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You’ve just jinxed uk
A patient with underlying health conditions has become the first person in the UK to die after testing positive for coronavirus.
The Royal Berkshire NHS Trust said they were an "older patient" who had been "in and out of hospital for non-coronavirus reasons".
The patient "was admitted and last night tested positive for coronavirus".
It comes as the number of UK people diagnosed with the virus reached 116, a rise of more than 30 since Wednesday.
Meanwhile, the prime minister's official spokesman said it was "highly likely the virus is going to spread in a significant way".
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-51759602
Let's be honest, the only thing that will come out of the government's promise to bridge the North-South divide is Coronavirus.
4 cases according to his site.
All countries are managing the information flow on coronavirus.
https://www.worldometers.info/coronavirus/
Italy has recorded 769 new cases and 41 new deaths taking the to total to 3858 cases and 148 deaths.
A professor of microbiology from the University of Milan was asked about that on Radio 4. He suggested two factors:
1. Mild cases are not being fully recorded so that the actual size of the outbreak is greater than that upon which the calculation is based; and
2. The worst affected areas are popular with retired people such that it may be that the profile of the affected population includes a higher proportion of the elderly.
Yes. Ive looked into it quite closely as I spend a few months a year in China and Hong Kong. This is what I posted a few days ago on another thread.
...."We are in danger of being misled by the figures coming out of China. The infection rates and mortality rate will not pan out the exact same way in every country.
The spread and death rate relate directly to government / population response and quality of medical care. The World Health Organisation did an extensive report into the China response. They cinclude that lockdowns in hotspot areas was key to stop the spread - China were very quick to act. The excellent medical care they provided prevented a much higher death rate. The 2 together prevented a greater catastrophe.
China gave health care for Covid19 free to all (where they previously would pay) and built new specialist care centres. They extended prescriptions to 3 months so patients were covered without needing to return to medical centres and, so, maybe infect others.
If other countries do not match this response the outcome will be very different.
If countries are negligent, as, initially, in Italy or have a poor medical response, as in Iran, the problem can quickly run out of control."