What if Covid Never Goes Away?

Discussion in 'Politics' started by jem, Nov 7, 2020.

  1. ElCubano

    ElCubano

    The shine will wear off and life resumes. There will not be another lockdown ever is my gut feeling. Peace
     
    #11     Nov 7, 2020
    jem likes this.
  2. Bugenhagen

    Bugenhagen

    Today in the car I heard a doctoral student of my wife's WhatsApp voice message regarding his mom's hospitalisation in ICU with Covid and her slipping into a coma.

    My Spanish is terrible, not really interested in learning it TBH but his voice was that of a young man falling and not knowing if he would ever stop. Anyone who has lost their mother probably gets that.

    The woman can't be that old.

    It will seem real when its you alright, if you have a soul. Jem is a monster but even his time will come.
     
    #12     Nov 7, 2020
  3. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    that's real low making up a story to win pity points to win an online argument.
     
    #13     Nov 7, 2020
  4. Covid-19 will never go away. That is like saying the flu will go away or pneumonia will go away. It's not going to happen.
     
    #14     Nov 7, 2020
  5. gwb-trading

    gwb-trading

    One opinion on the subject below. I will note that I believe the future course of COVID-19 will be driven by the number of people being vaccinated globally and the effectiveness of the vaccines.

    COVID-19 will probably become endemic – here’s what that means
    https://theconversation.com/covid-19-will-probably-become-endemic-heres-what-that-means-146435

    We can’t say with any certainty what the future of COVID-19 is. But based on our experience with other infections, there is little reason to believe that the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 will go away any time soon, even when vaccines become available. A more realistic scenario is that it will be added to the (large and growing) family of infectious diseases that are what is known as “endemic” in the human population.

    With the worldwide spread of the disease increasing again, it seems unlikely that the currently available measures can do more than bring that spread under control – except in countries that can effectively isolate themselves from the outside world. The fact that the vast majority of people are still susceptible to some degree means that there is sufficient fuel for the fire to keep burning for quite some time.

    This will be the case even if specific locations reach what is known as population (or herd) immunity (and it’s not clear how likely this is to happen). When a sufficient number of people become immune to a disease, either through vaccination or natural infection, its spread starts to slow down and the number of cases gradually decreases. But that doesn’t mean it will disappear instantly or completely.

    Outside any areas with population immunity, there are likely to be plenty of locations that still have enough susceptible individuals to keep transmission going. No measure of isolation is so strong that it will completely stop human interaction between regions, within and between countries, or globally.

    It’s also possible that the spread of an infection will eventually stabilise at a constant level so that it becomes present in communities at all times, possibly at a relatively low, sometimes predictable rate. This is what we mean when we say a disease is endemic.

    Some infections are present and actively spreading almost everywhere (such as many sexually transmitted infections and childhood infections). But most infections are endemic in specific parts of the world.

    This can occur when effective control has eliminated the infection elsewhere, or because the conditions needed for effective transmission can only be found in specific locations. This is the case for malaria and many other infections transmitted by mosquitoes.

    Theoretically speaking, an infection becomes endemic if on average each infected individual transmits it to one other person. In other words, when the reproduction number (R) = 1. In comparison, during an epidemic when the spread of the disease is increasing, R is more than 1, and when the spread is decreasing through control measures or population immunity, R is less than 1.

    In practice, there are a number of patterns that can be observed in endemic diseases. Some can exist at low levels throughout the year, while others might show periods of higher transmission interspersed with periods of low transmission. This might happen if seasonal factors influence how much contact people have with one another, how susceptible they are to the disease, or other organisms that spread it such as insects.

    As long as there is a sufficient supply of people still susceptible to the disease for each infected person to pass it on to, it will continue to spread. This supply can be replenished in various ways, depending on the characteristics of the disease.

    Waning immunity
    In diseases that give permanent immunity after infection, each new child born is susceptible after the immunity obtained from the mother wears off. This is why childhood infections such as measles are endemic in many parts of the world where the birth rate is high enough.

    In diseases that only give temporary immunity through natural infection, people lose that immune protection to become susceptible again. A virus or bacteria can also evade the immune memory by mutation so that people with immunity to an older strain will become susceptible to the new version of the disease. Influenza is a prime example.

    We don’t yet know how long immunity from infection from COVID-19 will last, or how good vaccines will be at protecting people. But other coronaviruses that are endemic in the human population, such as those that cause colds, only confer temporary immunity of about one year.

    Another important point is that people with immunity, whether from infection or vaccination, are rarely evenly distributed throughout a community or country, let alone the world. Certainly in the case of COVID-19, there are areas where the infection has spread more intensively and areas that have been relatively spared. Without even distribution, there is no population immunity even if enough people have been vaccinated to meet the predicted necessary threshold.

    In these cases, the average R can be low enough that the infection is under control, but in the unprotected pockets it will be well above 1. This leads to localised outbreaks and allows the disease to remain endemic. It continues to spread from place to place, seeded by a few locations where population density and interaction are high enough, and protection low enough, to sustain transmission.

    How we respond
    How we deal with COVID-19 once it becomes endemic will depend on how good our vaccines and treatments are. If they can protect people from the most severe outcomes, the infection will become manageable. COVID-19 will then be like several other diseases that we have learned to live with and many people will experience during their lives.

    Depending on whether immunity – either from natural infection or from vaccination – is permanent or temporary, we may need yearly vaccine updates to protect us (like influenza). Or it could be controlled by vaccination at some optimal age (like many childhood infections).

    If vaccines not only prevent clinical disease but also strongly reduce transmission and confer long-lasting immunity, we can envisage other scenarios, such as the potential eradication of the disease. But realistically this is unlikely. Eradication is notoriously difficult, even for diseases for which we have almost perfect vaccines and permanent immunity. Endemic disease is therefore the most likely outcome.
     
    #15     Nov 7, 2020
  6. Bugenhagen

    Bugenhagen

    Maybe it was Gnus' mom and he is confused.

    Honestly I was wrong, he won't ever understand that actually most people are brighter than he is and they just don't do the accountancy in a way that old people don't matter.

    He has never had the mind to grasp covid from the beginning.
     
    #16     Nov 7, 2020
  7. And if his story is true than what you said is even lower.
     
    #17     Nov 7, 2020
  8. Bugenhagen

    Bugenhagen

    You see the problem is "if" and Jem did that to himself.

    He has a worm on his brain, others foresaw how this year would play out fairly easily.

    Also, I don't "evade taxes", I may bounce most years to avoid tax residency but I'm not a citizen of the countries I live in so I get few of the benefits, I do however bring a lot of hard currency money into the economy, vastly more than many citizens contribute. Because if this, countries are happy to host tourists, even long term ones.

    I have citizenship of three countries and none of those tax citizens on global income.
     
    Last edited: Nov 7, 2020
    #18     Nov 7, 2020
  9. jem

    jem

    It is 100 percent true. I am not looking for sympathy. I had a long time to prepare. I didn't do anything to myself moron.


    But, my wife is still dealing with the loss of her mom. It is really sad.

    But the point I really wanted to make is that when you talk to nurses in old folks homes and hospice people... they say... many old people are very depressed because their relatives are not able to visit and they are not able to be as active as they once were.

    Plus, the damage being done to kids and others is severe...

    yet... self centered douchebags like bugenwrongen only see one side of the issue...
     
    Last edited: Nov 7, 2020
    #19     Nov 7, 2020
  10. Cuddles

    Cuddles

    Maybe he should produce a certificate?

     
    #20     Nov 7, 2020
    Bugenhagen likes this.