by Snowball »
22 Mar 2020 13:05
"Only once we have factual answers to the following can we tell if this is serious or a load of bollocks:"UK1) How many get infected with (seasonal) flu?
2018/19 Winter Hospital Cases. (35 Weeks) =
The cumulative number of cases and deaths were slightly lower compared to the 2017 to 2018 season (3,245 cases (mean weekly incidence of 0.20 per 100,000) and 330 deaths) but higher than the 2016 to 2017 season (992 cases (mean weekly incidence of 0.06 per 100, 000) and 112 deaths) in England (Figure 17).
The case fatality rate (proportion of ICU/HDU influenza cases which have died due to influenza) was 9.3% (273/2,924) based on data from week 40 2018 to week 15 2019.
This compares with a case-fatality rate of 10.2% (330/3,245) in the previous 2017 to 2018 season.2) How many of those infected die? UK Only
0.1% (One tenth of a per cent)
If this is the population death rate and 330 die, that means 333,000 (333 Thousand) get seasonal flu)3) How many get infected with covoid?UK Only
Currently 5,018 CONFIRMED Cases (probably 6,000+ by the end of the day,
already almost double the 35-week count (3,245) for seasonal flu)
This is Week 40 2018 to Week 15 2019)4) How many die?Official Cases (Tested Positive)
9.10% Italy (percentage has been rising, don't know if it has stopped rising)
4.64% UK (percentage still rising)
4.30% World (percentage still rising)
These figures will rise (like Italy's did, because many already
sick will die, even if there wasn't another infection
It seems more than possible the death rate will pass 10% of confirmed cases.
Experts are saying that this virus is much more deadly than seasonal flu and
seasonal flu UK has a death rate for hospital cases around 10%.If the confirmed cases are 1 in 10 of actual cases, that would mean 1% of the population, ten times seasonal flu============================================
Gov.UK Annual Seasonal Flu Reports
https://www.gov.uk/government/statistic ... lu-reportsGOV.UK Figures for Seasonal Flu THIS Winterhttps://www.gov.uk/government/news/uk-f ... 19-to-2020Oxford University ReportQuote
Key Disease facts
Influenza (flu) is a very common, highly infectious disease caused by a virus. It can be very dangerous, causing serious complications and death, especially for people in risk groups. In rare cases flu can kill people who are otherwise healthy.
In the UK it is estimated that an average of 600 people a year die from complications of flu.
(Snowball >> That is 1 in 100,000)
In some years it is estimated that this can rise to over 10,000 deaths (see for example this UK study from 2013 , which estimated over 13,000 deaths resulting from flu in 2008-09).
Flu leads to hundreds of thousands of GP visits and tens of thousands of hospital stays a year.
The flu virus is very variable and changes over time. Each year there are different strains around, and a new vaccine has to be prepared to deal with them. Vaccination from previous years is not likely to protect people against current strains of flu.
There are three basic types of flu: A, B and C. Type A is the most dangerous; it is the one that can cause serious disease and also triggers worldwide pandemics. Type C causes mild disease. Type B can make you feel very ill, but it has never led to a worldwide pandemic.
Flu epidemics can kill thousands or even millions of people. The 1918 flu epidemic is estimated to have affected half the world's population, and killed 40-50 million people worldwide. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that flu kills between 250,000 and 500,000 people around the world every year.
In the UK (and in the rest of the northern hemisphere) the annual flu season runs from about October to March or April. Most cases of flu occur between December and February.
https://vk.ovg.ox.ac.uk/vk/influenza-flu