Ralin wrote: ↑2020-02-25 06:56am
Isn't the concern as much about trying to stop this particular coronavirus from becoming a yearly recurring thing like flu season as it is about avoiding deaths in the near-term?
The major concern right now is preventing a global pandemic (which effort is not going perfectly). The virus running rampant among new hosts, even with a 1-2% death rate, will result in somewhere between 45 and over 100 million deaths (depending on whose figures you follow). That's
on top of all the "normal" deaths that society already copes with, which apparently number 50-60 million people a year (again, numbers vary depending on who you ask). So
potentially this could double the annual death toll for the planet. Or more. It
might. That doesn't mean it has to, but those accusing people
concerned about this virus of being hysterical or over-reacting are burying their heads in the sand. Being concerned and contemplating possible outcomes is not panic or fear-mongering, it's being prudent.
That said, yes, there ARE some frightened people out there doing bad shit like stealing masks from hospitals or otherwise engaged in panic moves. But they are a small minority (at this point). Any competent response to this threat will have to take into account that sort of human behavior.
In contrast, there are another group who keep grousing that it's all over-reaction. If we don't get a global pandemic they'll complain it was all an over-reaction of hysterical ninnies, ignoring all the efforts that went into to keeping it a regional problem rather than everyone's problem.
If it DOES go pandemic after the initial global sweep it will become an annual thing, like the colds (many of which are also coronaviruses) and flu we deal with every year, but because, after a pandemic, so many people will have had this and recovered (because the vast majority do recover) that it will become a relatively rare illness for that specific virus and blend into the background of other seasonal infections. Yes, it will still be more serious than some other coronavirus infections, but there will be fewer people to act as hosts (with so many recovered and presumably immune) so it would not produce concentrated centers of illness, it won't be able to travel as easily, and so forth.