer that for you. Everyone has a number, you're not more caring and compassionate.

 

You speak too much sense.

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9 hours ago, richard_smith237 said:

As I understand it this was the initial policy until the statistics started to present a horrific and devastation potential that the combination of infection rate and number of serious cases would overwhelm the healthcare systems such that the Case Fatality Rate (deaths) are exaggerated due to a poor response. 

 

The only solution was to react to the numbers and limit the rate of infection - governments the world over have recognised.

People are now questioning the dodgy model worse than the dodgy dossier

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9 hours ago, JackGats said:

Why wasn't there a lockdown on socializing at the height of the (untreatable) HIV epidemics? A whole segment of the population was being culled by a contagious microorganism. Why wasn't homosexuality banned, repressed and suppressed? What was so different from covid (apart from the age group of the casualties)? 

1. THe gay community were not the only people living HIV 

2. HIV was not transmitted through droplet infection, but by specific acts, transferring blood or bodilty secretions

3. It was only "contagious" if bodily secrections or blood from an infected person into the blood stream of an unifected person.

4. Places where the gay communties congregated, bars etc were used for community education programs

 

It was not considered scientifically to contagious because it was not transmitted socially.

 

So verydifferent, consider that  only in western countries was HIV contained primarily to the gay communities, does not apply to many African nations. It was only countries with good needle and syringe exchange programs which stopped the transmission into their drug injecting populations 

 

Young women in South Africa are at great risk of being infected with HIV. In 2005, HIV infection prevalence in the age group 15-24 years was 16.9% in women and 4.4% in men (1). The high HIV prevalence in this country is a result of a number of factors which include the following: poverty, violence against women, cultural limitations that promote intergenerational sex, non-condom use and preference for “dry sex,”

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2443629/

 

Edited by RJRS1301
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