gordondaviesmoustache
Well-Known Member
That's how much it upset him.This is a new thread.
That's how much it upset him.This is a new thread.
That's not reinfection. Most likely debris from the original infection.I get it from cnn , they have several who were in hospital first time but tested positive later on after going back to work , research will catch up
False alarm, I’ve just been in the park for a walk and walked through the town.Might be a bit of work for me there...
I’m obliged ;-)Counsel.
I consider myself stood down.False alarm, I’ve just been in the park for a walk and walked through the town.
Even got a butty and a brew from the Norfolk Arms.
Maintained distancing of course, there was only us and one other couple waiting there and we stood away.
I’ll let you know if I spot anything else when I’m out and about but as you now know, I’m hardly reliable.I consider myself stood down.
Surely it’s going to get to the point where so many have had it the deaths will start to go down?That's not reinfection. Most likely debris from the original infection.
There's only been 10 documented cases world wide according to this
"Of nearly 30 million cases to date since December 2019, there have been only about 10 documented and confirmed cases of re-infections. These data suggest that resistance to reinfection might be less a function of durability of the immune response and more one of breadth,” said the authors, led by Deepta Bhattacharya, an immunobiologist at the University of Arizona College of Medicine" dated 15/11/2020
Good luck.Middle son tested positive, after alert from NHS app to test, we presume from his work. Symptomless.
Whole family now apprehensively in self isolation.
Seeing you're work in Cheshire appears to have dried up would you be happy to take on work from inner city areas around Manchester.I consider myself stood down.
Anecdotally there have been a lot of suspected cases of reinfection, I'm not saying it is common it is probably uncommon but a lot more common than 10 documented cases suggest. Documenting cases accurately is very hard work and not worth most peoples time once it's been done a few times.That's not reinfection. Most likely debris from the original infection.
There's only been 10 documented cases world wide according to this
"Of nearly 30 million cases to date since December 2019, there have been only about 10 documented and confirmed cases of re-infections. These data suggest that resistance to reinfection might be less a function of durability of the immune response and more one of breadth,” said the authors, led by Deepta Bhattacharya, an immunobiologist at the University of Arizona College of Medicine" dated 15/11/2020
Yes. Antibodies still catch the fucker.Is that taking into account this new 'super' strain though?
Surely it’s going to get to the point where so many have had it the deaths will start to go down?
I know more that have had it than not.
As with every virus.The point is not whether you get it worse the second time , it is that immunity is not working , there are plenty in the us frontline who have had it twice
We obviously need a full national lockdown like March-April now.I think estimates of total infected in uk are still well below 20%
*If* they are all immune, then that reduces R by a factor of 0.8
R for the original variant was ~3.5, so would reduce to ~2.8.
Which is still catastrophically bad. There's probably potential for well north of another 200,000 people to die yet. Govt policy is dangerously close ton testing this out over the next 3 months.
I came across this yesterday which has an account for how the variant developed. I didn't follow up on the source it references to see how believable it is.Yes. Antibodies still catch the fucker.
See PHE reports on the new strain.
All vaccines target multiple strings of amino acids that form proteins on the virus spike.
All seem to still work.
Incidently onecof the three target areas for the PCR test no longer works, so if they could be bothered they could trace back through historical tests to identify where the mutation occurred and if indeed the mutation happened in the UK.
Eventually the vaccines will become selection pressure on the virus to stop antibodies attaching. Which is why they change the Flu vaccine every year.
Anywhere in England and Wales, mate xSeeing you're work in Cheshire appears to have dried up would you be happy to take on work from inner city areas around Manchester.