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Quote from: Kryptid on 12/02/2021 23:48:39Quote from: Jolly2 on 12/02/2021 23:45:42Incubation periods are anywhere between 1 and 27 days.I choose 14 again as a middle ground, to try and balance the shorter and longer incubation periods.The average seems to be 5 days: https://www.webmd.com/lung/coronavirus-incubation-period#1To.qoute the article "Most people with symptoms had them by day 12."Incubation is from time of contact to onset of symptoms that suggests 12.Then there is this "Researchers estimate that people who get infected with the coronavirus can spread it to others 2 to 3 days before symptoms start"That takes it to 10 day incubation period for some not all.
Quote from: Jolly2 on 12/02/2021 23:45:42Incubation periods are anywhere between 1 and 27 days.I choose 14 again as a middle ground, to try and balance the shorter and longer incubation periods.The average seems to be 5 days: https://www.webmd.com/lung/coronavirus-incubation-period#1
Incubation periods are anywhere between 1 and 27 days.I choose 14 again as a middle ground, to try and balance the shorter and longer incubation periods.
Kryptid the article suggests 10 day incubation not 5.
On average, symptoms showed up in the newly infected person about 5 days after contact.
Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:00:35Kryptid the article suggests 10 day incubation not 5.Actually:QuoteOn average, symptoms showed up in the newly infected person about 5 days after contact.
Therefore the article is contradicting itself.
Most people showed symptoms by day 12.
Cant be both.
Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:05:29Therefore the article is contradicting itself.No, it isn't.Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:05:29Most people showed symptoms by day 12.Yes, and?Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:05:29Cant be both.Why not?
And everyone else on the planet now knows what "asymptomatic transmission" means.Why don't you?Also, "by day 12", rather than "on day 12".
Which mean that we are talking about R is about 7 and the time scale from one generation to the next is about 4 days.That's 7.5 "generations" in a month (30 days/ 4 days ) and with R = 7
Here's another source with some more exact details on the numbers (it backs up the approximated 5 day average): https://www.news-medical.net/health/Coronavirus-Incubation-Period.aspx
Um, I never said that.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 13/02/2021 00:07:26Which mean that we are talking about R is about 7 and the time scale from one generation to the next is about 4 days.That's 7.5 "generations" in a month (30 days/ 4 days ) and with R = 7 Supporting evidence? I've never seen any suggesting an R0 of 7
What's your position on the R0 kyrptid?
Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:16:13What's your position on the R0 kyrptid?I haven't looked into it, so I really can't provide an informed comment.
How about this ?If you are trying to model how fast "the first outbreak" would spread, does it make sense to use a current value of R - which is based on people who know there's a virus doing the rounds, or would it be better to use the value of R from the early days of the Wuhan outbreak?Which would you say was a more appropriate value?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 13/02/2021 00:26:50How about this ?If you are trying to model how fast "the first outbreak" would spread, does it make sense to use a current value of R - which is based on people who know there's a virus doing the rounds, or would it be better to use the value of R from the early days of the Wuhan outbreak?Which would you say was a more appropriate value?The early days, of course.
Ok getting somewhere.Weekly incubation period and an R.0 of 3.Past infections . current infectionsPatient 0Week 1. 1 , 3Week 2 3 , 9Week 3 9 , 27Week 4 27 , 81Week 5 81 , 243Week 6 243 , 729Week 7 729 , 2,187Week 8 2,187 , 6,561Week 9 6,561 , 19,683Week 10 19,683 , 59,049Week 11 59,049 , 177,147Week 12 177,147 , 531,441Week 13 531,441 , 1,594,323Week 14 1,594,323 , 4,782,969Ok so that's over 4 million infections in 3 and half months from patient 0. Compared to over 4 million infections in 11 with the first data set.And for the first 2 months basically way under 2000 except for the last week
Quote from: Jolly2 on 13/02/2021 00:51:40Ok getting somewhere.Weekly incubation period and an R.0 of 3.Past infections . current infectionsPatient 0Week 1. 1 , 3Week 2 3 , 9Week 3 9 , 27Week 4 27 , 81Week 5 81 , 243Week 6 243 , 729Week 7 729 , 2,187Week 8 2,187 , 6,561Week 9 6,561 , 19,683Week 10 19,683 , 59,049Week 11 59,049 , 177,147Week 12 177,147 , 531,441Week 13 531,441 , 1,594,323Week 14 1,594,323 , 4,782,969Ok so that's over 4 million infections in 3 and half months from patient 0. Compared to over 4 million infections in 11 with the first data set.And for the first 2 months basically way under 2000 except for the last weekSo with 80% asymptomatic. In week 10 you would see about 4000 people with more severe symptoms, deaths at 10 per 1000 gives 40 deaths.But it's all relative to who has the virus.So under those numbers, China starts seeing deaths in December. That pushes back patient 0 to mid September. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_COVID-19_pandemic_in_2019Well that's funny."During the 2019 Military World Games in Wuhan (18-27 October, 2019), a large number of athletes from different International delegations had fallen ill with serious symptoms of which some of those athletes have attributed to COVID-19,"With a week incubation, athletes would have got sick at the end of the games if they caught it there.And those athletes would then all carry covid 19 back to their own nations. Supper spreader event.As they are all military that passes it through all world government establishments first.