newyorkguy
Penultimate Amazing
This is from one of the two studies linked by Sherkeu.
Below is a quoted that was linked here previously -- the New York Times news story is from August 4th -- but look at the experience Israel had:
I was recently reading a profile of an Italian woman named Gianna Pomata who spent most of her life working as a professor at the John Hopkins Medical University in Baltimore, before retiring and returning to her native Italy. She is buoyed by the way Italy has handled the pandemic and greatly troubled by the way the U.S. has seemingly struggled. The hostility in the U.S. towards following basic medical guidelines -- wear a face mask, practice social distancing -- is particularly troubling and, at the same time, somewhat baffling.
In the new Pediatrics study, Klara M. Posfay-Barbe, M.D., a faculty member at University of Geneva's medical school, and her colleagues studied-
- The households of 39 Swiss children infected with Covid-19. Contact tracing revealed that in only three (8%) was a child the suspected index case, with symptom onset preceding illness in adult household contacts.
- In a recent study in China, contact tracing demonstrated that, of the 68 children with Covid-19 admitted to Qingdao Women's and Children's Hospital from January 20 to February 27, 2020, 96% were household contacts of previously infected adults.
- In a French study, a boy with Covid-19 exposed over 80 classmates at three schools to the disease. None contracted it.
- In a study in New South Wales, nine infected students and nine staff across 15 schools exposed a total of 735 students and 128 staff to Covid-19. Only two secondary infections resulted, one transmitted by an adult to a child.
Below is a quoted that was linked here previously -- the New York Times news story is from August 4th -- but look at the experience Israel had:
As the United States and other countries anxiously consider how to reopen schools, Israel, one of the first countries to do so, illustrates the dangers of moving too precipitously. Confident it had beaten the coronavirus and desperate to reboot a devastated economy, the Israeli government invited the entire student body back in late May. Within days, infections were reported at a Jerusalem high school, which quickly mushroomed into the largest outbreak in a single school in Israel, possibly the world. The virus rippled out to the students’ homes and then to other schools and neighborhoods, ultimately infecting hundreds of students, teachers and relatives. Link to Times story
I was recently reading a profile of an Italian woman named Gianna Pomata who spent most of her life working as a professor at the John Hopkins Medical University in Baltimore, before retiring and returning to her native Italy. She is buoyed by the way Italy has handled the pandemic and greatly troubled by the way the U.S. has seemingly struggled. The hostility in the U.S. towards following basic medical guidelines -- wear a face mask, practice social distancing -- is particularly troubling and, at the same time, somewhat baffling.
“What I see right now in the United States is that the pandemic has not led to new creative thinking but, on the contrary, has strengthened all the worst, most stereotypical, and irrational ways of thinking. I’m very sorry for the state of your country, which seems to be in the grip of a horrible attack of unreason.” She continued, “I’m sorry because I love it, and have received so much from it.” The New Yorker magazine

