- 31 Mar 2020 17:23
#15080302
Seriously?
Look at the numbers of hospital admissions from people who aren't in hospital or care homes. Particularly the 40% who are under 55.
Or the numbers of doctors and healthcare staff who are suffering severe symptoms as a result of exposure. How do you explain the deaths of 60 doctors in Italy? Have they magically been isolating and lost their ability to overcome this virus?
You think staff at these homes are not bringing the virus in? If anything their reliance on close contact with others increases their chance of catching this virus.
This is now in the realms of fantasy.
Absolutely there are more recovered cases than are being reported, we don't disagree on this.
Sivad wrote:
There actually is very good reason to think that. People who are most susceptible to falling seriously ill are the people who were already being protected with isolation and distancing. These are people in nursing homes and hospitals and the elderly who everybody knows not to go around when you're sick. Those people would be the ones most likely to be hit last.
The WHO says mild cases only take two weeks or less to recover, so there have gotta be a whole lot more recovered cases than are being reported.
Seriously?
Look at the numbers of hospital admissions from people who aren't in hospital or care homes. Particularly the 40% who are under 55.
Or the numbers of doctors and healthcare staff who are suffering severe symptoms as a result of exposure. How do you explain the deaths of 60 doctors in Italy? Have they magically been isolating and lost their ability to overcome this virus?
You think staff at these homes are not bringing the virus in? If anything their reliance on close contact with others increases their chance of catching this virus.
This is now in the realms of fantasy.
Absolutely there are more recovered cases than are being reported, we don't disagree on this.