The point is the more people is infected and overcome the virus, the less transmissible it is, or the less harm it makes.
Remember: all that measures aim to avoid the collapse of the HealthCare System, just that.
BTW, these measures wasn't recommended by the @CDCgov
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Replying to @angeluisfc @dhoze1 and
no, that’s a completely separate effect, and furthermore, the more infections, the more chances it has to mutate
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Replying to @DanielleFong @dhoze1 and
Mutations doesn’t mean more or less infective or lethal, just to be accurate
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Replying to @angeluisfc @dhoze1 and
sure, but when mutations sum up to something acting differently it’s called a variant, that’s what we are discussing
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Replying to @DanielleFong @angeluisfc and
Norovirus, influenza, adenovirus, rinovirus, measles, chickenpox, coronavirus... Have been replicating hundreds of years, to levels orders of magnitude greater than C19. After all of that (some of them with larger R) they are essentially the SAME virus to this day.
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Replying to @BuenoEnfurecido @angeluisfc and
some of the viruses we have already defeated are / were super terrible, like smallpox and polio. flu changes a lot. the p.1 variant in brazil has a vastly higher attack rate and evades prior immunity.
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Replying to @DanielleFong @BuenoEnfurecido and
Could you let me see the study about the p.1 variant in Brazil? I assume u refer to C19
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Replying to @angeluisfc @BuenoEnfurecido and
unfortunately because the brazilian government has underprioritized the effort against covid there are a limited number of studies for the brazilian variant, so there's not as much good science as you would like this is a decent survey not too out of datehttps://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/what-we-know-about-the-p1-variant-of-the-coronavirus.html …
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Replying to @DanielleFong @angeluisfc and
the most compelling piece of anecdata i've heard comes from an interview with contact tracers working in Manaus, heard over the BBC World Service. "previously, we would contact trace people, and of 3 contacts maybe one would get the disease, now it is *everybody"
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Replying to @DanielleFong @BuenoEnfurecido and
So, there’s no scientific evidence of neither the variant is more lethal nor more transmissible Article citing people and a BBC interview That’s far from serious from any newspaper or radio But just a point:pic.twitter.com/ma8edKmEF7
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yes, they are working on a booster, there may be some success here but having very many variants will overtask our vaccine efforts, and it's not apriori clear that a variant will not evade any number of our extant vaccine strategies
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