Caligula Posted July 15, 2020 Posted July 15, 2020 4 hours ago, Tsai said: Kolko ozbiljno treba uzimati ove razne analize da virus napada sve organe i da cak i asimptomatski pacijenti mogu da imaju trajne posledice? Pitam da znam dal da izlazim iz bunkeru do svetskog u Kataru? Drugar mi slao na viber, zaista nije zezanje, forvardovao poruku njegovog ortaka koji kaze da je i njemu i njegovom drugu (koji mu je kasnije to opisao) pocelo tako sto je prvi simptom bio bol u testisima. Onda potrazim pa pronadjem ovo. Osim toga slabi simptomi kasnije, zbog cega se i testirao pa je ispalo da je pozitivan. Moj komsija izgubio culo mirisa i ukusa, naglo. To je uobicajen simptom. Dakle virus nekako gadja u ranoj fazi i zivcani sastav, i zlezde, i stomak, kasnije jetru, bubrege, pankreas, pluca. I to sve od slucaja do slucaja. Pa onda se covek posle mesec dana ponovo zarazi (?) Rekoh vec, nije virus no vanzemaljac. Spoiler Ja se pazim ali dete ne kapira koncept pazenja, zena opustenija od mene, tako da videcemo kako ce vakcina da se doceka. Blago tebi sto mozes u bunker, ja bih uzivao da sam sam. Knjige, filmovi, novi recepti za kuhinju, frilens, koji ce mi kurac ljudi i druzenje u zivotu ili makar tih godinu dana, ma to bi mi bilo verovatno najbolje utroseno vreme.
אַף אֶחָד Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 Izgleda da krece ozbiljno drugi krug i u Spaniji. Za sada samo izdvojena mala zarista, ali sve vise takvih.
eumeswil Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 Chilean police train dogs to sniff out COVID-19 Quote Police in Chile are training dogs to detect people that may be infected with the novel coronavirus by sniffing their sweat. “The virus has no smell, but rather the infection generates metabolic changes” which in turn leads to the release of a particular type of sweat “which is what the dog would detect,” Fernando Mardones, a Universidad Catolica professor of veterinary epidemiology, told AFP. According to Santelices, tests in Europe and Dubai shown a 95 percent efficiency rate in canine detection of COVID-19 cases. Medical Detection Dogs, a British charity set up in 2008 to harness dogs’ sharp sense of smell to detect human diseases, also started training canines to detect COVID-19 in late March.
borris_ Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 3 hours ago, chandra said: Izgleda da krece ozbiljno drugi krug i u Spaniji. Za sada samo izdvojena mala zarista, ali sve vise takvih. I u francuskoj.
Tresko Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 Kako da kreće drugi krug, kad se prvi krug nikad nije završio?
slepa živana Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 16 minutes ago, Tresko said: Kako da kreće drugi krug, kad se prvi krug nikad nije završio? kao dvogrba kamila
Lancia Posted July 16, 2020 Posted July 16, 2020 2 minutes ago, slepa živana said: kao dvogrba kamila Sutra cu da sutnem jednu u dupe.
Filozof manijak Posted July 17, 2020 Posted July 17, 2020 7 hours ago, Lancia said: Sutra cu da sutnem jednu u dupe. Da joj ispraviš grbe?
jms_uk Posted July 17, 2020 Posted July 17, 2020 Stiglo mi je pismo danas (ako hocu) da se prijavim za COVID-19 testing research study - salju random, po celom UK. Istrazivanje radi Imperial College. Prijavio se, treba da stigne test na kucu za nedelju-dve. Kurirom se salje nazad, i rezultati budu nedelju dana kasnije.
Skyhighatrist Posted July 17, 2020 Author Posted July 17, 2020 Need some good news about covid-19? Here are six reasons for optimism Spoiler These days of rising cases, hospitalizations and now surging deaths can be overwhelming. To help get through this storm, we must keep track of positive developments, too. Here are six positive developments to remind us that there is hope in this crisis: Therapeutic treatments (in addition to what we already have for the most sick patients) will arrive before vaccines. When someone contracts the novel coronavirus, his or her body’s immune system launches a defense, including producing antibodies that circulate in the blood to help identify infectious invaders. These circulating antibodies offer some protection against future infection (for how long, we still don’t know). Scientists have now engineered clones of these antibodies — what we call monoclonal antibodies — and they are showing to be effective both therapeutically and to prevent infection. They work by attacking the spike protein of the coronavirus, which is how this virus gets into our cells. Stop that from happening, and the virus can’t replicate inside the body. Rapid, low-cost saliva tests are also coming, and, as my colleague Michael Mina and Laurence J. Kotlikoff recently pointed out, they are a game-changer. Why? These are like home pregnancy tests but for covid-19. Imagine a test you could take at home every day, that gives you an answer in a few minutes after spitting into a vial and costs only $1 to $5. Such a test would change our ability to slow outbreaks where early detection is everything. It would also help consumer confidence and slow down this economic crisis. Want to go to school or work or a Broadway show? Show your rapid test was negative. These tests are not perfectly accurate, but the counterintuitive part is that they don’t have to be. More important than accuracy are speed and frequency of testing. The debate is finally over: Masks work. It took three months, but universal mask-wearing is catching on. What was once awkward and unusual (in the United States, anyway) has now become more accepted. More states and businesses are requiring them. And, what was once political — thanks to our president who said people were wearing masks only to make him look bad — is quickly becoming common sense. We now see leaders in red states urging mask- wearing. (Not all masks are created equal, so fortunately, there is now guidance on what constitutes a good mask.) Consensus has finally emerged that airborne spread is happening. Scientists in my field have been warning about this for months (I wrote about this in early February and more recently argued that airborne transmission is linked to super-spreader events), yet the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization have consistently failed to recognize this. Last week, the tide turned when 239 scientists signed a letter to the WHO urging it to acknowledge airborne transmission. And that’s exactly what the WHO did. This means that there will be more messaging coming out from the WHO and other organizations recommending that people add a new control to their toolkit for fighting this virus — healthy building strategies, such as higher ventilation, better filtration and the use of portable air-cleaning devices. There is some science showing that past exposure to common-cold coronaviruses might be playing a protective role for some people. This is a big claim — and I should caution that it is not fully resolved — but several studies are now showing that 20 to 50 percent of people who had never been exposed to the novel coronavirus have immune cells — known as memory T cells — in their body that react to this new virus. The speculation is that this is due to prior exposure to common-cold coronaviruses. We still don’t know why some people fare better than others, or why a few spread the disease to many while others do not spread it at all, but these findings might hold some answers to those questions. Vaccine trials seem to be working, and drug manufacturers have already said they might be able to deliver doses by October. Remember, it was not a given that vaccines would work, so the fact that the early-stage clinical trials are showing positive signs is encouraging. Also a reminder that this is lightning-fast; if we get a vaccine within 12 months, that will be the quickest vaccine ever developed — by several years. There is an important caveat: My colleague Juliette Kayyem likes to point out that vaccines don’t save people, vaccinations do. Once we have a vaccine, the hard task of manufacturing and distributing it comes into play. So, while the signs on vaccines are good, and we might have data in hand in a few months that they work, it will still be a few more months until people have the opportunity to actually receive the vaccine. For the first time in history, nearly every scientist in the world is focused on the same problem. This is starting to pay real dividends. Joseph G. Allen is an assistant professor of exposure assessment science, director of the Healthy Buildings program at Harvard University’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health and co-author of “Healthy Buildings: How Indoor Spaces Drive Performance and Productivity.” 5 3
trustno1 Posted July 18, 2020 Posted July 18, 2020 Mene zanima zašto su novi dnevni slučajevi u Italiji oko 200 a u Njujorku oko 700 i tako već danima. Ali ne znam zašto.
kr en Posted July 18, 2020 Posted July 18, 2020 Healthy concertgoers wanted for German coronavirus experiment German researchers have called for 4,000 volunteers to attend a pop music concert and help them assess the risks of coronavirus transmission. All participants would need to test negative for the virus before taking part. https://www.dw.com/en/healthy-concertgoers-wanted-for-german-coronavirus-experiment/a-54221955
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