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Originally Posted by spino1i
So you test and confirm someone has coronavirus. How is that going to stop its spread? How are you going to track every person that person came into contact with? How would you even find their name? A lot of the spread would be among strangers. And even if you did, how would you get these people to cooperate?
This is exactly what they are doing in South Korea, New Zealand and Australia. And it is wroking very effectively.
Once somebody tests positive they track in both directions. They try to find out who they caught it from (and when) and they contact everyone who has been in contact with the infected individual since.
They then test every one of them and hold them all in quarantine until the negative test results come back. They also do the same for all family members.
Yes they won't ever be able to get to 100% of all contacted people but they easily reduce the rate of infection (R0) to much less than 1 which crushes the spread of the virus.
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These countries you mentioned that do this have had very low spread of the virus right from the get go. South Korea has had 11000 cases total. Contact tracing is a lot more effective when only a handful of people have it to begin with and society is very obedient and has a history of a very strong government with high amounts of surveillance. But it isn't going to work in America where there are over a million cases and the country is much more individualistic.
This is just untrue.
South Korea was rated number two after China in disease spread early on. The reason they limited the spread was that they shut down travel into and out of the region in question and ramped up testing to 10,000 tests a day so they could do tracing and reduce R0 to below 1.
This is the reason they had 11,000 cases total. They reduced the spread rate very very early on. Because they took this seriously from the getgo.
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https://www.businessinsider.com/sout...utbreak-2020-5
This sort of government surveillance is just not allowed in America and for good reason.
And South Korea can keep trying this for a while, but again, the virus isn't going anywhere, inevitably it will still spread and get the same number of people in South Korea it was going to get to begin with if they hadn't had any social distancing measures.
This is blatantly untrue.
They are crushing the spread of the virus easily. The entire nation wears masks.
Inevitably they will continue contact tracing and have very few deaths per capita.
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You aren't going to snuff the virus out by isolating everyone that has it and quarantining them for ever. That works if a few hundred people have it. But its spread too far to far flung areas of the globe for that to work anymore.
Of course you are going to snuff it out if you do this. And nobody is quarantined forever. The quarantine applies only to people who are infected and lasts 14 to 21 days.
edit: The one caveat is that you test all travelers into your locale (whether that be city/state/country) to insure that if they have Covid that they don't spread it within your community. This is how New Zealand and Australia have crushed the virus.
What you are probably referring to is shutting down various parts of the economy where social distancing can't happen (like sporting events, concerts, restaurants, religious services, gyms, barbers, etc.). And yes in countries like the US where we haven't gotten the virus under control and don't seem headed in that direction, there is little chance we will be able to safely re open those types of gatherings until a vaccine has been developed.
But that is not true in countries like New Zealand, Australia, South Korea, etc. that have brought the new case count to virtually zero on a daily basis. Because they took this seriously very early on and are cooperating with the government in terms of the tracing, they are relatively secure in terms of deaths as a result of Covid-19.
Believe it or not I am in favor of phased re-opening of the economy where people get to decide for themselves if they want to risk getting Covid-19. I would imagine that most people my age or older would choose to not go to restaurants, theater, concerts, movie theaters, etc. until a vaccine is developed. I certainly wouldn't.
But then there is poker. I want to resume playing tournament poker. If the WSOP is indeed held in the fall of 2020 I would love to participate. But these are the conditions that I would need before I would consider doing it:
- The R0 in Las Vegas would have to be well below 1 per infected individual (that is the rate of infection would have to be going down) and hospitals would have to have ample number of beds available for potential Covid-19 patients. Similarly with ICU beds and ventilators.
- The WSOP would have to restrict players from entering if they came from States/countries that had high infection rates. This means that testing in the US would have to ramp up considerably - as has been happening - from present testing.
- Ideally I would like to see all travelers coming in to Las Vegas have to take Covid tests. And ideally by then the results would take minutes not days (like a strep test now). Any traveler who test positive would have to go into quarantine until they test negative.
- I would like all potential players screened each day for fevers.
- All players would have to wear standard N95 masks (masks are only effective in stopping the spread if people are forced to breathe through the masks. Ideally the WSOP would provide the masks on entry each day.
- The WSOP would willingly participate in contact tracing. So if any individual tested positive who participated in a tournament then all players who came in contact (same room or section of the room) would be contacted and tested. And all players would have to sign waivers to that effect.
- Similarly, a prerequisite would be that all States/Countries allowed to play be doing contact tracing so that if at any point somebody tested positive that their place of origin would be contacted so that contact tracing could be initiated in the event that they contracted the disease before they left for Vegas.
The one thing I don't want to see happen is to have Vegas and the WSOP become ground zero for the spread of the virus. As of now I haven't heard the mayor of Las Vegas say anything that would lead me to believe that this would be dealt with. But perhaps the governor, who has been an advocate of controlling the spread of the pandemic would make testing/tracing happen.
Last edited by Mr Rick; 05-24-2020 at 04:19 PM.