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Hence those number are rediculas.
For a good estimation of uncontrolled spread of serious infection ofthe virus look at the first reported case in Italy and the increase over time. It will not give asymptomatic cases, but it will give the R value of the spread of problematic cases, asymptomatic cases such as children seen not to be infectious for very long.
The infectious period is variable between children and adults of varying ages, the incubation periods vary, but,Symptoms start on average 5 to 6 days after exposure, this is the incubation period. People mostly become most infectious between 2 days before symptoms and decline in infectiousness. People decline in infectious quality, ending 7 days after symptoms or 12 after exposure.So 6 days after exposure seems a good average, any cases with symptoms are likely to be less social in the symptomatic stages.
https://www.the-scientist.com/features/why-r0-is-problematic-for-predicting-covid-19-spread-67690
Setting the R0 between 2 and 3 is probably the best bet.
Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 19:43:36Setting the R0 between 2 and 3 is probably the best bet.Not according to the link I posted earlier, which stated 5.7.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36For a good estimation of uncontrolled spread of serious infection ofthe virus look at the first reported case in Italy and the increase over time. It will not give asymptomatic cases, but it will give the R value of the spread of problematic cases, asymptomatic cases such as children seen not to be infectious for very long. You're missing that we know the asymptomatic cases range between 60 and 80%. So we can get a good estimate of the R0 looking at confirmed cases. There is the issue of tests ofcourse, because confirmed cases only relates to tested positive, which is limited to available tests.
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36The infectious period is variable between children and adults of varying ages, the incubation periods vary, but,Symptoms start on average 5 to 6 days after exposure, this is the incubation period. People mostly become most infectious between 2 days before symptoms and decline in infectiousness. People decline in infectious quality, ending 7 days after symptoms or 12 after exposure.So 6 days after exposure seems a good average, any cases with symptoms are likely to be less social in the symptomatic stages.Yeah a weekly doubling is probably fair.
I dont see a suggestion of 5 in there you'll have to quote it.
The R0 for COVID-19 is a median of 5.7, according to a study published online in Emerging Infectious Diseases. That’s about double an earlier R0 estimate of 2.2 to 2.7
Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 21:01:58I dont see a suggestion of 5 in there you'll have to quote it.QuoteThe R0 for COVID-19 is a median of 5.7, according to a study published online in Emerging Infectious Diseases. That’s about double an earlier R0 estimate of 2.2 to 2.7This is the link I'm referring to, by the way: https://www.healthline.com/health/r-nought-reproduction-number#meaning
Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 19:33:17Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36For a good estimation of uncontrolled spread of serious infection ofthe virus look at the first reported case in Italy and the increase over time. It will not give asymptomatic cases, but it will give the R value of the spread of problematic cases, asymptomatic cases such as children seen not to be infectious for very long. You're missing that we know the asymptomatic cases range between 60 and 80%. So we can get a good estimate of the R0 looking at confirmed cases. There is the issue of tests ofcourse, because confirmed cases only relates to tested positive, which is limited to available tests.No I addressed this in the post, I am addressing the problematic cases. Asymptomatic cases are not infectious for a long period, plus the fact that the asymptomatic cases and normal cases are responsible for latter serious infections, they have already been accounted for. Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 19:33:17Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36The infectious period is variable between children and adults of varying ages, the incubation periods vary, but,Symptoms start on average 5 to 6 days after exposure, this is the incubation period. People mostly become most infectious between 2 days before symptoms and decline in infectiousness. People decline in infectious quality, ending 7 days after symptoms or 12 after exposure.So 6 days after exposure seems a good average, any cases with symptoms are likely to be less social in the symptomatic stages.Yeah a weekly doubling is probably fair.The R rate in problematic cases is what I was suggesting YOU calculate!
Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 22:04:23Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 19:33:17Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36For a good estimation of uncontrolled spread of serious infection ofthe virus look at the first reported case in Italy and the increase over time. It will not give asymptomatic cases, but it will give the R value of the spread of problematic cases, asymptomatic cases such as children seen not to be infectious for very long. You're missing that we know the asymptomatic cases range between 60 and 80%. So we can get a good estimate of the R0 looking at confirmed cases. There is the issue of tests ofcourse, because confirmed cases only relates to tested positive, which is limited to available tests.No I addressed this in the post, I am addressing the problematic cases. Asymptomatic cases are not infectious for a long period, plus the fact that the asymptomatic cases and normal cases are responsible for latter serious infections, they have already been accounted for. Quote from: Jolly2 on 24/02/2021 19:33:17Quote from: Petrochemicals on 24/02/2021 02:50:36The infectious period is variable between children and adults of varying ages, the incubation periods vary, but,Symptoms start on average 5 to 6 days after exposure, this is the incubation period. People mostly become most infectious between 2 days before symptoms and decline in infectiousness. People decline in infectious quality, ending 7 days after symptoms or 12 after exposure.So 6 days after exposure seems a good average, any cases with symptoms are likely to be less social in the symptomatic stages.Yeah a weekly doubling is probably fair.The R rate in problematic cases is what I was suggesting YOU calculate!It's a game of averages. If the R0 for asymptomatic people is lower, and 80% are generally Asymptomatic, then the overall R0 is gonna be a lot lower. I suppose you could run them in tandem. A composite. A serious infection data set With a higher R0 and faster incubation period And then an asymptomatic data set with both lower and then.Somehow combine them.For every 10 people infected 8 generally wont notice.
It's one study, compared to alteast 7 or so more that all put the number lower.
Why daren't you answer this?Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/02/2021 20:43:37Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 18:46:04I already asked this, but I don't think you answered.Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 13:56:27First question: do you think that R0 only has one value, or do you recognise that, for example in the UK it's near 1 (hopefully a little below) ?
Quote from: Jolly2 on 25/02/2021 01:48:52It's one study, compared to alteast 7 or so more that all put the number lower.You still refuse to answer this simple question.Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/02/2021 21:21:17Why daren't you answer this?Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/02/2021 20:43:37Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 18:46:04I already asked this, but I don't think you answered.Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 13:56:27First question: do you think that R0 only has one value, or do you recognise that, for example in the UK it's near 1 (hopefully a little below) ?
Quote from: Bored chemist on 25/02/2021 08:53:33Quote from: Jolly2 on 25/02/2021 01:48:52It's one study, compared to alteast 7 or so more that all put the number lower.You still refuse to answer this simple question.Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/02/2021 21:21:17Why daren't you answer this?Quote from: Bored chemist on 14/02/2021 20:43:37Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 18:46:04I already asked this, but I don't think you answered.Quote from: Bored chemist on Today at 13:56:27First question: do you think that R0 only has one value, or do you recognise that, for example in the UK it's near 1 (hopefully a little below) ?I daren't answer. Ofcourse if you paid attention you would have noticed I have been citing R0 between 1.4 and 3 so I Daren'ted.
In answer to the OP's question, Covid-19 originated from China.
There is no evidence of the Corona Virus that evolved into covid19, in the surrounding area of wuhan.
Quote from: Jolly2There is no evidence of the Corona Virus that evolved into covid19, in the surrounding area of wuhan.How about a post on Chinese social media at the end of December 2019, mentioning a lot of patients with a mysterious respiratory disease?- That is pretty clear evidence that it first reached epidemic contagiousness in the big city of Wuhan.- The WHO team found evidence of 13 RNA variants circulating in Wuhan from early RNA sequences they were able to obtain. That points to a spillover that had been circulating for a couple of months (in humans and/or animals).I agree that this evidence does not show in which geographical region the original spillover happened- But then you try to claim that this same evidence shows that Fort Detrick was the source!