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Msg. 52674 of 62138 |
Iran reported its first two cases yesterday. Then it reported that both patients had died. Now... Oh - be sure to check out the graph for South Korea, toward the bottom, in yellow. It's disturbing - though I still don't know if a single white person ANYWHERE has died. I do wish the authorities would clear that up.
February 20, 2020 The Iranian regime has reportedly imposed a China-style crackdown on Qoms, deploying military and crowd-control police across the city. It's just the latest sign that the cases and deaths ex-China are accelerating. CNBC's Eunice Yoon reports that Beijing has warned Hubei not to allow people back to work before March 10.
Local leaders said yesterday that they would launch a special financing vehicle to help struggling companies in the province survive the outbreak. Following the WHO's daily press conference, Director General Dr. Tedros said the WHO had confirmed 1,000 cases outside mainland China (with more than half of them infected aboard the 'Diamond Princess'), and 7 deaths, likely excludes some of the deaths announced over the past 12 hours. Though he added that the data coming out of China "appeared to show a decline in new cases." "Outside China, we have seen a steady drip of new cases, but we have not yet seen sustained local transmission, except in specific circumstances like the Diamond Princess cruise ship," he added. More ominously, Dr. Tedros exclaimed that the outbreak is far from over, and if governments don't take adequate steps to fight the virus, the number of cases outside China "won't stay low for very long." Worried about more shortages of personal protective equipment like facemasks, Dr. Tedros pleaded with a dozen different manufacturers to do whatever they can to keep up appropriate global supplies.
World Health Organization (WHO) ![]() The director said the WHO expects to have more data from two clinical trials for treatments in roughly 3 weeks. Since we haven't posted a breakdown of new cases yet today, we figured we'd share this list of countries, cases and deaths courtesy of the Associated Press:
In other news, UK passengers aboard the 'Diamond Princess' will be evacuated by their government on Friday. The chartered evacuation flights (following the standard template) will land at Boscombe Down airbase in Wiltshire. Elsewhere in the anglosphere, Australia has extended its travel ban for arrivals from China into a fourth week. It will last until Feb. 29, the Guardian reported. * * * Hours after Japanese press reports claimed that two passengers who contracted COVID-19 aboard the 'Diamond Princess' died yesterday - news that was later confirmed by Japanese authorities - South Korea reported its first fatality while one of its major cities asked citizens to stay inside and avoid venturing outdoors, according to the Washington Post. According to Japanese government officials, both of the virus-related fatalities were Japanese citizens in their 80s who had been moved off the ship more than a week ago for treatment in a Japanese hospital, though the government has so far declined to release names. The latest reports Thursday morning confirmed another 13 cases aboard the DP bringing the total to 634. The odds that individuals being released from the 2 week quarantine on Thursday and Friday might have contracted the virus, but have yet to show symptoms, remains high. The death in South Korea raised the death toll ex-China to 10.
The speed is hardly a surprise for those who have been paying attention to all of the new research, instead of dismissing it for being 'alarmist' and 'not peer reviewed'. Finally, earlier this week, researchers published the largest study yet of the outbreak, which confirmed that COVID-19 is more contagious than SARS and MERS, leaving it on par with seasonal influenza. Still, experts insist that the virus's fatality rate is probably around 2%, meaning that it's less deadly than SARS, but the wider spread will result in more deaths, CNN reports. Even as President Xi does everything in his power to present an image of success to the Chinese people - in his speeches, he claims the Chinese government's strict quarantines have been an unmitigated success - global experts, including the WHO, have warned that the disease will continue to spread globally, and that the end of this crisis is still far from certain. And as new confirmed cases dropped substantially on Wednesday in Hubei, everywhere else, the rate of new infections is accelerating. In South Korea, the number of cases soared by almost two-thirds to 104 overnight, further emphasizing our observation that the number of cases ex-China has started to accelerate notably as the curve starts to resemble an exponential progression.
One WHO health expert told a Japanese TV station on Thursday that the virus is "a moving target" making it difficult to collect information and treat people: "Nobody has ever had to deal with this situation before, this is a new virus on a ship with 4,000 people, there are no guidelines for that." He added that he suspects there was a substantial amount of transmission before it arrived in Yokohama, adding that it was "not possible" to isolate everybody individually.
The WHO senior epidemiologist was responding to claims made by another expert in infectious disease that the Japanese had failed to observer proper quarantine protocols. Back in Korea, the mayor of Daegu, a city of 2.5 million where 10 South Koreans contracted the disease from a church service, asked residents to stay indoors. Iran also reported two infected that then died. ![]() Gold is $1,581/oz today. When it hits $2,000, it will be up 26.5%. Let's see how long that takes. - De 3/11/2013 - ANSWER: 7 Years, 5 Months |
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