Gulf Coast wrote:I think we have different opinions on the virus.
Ya think?
Sorry to derail, do you have any stainless bayou classic fryers?
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Gulf Coast wrote:I think we have different opinions on the virus.
Glad you caveated your responses earlier with aiming to protect school kids' grandparents, because the "science" doesn't yet paint a picture of this exactly being the black plague for anyone otherwise healthy.GaryDroze wrote:I respect differing opinions, but as a science teacher, I'm chasing the facts.
Appreciate you sharing it's the exception and not the norm. Florida and nation-wide data speaks solidly on the issue, and based on the linked article would bet a fair amount of money that comorbidities quite sadly came into play with both cases.FlyrodC wrote:Two 17 year olds have died from "the Corvid" in Florida. I know that they're the exception, not the rule. A couple hundred thousand will die from "the Corvid" this year and most of them will be elderly, will die alone and will be sorely missed by their families. Doing what you can to keep from getting it and spreading it seems to me like a reasonable goal.
Im not sure about you, but I think the worry for most of us is infecting an older family member. Not getting it ourselves. I’d feel awful if I was asymptotic and got my mom or in-laws sick ( or someone elderly that you love)big bend gyrene wrote:Glad you caveated your responses earlier with aiming to protect school kids' grandparents, because the "science" doesn't yet paint a picture of this exactly being the black plague for anyone otherwise healthy.GaryDroze wrote:I respect differing opinions, but as a science teacher, I'm chasing the facts.
Guessing you already know the statistics, but for others who might not, for those under the age of 25 the death rate is at 0.00. Last I dug into the data (running a medical practice and being married to a physician, we too both appreciate "scientific data") not a single person in Florida under 25 has died.
And until you get to age 50, the very few in Florida who have died had multiple comorbidities along the lines of: morbid obesity, diabetes, late stage renal failure, stage 4 cancer, etc. Seriously, when I read descriptions of those Floridians under the age of 50 who died, it felt like I was reading obituaries BEFORE even taking the covid into account... in other words, the covid was the straw that broke the quite-already weakened camel's back.
And even for those into their 80s, existing comorbidities closely correlate with whether the disease is fatal. Pulled this data DIRECTLY from New York City's data site when the city was nearing their peak. As you can see, for the disease to be fatal it really does GREATLY matter whether one has other health issues or not.
Gary, none of this is to pick a fight with you... protecting kids' grandparents is a completely sensible and morally admirable thing to do. Again, just want to point out to others the "scientific data" doesn't paint this to be a massive cause of panic for most folks. If you're older AND / OR have numerous serious comorbidities, than taking all precautionary steps possible makes sense.
ALL of the above shared, vaccine could be years in the making / may never exist (one never was finished for the 1st SARS though it too was given expedited efforts), and while masks and social distancing may slow spread until a vaccine is formulated, contrary to what many might believe it may not end up being the wisest path to drag out spread for too long... places hit hardest actually burn out the fastest thanks to herd immunity being developed. Drag things out too long and you avoid the herd immunity from being able to nip the virus in the bud (even if momentary -- not known how long at moment how long developed immunity lasts).