yes, though they beat SARS-cov didn't they, more or less, even tho it mutates. Pregnancy would be even more irresponsible if you ask me
(glad you got away with your irresponsible cruise btw hope you had a good time )
yes, though they beat SARS-cov didn't they, more or less, even tho it mutates. Pregnancy would be even more irresponsible if you ask me
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-heal ... SKBN20U085siskue2005 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 23:28I m interested to know where u got that value from?? Any source of that??LM10 wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 22:21Poor countries won’t be able to test even close to as much as rich countries. A test kit for that Coronavirus is enough for 50 individual tests and costs $1600.Restomaniac wrote: ↑07 Mar 2020, 19:42Im not so sure. I am personally worried about how few cases from Africa, India and South America are being discovered. I do hope there isn’t a hidden pandemic in poorer parts of the world that due to lack a good medical health (which is a disgrace to our species) that is going totally unnoticed.
"Unpleasant ways with animals"
So, I'd say just let it come and I will create my own antibodies ...
I actually think that there may be an increase in pregnancies in the next 9 months. Most likely in China, Korea, Japan and Italy. Coronavirus boomizzy wrote: Pregnancy would be even more irresponsible if you ask me
(glad you got away with your irresponsible cruise btw hope you had a good time )
Yep, The huge 1965 Northeast US and Canada blackout did lead to a serious bump in births nine months later.........JonoNic wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 02:53I actually think that there may be an increase in pregnancies in the next 9 months. Most likely in China, Korea, Japan and Italy. Coronavirus boomizzy wrote: Pregnancy would be even more irresponsible if you ask me
(glad you got away with your irresponsible cruise btw hope you had a good time )
Really, F1 is a business; they are concerned about profit and lose, not ethics and morality. If they can't make a profit they will be out of business. They will do everything they can to continue as usual, not for ethical or moral reasons, but for business reasons. When is the last time you've heard of any for profit business giving up profit for ethical reasons? I'm just saying they won't act for such reasons; the MBA's of the world are not taught to run a business for the greater good, but rather just for profit, and mostly for short term profit. The world could be ending and there will be someone out there hoarding those dollars......izzy wrote: ↑08 Mar 2020, 22:56F1 must not cause any extra deaths. After that, life has to go on as @DChemTech says, and F1 can lead the way in doing it the best way, with screening, being careful, taking the best expert advice and not kissing people you don't know fairly well alreadyastracrazy wrote: ↑08 Mar 2020, 21:57As a fan, we should ask ourselves, do we really want a season defined by the virus? No.
If the trajectory continues with the virus, this season is going to turn into a complete --- show.
They should delay this season by a year. These cars race next year and the rule changes turn into 2022. Prob not a bad thing anyway.
Things take a turn a look better, then host non-championship races with last years cars trying out all these ideas Brawn has. Cheap tickets will fill the seats.
Money loss will be the main factor of this though, of course, which is the problem anyway.
so personally i'm relying on FIA to be ethical and smart about it, and the host countries too which they seem to be, and super excited about the season that's about to start at long, long last
Oh FFS. You think the virus is going to grow legs and walk.izzy wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 00:27yes and NHS said droplets too, but they also said they don't know exactly, and then you said they do know. So although i do respect your posting this time you are up against itJust_a_fan wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 00:17So, like other such virus, droplet spread via coughing is likely. As I said.
Spread via contaminated surfaces is likely to mimic similar virus and thus is a risk for a few hours at most. A good wipe down with disinfectant (or strong soap solution) is likely to be an effective way to limit surface-touch spread.
and i mean it is a weird Chinese virus that arose from their unpleasant ways with animals and it can mutate, so it probably is best to not assume too much
We shall see how ineffective the measures are.DChemTech wrote: ↑08 Mar 2020, 22:30Or maybe we should not overreact by cancelling all of daily life and spending insane amounts of money on ineffective measures to 'combat' a disease which, as far as lethality goes, still lies way below hunger, pollution, poor diet, lack of exercise, malaria, etc.
They can't against air pollution either - that relies on governmental measurements. In the Netherlands, a reasonably developed country, an estimated 10.000 people die prematurely each year due to pollution. That's 2-4x more than due to the typical flu-wave (although that also reaches 10.000 on occasion). But whenever it comes to reducing pollution, taking 10.000 lives structurally, the standard counter-argument is 'that would hugely harm the economy'. Meanwhile, we are spending way, way much more to combat a disease which maybe at it's worst would take 10.000 lives, this year (and has taken 3 so far).henry wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 10:39We shall see how ineffective the measures are.DChemTech wrote: ↑08 Mar 2020, 22:30Or maybe we should not overreact by cancelling all of daily life and spending insane amounts of money on ineffective measures to 'combat' a disease which, as far as lethality goes, still lies way below hunger, pollution, poor diet, lack of exercise, malaria, etc.
The lethality of the disease varies enormously with age. Up to age 40 it’s not very lethal. For people in their 70s it’s 10% and in the 80s 15%. That’s Russian roulette territory.
As for the other causes of death you cite people can take my own individual precautions against them but they can’t take individual precautions against a virus. Well maybe they can self isolate for the duration.
I'm not assuming anything apart from NHS probably know what they're talking about. The whole coronavirus family probably arose from the way the Chinese intermingled ducks and pigs, and they've only just debunked the theory this mutation kicked off in a wildlife meat market. It was news they've suspended eating dogs and catsJust_a_fan wrote: ↑09 Mar 2020, 01:00"Unpleasant ways with animals"
What?
Remember that the thing that makes you work - mitochondria - is likely a thing that invaded an early cell line. Don't assume all infection is necessarily bad.
The recently implemented travel restriction (and strictly speaking travels aren't forbidden but just "to be avoided") in northern Italy doesn't concern those who travel for work.Ringleheim wrote: ↑08 Mar 2020, 19:12Maranello is already under lockdown! I don't understand how the Ferrari team is supposed to be able to travel from the factory to the races freely, and if there is no Ferrari ,there is no F1.