Not very long ago there were *only* 6 deaths from Covid 19 in China. More recently there were *only* 6 deaths in Iran, Italy etc.
I read his post in a completely different vein! Weird, eh.
That's how flu epidemics start, too. Thing is, flu
is dangerous. A lot of people die from it. A lot, if not most, of those deaths could be avoided by early voluntary isolation (to isolate symptom-free infected carriers, stopping the spread). We don't, and I find that utterly stupid; similar to driving against traffic lights.
Covid-19 is very flu-like. Like for influenza viruses, there are no known antiviral treatments. There are vaccines for the three main influenza variants, but their efficacy varies; and sometimes the variant is a different one than actually spreads most. Covid-19 seems to spread a little slower, but with a longer incubation period, and have a higher mortality rate (as it tends to stress kidneys more in patients who get seriously ill). The differences are quite minor, really.
Yes, it is a different virus. Yes, both will kill a large number of people, albeit a very small fraction of the population; nothing like the black death in the middle ages (which killed about 45% of Europe's population in five years or so), or the Spanish Flu in early 1900s (which killed about 2.4% of humans on Earth). It has been too long since the last really bad flu epidemic, I guess, since people are freaking so bad right now.
Because of the low likelihood of death for any particular individual, infected or not, there is no need to panic. Yes, a lot of people will die, but there is a stupendous number of humans on this planet; way too many for an ordinary human to understand or grasp in any intuitive manner. (We can "feel" amounts up to a couple of thousand, but above that, we abstract, and instead count groups of humans.)
In particular, the overall death toll from covid-19 will almost certainly be no different than a bad flu season; at most at the level of pandemic expected to occur from one of the influenza viruses every three decades or so. All the statistics bear the signs of that (since we can very simply compare them to old ones, except that we now have better information networks and much more data).
Also, the Chinese response to the virus is rather exemplary. I do not know
why they reacted so strongly, but it definitely was effective. In the coming weeks, we will see that the number of deaths in Europe will be much higher, because of the ideological/political opposition to any sort of borders or restriction on movements -- that is my guess and bet. I estimate we are only in the second week of the infected but symptomless carriers spreading the virus, so the true spike in cases will be a week to three weeks away still. If that does happen, we know from the Chinese example that it could have been avoided. Hopefully I'm completely wrong, though.