Aargh Knowing that one person, on average, infects a little over two people, and that the virus has been circulating in the states since at least February, a month before we began any kind of serious testing or lockdowns, is it really that far fetched that there are 56 undiagnosed cases for every one diagnosed case?
I’m also unsure why you view the fact that there are 56 million untested people as a “MAJOR” problem. If more people have had this and recovered or were asymptomatic it’s a good thing in my opinion. Testing every one of them is irrelevant at this point for determining the IFR. As long as we are confident in the accuracy of the antibody tests we can sample parts of the population and be confident in extrapolating the data. How accurate the tests are at this point is a legitimate question which is why most are taking study that says we’re underestimating the number of infected by a power of 40-80 with a grain of salt. However, those general population antibody studies are happening in a few different areas of the world and they’re all saying the same thing. More people have had this than we know. Which is scary, because it spreads quickly, but also reassuring because it’s not as deadly as the 5.7 CFR indicates.
You seem to be saying that once a person contracts Covid, they are infectious forever. To my understanding that is not the case. Yes, it can be transmitted by an asymptomatic person but as far as I know that person will cycle through the disease and no longer be a transmission risk after a period of time the same as if they had symptoms and recovered.
I’m also unsure why you view the fact that there are 56 million untested people as a “MAJOR” problem. If more people have had this and recovered or were asymptomatic it’s a good thing in my opinion. Testing every one of them is irrelevant at this point for determining the IFR. As long as we are confident in the accuracy of the antibody tests we can sample parts of the population and be confident in extrapolating the data. How accurate the tests are at this point is a legitimate question which is why most are taking study that says we’re underestimating the number of infected by a power of 40-80 with a grain of salt. However, those general population antibody studies are happening in a few different areas of the world and they’re all saying the same thing. More people have had this than we know. Which is scary, because it spreads quickly, but also reassuring because it’s not as deadly as the 5.7 CFR indicates.
You seem to be saying that once a person contracts Covid, they are infectious forever. To my understanding that is not the case. Yes, it can be transmitted by an asymptomatic person but as far as I know that person will cycle through the disease and no longer be a transmission risk after a period of time the same as if they had symptoms and recovered.
Comment