I wonder what those numbers would look like taking into account that there has been much more testing online in the last several weeks? (so of course the number of detected positives goes up)
I grant that the worst might not be behind us, but I also keep in mind that the experts said from the beginning that most likely outcomes are that this will become another variant of the common cold or flare up some years similar to a bad flue season [0]
I also agree that this needs to be watched, and I appreciate your realistic appraisal of lockdowns despite the possible remaining danger.
The idea is that it will decrease in severity over time. It may already be doing so. In early March they were tracking a dozen mutations already.
From the linked article [0], quoting a number of infectious disease experts, coronavirus researchers, epidemiologist, etc:
>OC43 and 229E are more prevalent than other endemic human coronaviruses, especially in children and the elderly. Together, the four are responsible for an estimated one-quarter of all colds. “For the most part they cause common-cold-type symptoms,” said Richard Webby, an influenza expert at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. “Maybe that is the most likely end scenario if this thing becomes entrenched.”
>Odds: Moderate. “I think there is a reasonable probability that this becomes the fifth community-acquired coronavirus,” Adalja said, something he expanded on in his blog. Webby agreed: “I have a little bit of hope that, OK, we’ll put up with a couple of years of heightened [2019-nCoV] activity before settling down to something like the other four coronaviruses.”
>Odds: Pretty good. What we may be seeing “is the emergence of a new coronavirus … that could very well become another seasonal pathogen that causes pneumonia,” said infectious disease expert Michael Osterholm of the University of Minnesota. It would be “more than a cold” and less than SARS: “The only other pathogen I can compare it to is seasonal influenza.”
(The article had a lot of other interesting and relevant information.)
I grant that the worst might not be behind us, but I also keep in mind that the experts said from the beginning that most likely outcomes are that this will become another variant of the common cold or flare up some years similar to a bad flue season [0]
I also agree that this needs to be watched, and I appreciate your realistic appraisal of lockdowns despite the possible remaining danger.
[0] https://www.statnews.com/2020/02/04/two-scenarios-if-new-cor...