Once you have rampant outbreaks, yeah, contact-tracing gets overwhelmed, whatever the rule. South Korea which used very aggressive contact-tracing to stamp out terrible outbreaks tracked everyone in same indoor space—even giant clubs. But you can only do that early in the game.
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zeynep tufekci Retweeted
Yes, viruses like to take breaks, too, especially if people are eating or drinking! (Let's ocus on explaining mechanisms properly, including airborne transmission, rather than providing rigid/binary rules & incorrect/incomplete explanations, part zillion). https://twitter.com/Amtrak/status/1356981157754208257 …
zeynep tufekci added,
This Tweet is unavailable.8 replies 33 retweets 216 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted Linsey Marr
While we are at it—and while noting that many experts in countries like Japan (and SK/Taiwan/HK) had airborne-transmission (AND overdispersion AND presymptomatic transmission) nailed by February 2020—here's our own imitable
@linseymarr on March 5th, 2020.https://twitter.com/linseymarr/status/1235640400054046724 …zeynep tufekci added,
6 replies 41 retweets 184 likesShow this thread -
zeynep tufekci Retweeted Linsey Marr
While we are at it—and while noting that many experts in countries like Japan (and SK/Taiwan/HK) had airborne-transmission (AND overdispersion AND presymptomatic transmission) nailed by February 2020—here's our own INimitable
@linseymarr on March 5th, 2020https://twitter.com/linseymarr/status/1235640400054046724 …zeynep tufekci added,
3 replies 22 retweets 92 likesShow this thread -
Went back my July article on ventilation & aerosol transmission that I wrote after listening to the infectious disease experts in Japan & Hong Kong, aerosol experts here like
@linseymarr & reading the epi papers/reports that were, basically, yelling at us. https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2020/07/why-arent-we-talking-more-about-airborne-transmission/614737/ …pic.twitter.com/kzICCnVE9d
3 replies 52 retweets 164 likesShow this thread -
We may *finally* be at a turning point for aerosols and airborne transmission—not just lip service but real recognition. Few of the Twitter people who've been saying this—and working so hard to be heard—for a year:
@linseymarr@j_g_allen@kprather88@Don_Milton@ShellyMBoulder3 replies 48 retweets 229 likesShow this thread -
Replying to @zeynep @linseymarr and
Yep - full year, almost to the day. First piece for me was Feb 9. Covers aerosols, ventilation, MERV-13 filters, portable air cleaners w/ high efficiency filters, humidity...https://www.ft.com/content/5083fd42-4812-11ea-aee2-9ddbdc86190d …
2 replies 10 retweets 50 likes -
Replying to @j_g_allen @zeynep and
major US newspaper declined to take this in late January, so that's why I went international w/ FT. Wouldn't be til mid-March that I could land a similar piece in US newspaper...
2 replies 3 retweets 29 likes -
Replying to @j_g_allen @linseymarr and
It's February 2021, and I think we're finally there. The thing that's so frustrating is that the evidence seems to have become pretty solid—from the epi record and more—by February/March. Too many cases and patterns that just couldn't be explained away. And yet...1 reply 1 retweet 15 likes -
I can only hope we learn from this. It's going to be such a stark story, in retrospect.
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Replying to @zeynep @j_g_allen and
So are the transmission modes for other common viruses, such as coronaviruses etc. also the same? In other words, have we been getting it wrong for other viruses also?
1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Likely.
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes - Show replies
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