The Coronavirus Fiasco

If there is one article you read today, read this one! This ties right into what we have explained to you about the fear and hype of the Coronavirus.

We have explained the Coronavirus kills about 2% of those infected. That is from official’s numbers when this first kicked off. The CDC is saying the new numbers are 3.4%.

However, this paper explains they are basing these numbers off unreliable data. Which in turn means, governments are making rash decisions that are not warranted.

This paper will explain, the Diamond Princess cruise ship is the perfect example to see what the Coronavirus can do among a population. The mortality rate was just 1% from the Coronavirus! Here is the kicker, the cruise ship was largely an older population. This further backs up everything we have been explaining to you.

It gets even better, read on…

Stat News explains,

This evidence fiasco creates tremendous uncertainty about the risk of dying from Covid-19. Reported case fatality rates, like the official 3.4% rate from the World Health Organization, cause horror — and are meaningless. Patients who have been tested for SARS-CoV-2 are disproportionately those with severe symptoms and bad outcomes. As most health systems have limited testing capacity, selection bias may even worsen in the near future.

The one situation where an entire, closed population was tested was the Diamond Princess cruise ship and its quarantine passengers. The case fatality rate there was 1.0%, but this was a largely elderly population, in which the death rate from Covid-19 is much higher.

Projecting the Diamond Princess mortality rate onto the age structure of the U.S. population, the death rate among people infected with Covid-19 would be 0.125%. But since this estimate is based on extremely thin data — there were just seven deaths among the 700 infected passengers and crew — the real death rate could stretch from five times lower (0.025%) to five times higher (0.625%). It is also possible that some of the passengers who were infected might die later, and that tourists may have different frequencies of chronic diseases — a risk factor for worse outcomes with SARS-CoV-2 infection — than the general population. Adding these extra sources of uncertainty, reasonable estimates for the case fatality ratio in the general U.S. population vary from 0.05% to 1%.

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