Where did you go to medical school?
I didn't, but I'm not talking about the biology, or trying to explain the mechanisms of the disease. Those are subjects for the doctors to discuss.
What I'm talking about is statistics. I'm an engineer, and applying math to the real world, and analyzing numbers is something I AM qualified to do.
Besides, there is nothing in what I posted that isn't just common sense if you think about it.
Here's a simple example of how the numbers work.
Suppose you have 10,000 infected with the virus.
But since it is something new, of those 10,000 infected only 1,000 have been tested and tested positive.
Of those 34 have died.
So, at this point you have 1,000 KNOWN cases and 34 dead - a 3.4% mortality rate for those known cases. OMG! 3.4% a mortality rate!
But in reality what you actually have is 10,000 infected, 9,000 of them undiagnosed, and 34 dead. Which gives you a true mortality rate of 34 per 10,000 or .34%
We KNOW there are a lot more people infected than have been tested and proven to have the virus. Hell, that is one of the things they're screaming about as a possible cause for it turning into a pandemic. That there are a lot of people infected wandering around with no symptoms infecting others, right?
We also know that at least 96.6% of the people infected with it survive. From those two things we know that there may be thousands, or maybe tens of thousands, or even hundreds of thousands who are infected or have already had it and got over it - an unknown number of them without ever being diagnosed.
So as I said, we don't know the actual mortality rate. We know the upper limit of what it could be - the 3.4% figure that the media is hyping. But since we have absolutely NO IDEA how many actual cases there are, we really only know that the true mortality rate can't be higher than that - and logically it has to be lower. Almost certainly a LOT lower. Like by a factor of 10 or even 100. Most likely it is somewhere in between.
The funny thing is this isn't even a new virus - the Israelis have already developed a prototype vaccine for coronavirus that is ready for clinical trials. How? Because just by coincidence some researchers there happened to already be working on a vaccine for this family of viruses long BEFORE the outbreak in China.
Anyway, I don't have to be a doctor to understand how numbers and statistics work. It's pretty common sense if a person just puts aside all the hype and panic and looks at it realistically instead.
Another point to ponder. Last I looked, not counting the cruise ship where almost everyone got it - over 95% of the cases detected so far are in China, Korea, and Japan. If you look at the map Korea is right there between mainland China and Japan. So 95% of the known cases are concentrated in that one geographic area. After nearly 2 months.
There have been 9 deaths in the US so far. One 50-something guy with other serious health problems, and the rest were all elderly residents of one nursing home. What groups suffer the most deaths from all flu strains? Oh yeah, that's right, the elderly and those with other serious health issues.
FWIW, that nursing home with the 8 deaths is right here in my home state. In Kirkland, right down the street from where I lived for 16 years in fact. The ninth death was a guy in Everett about 40 miles from the nursing home. Though in all fairness I don't live there anymore - I live 300 miles away from there now.
So, crunching the numbers and applying a little common sense, I'm not worried. Any more than I was about West Nile, Zika, Swine Flu, Bird Flu, Ebola, Hantavirus, or even HIV. They have all been "the NEXT pandemic" - until none of them were.