yukmonkey said:How's it doing in the southern hemisphere?Bo Darville said:
We've seen no proof that this virus is susceptible to warm or humid weather. Not all viruses are.
YellowPot_97 said:yukmonkey said:How's it doing in the southern hemisphere?Bo Darville said:
We've seen no proof that this virus is susceptible to warm or humid weather. Not all viruses are.
24 cases in Australia, 15 have recovered, no deaths
1 cases just showed up in Brazil.
Nothing from Southern Africa or elsewhere below the equator.
Dry cough, initially low grade fever then escalating as you enter the severe phase (if you do). The pneumonia appears to be viral & bacterial. Usually does not have body aches or GI symptoms like flu. This one seems to be much more insidious onset with severe complications arising > 10 days into the illness.AgBQ-00 said:
This will be an elementary level question but I really don't want to go back and read the whole thread. I see symptoms are flu like or cold like. Fever, cough, shortness of breath. Do we have any specifics as far as mild or high fever? Or dry vs wet cough? Is the shortness of breath due to build up of phlegm that can't be cleared? Did a brief search but have not seen anything specific
Bobcat06 said:
Viruses are seasonal for two reasons:
1. Humidity is higher in the summer which decreases the mean free path a small particle (e.g. virus) can travel before encountering a water droplet
2. Viruses aren't alive. They're essentially complicated proteins. Under proper conditions, they could sit for a century and still be viable. They have to be denatured to be effectively "killed". Two things that are known to denature viruses are high temperature and irradiation, both more prevalent in the summer
That being said, this is a rule of thumb and not true for every virus. Watch Signapore to determine how the infection will progress during the summer.
AgBQ-00 said:
This will be an elementary level question but I really don't want to go back and read the whole thread. I see symptoms are flu like or cold like. Fever, cough, shortness of breath. Do we have any specifics as far as mild or high fever? Or dry vs wet cough? Is the shortness of breath due to build up of phlegm that can't be cleared? Did a brief search but have not seen anything specific
And also the general health and habits of the people who contracted.Quote:
Singapore is having success containing the virus and has not had any deaths. It is hard to tell whether its the climate or their fairly stringent containment actions. It's probably both.
What kind of weather do you guys think Singapore has year round?!?yukmonkey said:How's it doing in the southern hemisphere?Bo Darville said:
We've seen no proof that this virus is susceptible to warm or humid weather. Not all viruses are.
kingj3 said:
Asking again since more people are trafficking the forum:
Can the more medically knowledgeable give some theories about what this might look like and mean for daily life of the afflicted if this turn out to be similar to HIV in that you can not shake the virus.
Nuclear Scramjet said:YellowPot_97 said:yukmonkey said:How's it doing in the southern hemisphere?Bo Darville said:
We've seen no proof that this virus is susceptible to warm or humid weather. Not all viruses are.
24 cases in Australia, 15 have recovered, no deaths
1 cases just showed up in Brazil.
Nothing from Southern Africa or elsewhere below the equator.
Do you honestly expect a bunch of failed states in Africa that treat diseases as if they are curses from witch doctors have any capability of testing for this? Or that any of the corrupt South American countries have any idea what is happening or even care? I'd be amazed if we hear anything until they have tens of thousands dead.