Tracking the next pandemic: Avian Flu Talk |
Austria’s strict lockdown |
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Pixie
Admin Group Joined: June 05 2006 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 19668 |
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Posted: November 14 2020 at 1:51pm |
https://amp.ft.com/content/33242eab-79c3-4b93-a266-9e3a7be6164e?__twitter_impression=true November 14, 2020 5:59 pm by Sam Jones in Zurich Austria’s government has ordered one of the strictest lockdowns in Europe, with chancellor Sebastian Kurz telling the public to “meet nobody” as the country battles a surge in coronavirus infections. “One contact is one contact too many,” Mr Kurz said on Saturday, as he unveiled a raft of restrictive measures that will put much of public and economic life in the alpine country on hold. An “around-the-clock” curfew will apply from Tuesday, with people only allowed to leave their homes to buy groceries, travel to essential work or provide urgent care. Austria’s second lockdown will be stricter than others in Europe, such as that recently imposed in France, because schools will also close. Only supermarkets, pharmacies, banks and post offices will be allowed to stay open. Working from home will be mandatory, except for those who provide essential services. On Friday, Austrian public health authorities reported 9,586 new coronavirus infections. The government introduced a range of softer restrictions earlier this month in an effort to curb the growth in cases, but despite these efforts officials have been alarmed at the speed numbers have risen. Health minister Rudolf Anschober, speaking alongside Mr Kurz at a press conference on Saturday, said that the number of patients with Covid-19 in the country’s hospitals had doubled in the past two weeks. |
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EdwinSm,
Moderator Joined: April 03 2013 Status: Offline Points: 24065 |
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It seemed that much of the eastern part of Europe had a relatively mild first wave, and Austria is in that category (lower figures than Germany), Now with the second wave it seems as if it is out of control in the whole region, including Austria. |
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cn65
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From which we might conclude that mask wearing introduced at the end of the first wave in such places including France and Spain does precisely nothing to control the spread. |
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WitchMisspelled
Adviser Group Joined: January 20 2020 Status: Offline Points: 17170 |
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Perhaps I haven't had enough coffee yet, but can you expand on that theory cn65? |
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Technophobe
Assistant Admin Joined: January 16 2014 Location: Scotland Status: Offline Points: 88450 |
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You had better have some great evidence (Austria is not it) if you want that theory accepted, cn65. Proper scientific studies on mask wearing demonstrate it reduces infection rates by significant amounts*. None of the studies claim that mask wearing stops transmission, but the consensus agrees that it has a huge statistical effect. Possibly as high as 90% if the mask wearer is the infected person. Epidemiologically speaking, that renders it a vital tool in viral supression. Alone, it would not help much, but added to hygene, distancing, testing, tracing, isolations and lockdowns it is an important link in the chain. None of those other methods is 100% either. But when all are put together, the R rate can be dropped below 1. If there is a failure of compliance, understanding, planning or organisation and even one of the tools fail, you get an Austria situation. This is a fairly nasty virus, made much worse by its contagiousness, numbers of asymptomatic patients and additional animal hosts. Making this even worse, people are suffering from covid fatigue in most countries and getting sufficient compliance to supress the spread is becoming harder. It is more important now to keep our guard up than ever before. Austria's problems await the unwary and the worst time to catch something is when the ICU beds are full. 'And do I practice what I preach? I don't go out in public at all these days. I wear a mask for deliveries and disinfect post, using a disinfectant containing soap which inactivates this virus (as it is enveloped). |
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How do you tell if a politician is lying?
His lips or pen are moving. |
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