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So, Hands Up. Second Wave Or Not?
I've remained quite skeptical of the seriousness of the coronavirus doing the rounds recently and think a lot of it was played up in order to drive through a looming recession.
Anyway, my question is, do people really believe that this is a very serious pandemic that will come in ever more serious waves until a vaccine is found?
Will it perhaps return in a less serious nature?
Or is it on the same level as Spanish Flu in which apparently many many millions were killed second time around compared to the first wave.
Or will it quietly disappear, leaving only high jobless figures and economic turmoil in its wake?
I would love to hear people's thoughts.
Anyway, my question is, do people really believe that this is a very serious pandemic that will come in ever more serious waves until a vaccine is found?
Will it perhaps return in a less serious nature?
Or is it on the same level as Spanish Flu in which apparently many many millions were killed second time around compared to the first wave.
Or will it quietly disappear, leaving only high jobless figures and economic turmoil in its wake?
I would love to hear people's thoughts.
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by flobadob. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We haven't quite finished the first wave yet, around the world at least. Brazil, Russia, India, Mexico, Peru and a few other countries are still seeing cases and death rates on a general increase, or at least holding close to their peak level.
As far as pandemics go this is already, by any reasonable measure, the most serious pandemic besides HIV for the last century. I'm not sure that scepticism about its seriousness is reasonable any longer, except possibly if you treat serious and apocalyptic as synonymous.
As far as pandemics go this is already, by any reasonable measure, the most serious pandemic besides HIV for the last century. I'm not sure that scepticism about its seriousness is reasonable any longer, except possibly if you treat serious and apocalyptic as synonymous.
Also, as to the possibility of a second wave, I am currently pessimistic. A lot of lockdown measures have been discarded, so I don't see that it makes sense to talk about "easing" so much as "ending" lockdown, in the UK at least. So in around a month I wouldn't be shocked to see case and death rates start to rise again. I dearly hope I'm wrong.
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When there's top scientists saying something different from each other re second waves, social distance, lockdown measures and outlook every single day this will be just an entertaining discussion for some or opportunity to self-proclaim as an expert but other than that it's a pointless question as nobody knows who is going to be right in the end.
The problem with the UK is we tested too late and are tracing too late. The data we are getting now is just one half of the puzzle, so impossible to make any conclusions one way or another.
I believe we are easing too early.
London was hit first and badly, but it is now past peak and safe to relax isolation. But in the rest of the country it is still rising, and has peaked, and the last thing we should be doing is socialising with 6 people at a time.
We probably won’t get a second peak, but instead of a reducing curve of the graph, it be a longer slower decline outside London.
I believe we are easing too early.
London was hit first and badly, but it is now past peak and safe to relax isolation. But in the rest of the country it is still rising, and has peaked, and the last thing we should be doing is socialising with 6 people at a time.
We probably won’t get a second peak, but instead of a reducing curve of the graph, it be a longer slower decline outside London.
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