I’ve invested a few pennies in odx.
The plan is to achieve design freeze on the tests in June.
Then manufacture and distribution afterwards.
https://register.gotowebinar.com/recording/2171214814960679183
You can view the webinar From yesterday on this by clicking the link above.
https://www.insidermedia.com/news/wales/consortium-making-significant-progress-on-antibody-test
Also the above from bbi who are a private member of the same consortium.
Hmmm. There’s been dozens of biotech firms touting finger prick serology kits that promise the earth but don’t deliver. I wouldn’t be putting my house on a start-up delivering a test that can match the accuracy of the Roche/Abbot tests, never mind surpass them. Especially if it’s going to be a do it yourself kit. Actually, never mind the house, I don’t think I’d risk my garden shed!
You never know though. I haven’t watched that webinar yet. Thanks for sharing.
The first wave was never really done in the states where we are seeing increases, for the most part. You can’t judge the US numbers as a whole any more so than one could the EU, as an example.
UK infection rates have fallen again - according to the ONS random sampling tests covering the period to the 7th March. Currently running at around 1 in 1700 in the general population, down from around 1 in a 1000 in the last report.
https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopula...naviruscovid19infectionsurveypilot/12june2020
"Out of the 19,933 participants' swab tests included in this analysis, 11 individuals in 8 households tested positive for COVID-19. As this is a household survey, our figures do not include people staying in hospitals, care homes or other institutional settings. In these settings, rates of COVID-19 infection are likely to be different.
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The Italian government said in their update today that in Lombardy 25% of people tested are coming back positive for Covid antibodies. It's likely to be slightly off because lots are refusing tests, but it's way higher than anything announced so far.
The figure for healthcare workers is 12%. Possibly it's low because we segregated Covid hospitals early on and all healthcare workers kept well away from other people.
How big a region is Lombardy? Something that only occurred to me recently is that serology tests will always underestimated true exposure. We know that antibodies decrease fairly quickly and a proportion of people don’t generate much antibodies at all (especially milder cases). So if we’re getting 25% positive serology, then true exposure could be maybe even double that. Which is getting close to the sort of exposure needed for herd immunity.
If prior exposure gives you immunity (that’s a very big if)
How big a region is Lombardy? Something that only occurred to me recently is that serology tests will always underestimated true exposure. We know that antibodies decrease fairly quickly and a proportion of people don’t generate much antibodies at all (especially milder cases). So if we’re getting 25% positive serology, then true exposure could be maybe even double that. Which is getting close to the sort of exposure needed for herd immunity.
If prior exposure gives you immunity (that’s a very big if)
10 million. There is a lot of variation between excess deaths in different provinces in Lombardy, which would not be possible if spread was 50%. I haven't seen anyone mention that antibodies decrease quickly enough for it to make a large difference to these studies, any links to contrary?How big a region is Lombardy? Something that only occurred to me recently is that serology tests will always underestimated true exposure. We know that antibodies decrease fairly quickly and a proportion of people don’t generate much antibodies at all (especially milder cases). So if we’re getting 25% positive serology, then true exposure could be maybe even double that. Which is getting close to the sort of exposure needed for herd immunity.
If prior exposure gives you immunity (that’s a very big if)
I suppose the next weekly figures will be the interesting ones as it would start to include infections from the mass gatherings and protest from last weekend, if there's to be an increase at all.
The broad downwards indicator is reasonable though. The main sources of the error margins are the tests themselves and the way that, as the disease becomes less common across the country, it becomes easier to miss local hotspots. For this stage in the UK, it's probably a more important test set statistically speaking than the one that the NHS produces based on people with symptoms or those in particular locations (like a care home) to be tested.The margins of error are huge and overlapping.
If there's no increase then this whole covid fiasco is doubtful at every avenue.I suppose the next weekly figures will be the interesting ones as it would start to include infections from the mass gatherings and protest from last weekend, if there's to be an increase at all.
Where would people be without the government's detailed and specific guidance?:
'Q. What do you say to businesses in the south-west who are actually quite worried about the R value?
Shapps says stay alert and stay at home as much as possible.
Q. Is it acceptable that student nurses who answered the government’s call to join the frontline response to Covid-19 are being asked to carry out duties beyond their level of competence? How will they be fully protected and supported?
Shapps says people should be working in areas in which they are and feel competent.'
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Absolutely pathetic.
If there's no increase then this whole covid fiasco is doubtful at every avenue.
Sounds reasonable.Seattle coronavirus survivor gets a $1.1 million, 181-page hospital bill
https://www.seattletimes.com/seattl...obox_f&utm_source=Facebook#Echobox=1592007864
The 10-hour surgery took several hours longer than expected because inflammation left the patient’s lungs “completely plastered to tissue around them, the heart, the chest wall and diaphragm”.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...ung-transplant-chicago?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Case of a 20 year old patient with severe covid who got a lung transplant. Interesting bit here
The lungs being matted to surrounding structures might explain the post recovery prolonged chest pain being a prominent feature
This is the diseased lung and chest xray
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...ung-transplant-chicago?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
Case of a 20 year old patient with severe covid who got a lung transplant. Interesting bit here
The lungs being matted to surrounding structures might explain the post recovery prolonged chest pain being a prominent feature
This is the diseased lung and chest xray
![]()
2020 says: challenge accepted.Not bad, i was expecting worse
Not bad, i was expecting worse
We're one of the countries with the least under reporting. It's believed we're under reporting by about 30% A lot of countries its estimated are under reporting by 100% or more. That's not a everyone else is lying thing, just that they won't know the true figures yet for a while.Why is the death rate in Uk so high?
Twas inevitable. I'm surprised it took this long, actually.