On Mar 17, 2020, at 02:41 , Alexandre Petrescu <alexandre.petrescu@gmail.com> wrote:
On 16/Mar/20 21:08, Owen DeLong wrote:
This simply isn’t true…
Listen to qualified medical professionals, especially those who specialize in infectious diseases and epidemiology.
YEs listen to them.
This morning they say: everyone can get it, there is no age or pre-conditio.
They’ve always said “everyone can get it, there’s no age or pre-condition”. The age and pre-existing condition thing comes into play in defining the probability that you will get a severe case of it. That advice hasn’t changed. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-nCoV/index.html If You Are at Higher Risk alert icon Who is at higher risk? Early information out of China, where COVID-19 first started, shows that some people are at higher risk of getting very sick from this illness. This includes: Older adults People who have serious chronic medical conditions like: Heart disease Diabetes Lung disease
That''s it. They dont know, and worse they dont say they dont know.
Actually, they do say they don’t know (about the things they don’t know). For example: https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/prepare/transmission.html?CDC_AA_r... COVID-19 is a new disease and we are still learning how it spreads, the severity of illness it causes, and to what extent it may spread in the United States.
I am an engineer, I am not medical professional, my question is: is there a device to detect the virus with the crown in the air and light up a led?
No… No such device exists for Corona Virus at this time. Such a device is not easily developed.
(we do have such devices for VOC, for CO2, PM2, PM10 pollution, and many other things in the air; but about virus with a rcown?)
Detecting a virus in the air is much more complicated than detecting VOC, CO2, PM2.5 (presumably what you meant by PM2), or PM10. PM2.5 and PM10 are a simple size test. CO2 is a molecule that is easy to detect through a simple electrochemical process. VOC are a class of hydrocarbons that all share certain chemical properties which are easily detected through a simple electrochemical process. It should also be noted that such devices even for the chemicals they can detect require a certain concentration of that chemical. On the other hand, a single airborne virion can be enough to cause a widespread epidemic. If that single virion is “lucky” enough to find a compatible host cell and get the cell to start replicating it, then you can quickly get lots more copies of that virion which then seek out additional host cells and additional hosts to make even more, and so on. Viruses are not. Viruses are very tiny intracellular parasites where very subtle chemical differences cause massively different effects on humans. They consist of an RNA or DNA genome surrounded by a protective virus-coded protein coat. More information here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK8174/ Currently, the best we can do is a test to detect coronavirus infection in a person after they are infected and symptomatic. So for now, stay indoors with your family and if you’ve got a sick sense of humor like I do, play one or more of the Pandemic board games (if you happen to own them). Owen
Alex
The information on the CDC and WHO websites remains the primary source of trustworthy information. It may be incomplete, but if someone is contradicting something there, they’re very likely to be wrong.
OTOH, anyone selling “survive COVID” or “cure COVID” etc. is completely untrustworthy and guaranteed to be lying to you in order to sell a product. Despicable, but common place.
There’s no authoritative way to get false information off the internet, so we have to combat it as best we can with good information and education. Even in my own household, this is a constant battle as my GF continues to bring home odd superstitious rumors and embellishments from a variety of inaccurate sources and I constantly have to correct her perspective.
For up to date local information, check with the local public health authority in your jurisdiction. In the US, that will usually be your county public health agency. In some cases, individual municipalities also have public health departments.
It's the price we pay for hyper-connectedness (not trying to coin a phrase, hehe).
Everybody (especially the kids) lives on their device 99% of the time. If you're not on their device, you are not relevant to them.
When was the last time you bought a newspaper? How many times do your kids watch the news, either on TV or their device? But they are all over WhatsApp, Instagram, Twitter, SnapChat, WeChat, et al. And even if they have the "News" app on their phone, they probably have never opened it. If they opened it, they didn't find value in it.
On average, the we (and the kids) will give your app two tries; if we don't like it, you're out - which explains why we all have 3,000 apps on our phones, but only use 2 or 3 of them most consistently.
Whoever wants to get professional and verified information out (to the kids who live on their devices) needs to find a way to do so in a manner we find relevant, otherwise we'll simply keep trading mis-information for whatever reason we feel gives us value.
Mark.