There’s so much noise everywhere about this.
People need to be careful if they are high risk,
especially if hospital beds are lacking. There are treatment options being utilized with some degree of success but if there’s no capacity for care then sheltering is the only truly safe option.
The reality though is that each one of us is
likely to catch this. Maybe the vaccine will ride in to save the day, but I’m not counting my chickens. I’m worried about what’s going to happen this winter if the flu hits like usual (or maybe the masks will help). But despite the link
@Sirwalterraleigh posted a while ago, our bodies routinely produce immunity to previous infections (and if we cannot mount a true immunity to this corona, then a vaccine likely would not produce true immunity either); once we have caught this, subsequent infections should always be milder.
The idea that we can isolate this virus to its demise is naive - the world is too connected. Until we are all immune - either naturally or from a vaccine, there will continue to be outbreaks. Here in Texas, we’re catching it for better or worse. Hopefully for the best.
an addendum: so Sweden has been the maligned pariah on this and the press has not been kind for sure, but recent numbers are promising that maybe they’re already getting over the hump and I don’t see articles suggesting that this improvement is due to restrictions.
Sweden Coronavirus update with statistics and graphs: total and new cases, deaths per day, mortality and recovery rates, current active cases, recoveries, trends and timeline.
www.worldometers.info