Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Medicine

Anxious WHO Implores World To 'Do It All' in Long War on COVID-19 (reuters.com) 343

The World Health Organization warned on Monday that there might never be a "silver bullet" for COVID-19 in the form of a perfect vaccine and that the road to normality would be long, with some countries requiring a reset of strategy. From a report: More than 18.14 million people around the world are reported to have been infected with the disease and 688,080 have died, according to a Reuters tally, with some nations that thought they were over the worst experiencing a resurgence. WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus and WHO emergencies head Mike Ryan exhorted nations to rigorously enforce health measures such as mask-wearing, social distancing, hand-washing and testing. "The message to people and governments is clear: 'Do it all'," Tedros told a virtual news briefing from the U.N. body's headquarters in Geneva. He said face masks should become a symbol of solidarity round the world. "A number of vaccines are now in phase three clinical trials and we all hope to have a number of effective vaccines that can help prevent people from infection. However, there's no silver bullet at the moment -- and there might never be."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Anxious WHO Implores World To 'Do It All' in Long War on COVID-19

Comments Filter:
  • by timeOday ( 582209 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @12:14PM (#60360747)
    I'm working from home and wearing a mask, and working from home.

    But if the vaccines later this year and early next year don't work, man, I don't know. Then we're back to "everybody's going to be exposed eventually, might as well get it over with."

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @12:26PM (#60360811)

      Then we're back to "everybody's going to be exposed eventually, might as well get it over with."

      With all the nice long-term health issues even people with no or minimal symptoms are having, that sounds like a very bad idea. Also seems immunity may be only short-term (which basically is the problem a vaccine may have), so you get a chance to be maimed or killed again and again and again. Just as the flu, just 5 times as deadly (or 50x as deadly if the medical system gets overwhelmed) and with a nice high risk of serious issues afterwards, which are rare with the flu.

      • If immunity is fairly short-lived, and if you face fresh odds of big problems with every infection, then I can see your point - there would be a (statistical) benefit of just getting it "less often" over the course of your life.

        I would think there would be a huge correlation between subsequent infections in the same individual, such that if you're OK the first time you'd probably be OK subsequently - until over time your risk factors change, e.g. getting old. But, I'm sure nobody knows the degree to wh

        • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @12:57PM (#60360999)

          I would think there would be a huge correlation between subsequent infections in the same individual, such that if you're OK the first time you'd probably be OK subsequently - until over time your risk factors change, e.g. getting old. But, I'm sure nobody knows the degree to which that is true or false yet.

          Except there are indications of long term damage to organs such as the heart and lungs in people that recover from Covid19. So there's always a risk that those long term effects mean that if/when Covid21 rolls around the compounded damage is too much for your body to take.

      • I would expect that even with short-term immunity -- some months of perfect immunity and some following months of decreased risk of infection and/or reduced severity of illness -- there will be huge vaccination pushes that will dramatically reduce the pool of susceptible individuals, driving the basic reproduction number down far enough that you might be able to extinguish it regionally for a period of time. Do that enough, and it might extinguish it for good, especially with some level of coordination for

        • Even at 6 months immunity I think you would have a challenge, especially for the vaccines that have nasty side effects.

      • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @02:29PM (#60361419)

        Also seems immunity may be only short-term

        I've never understood the people making this claim.

        The basis for the claim is a few months after you get over your COVID infection, the level of anti-COVID antibodies goes down or disappears entirely.

        That's exactly how the immune system works. You fight off the infection, then you stop making the antibodies and some memory cells are stored away in case you get infected again. You don't make tons of antibodies for every disease you've ever been infected with.

        The claim that immunity is short-lived seems like massive click-baiting.

    • by spun ( 1352 )

      No thanks, have you read what this fucking monstrosity does to the body, long term? It's a blood vessel disease. It pokes holes in your blood vessels. Heart damage, stroke, blood clots kicking the shit out of every major organ, this is not a "lung disease" at all. Even "asymptomatic" folks are actually showing severe pathology. And you don't build up much of an immunity to it at all, naturally. People are getting it a second, even third time.

    • If the vaccines don't work, that could imply immunity is short lived, That would change your calculation of "everybody's going to be exposed eventually, might as well get it over with." to "everybody's going to be exposed eventually, and then over and over again"

    • There may never be 'silver bullet', WHO warns - BBC News

      https://www.bbc.com/news/live/... [bbc.com]

  • The average joe really like solutions like silver bullet. They get pretty disappointed when someone points that the solution rely on the people itself, not in a magical solution or big hero.
  • To do it all again?

  • Better that people like Herman Cain, Bill Montgomery, and John McDaniel die as they stick it to the liberals and their hoax about coronavirus. These deaths will both help raise the IQ of the country and prevent them from voting for the con artist in a few months.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Monday August 03, 2020 @01:22PM (#60361161) Journal

    Summary: Keep fragiles safe while building herd immunity, and don't overwhelm ERs and ICUs

    What some have been saying all along.

    Hoping for a vaccine is icing on the cake, but we can't plan for that.

    A prediction: Once this is over, and safely past the hot air of the US election, cooler analysis will tally the downsides of the shutdown, and measure it against the death rates with it, and offer an optimized path to get through the next one.

    My prediction: Riding the line of what hospitals can handle en route to herd immunity will be that path.

    Don't downmod. File it away and let's see in a few years.

  • At this point the WHO doesn't have much credibility left. But the statement that there probably will never be "one silver bullet to prevent Covid-19" is accurate according to my personal research. After personally reading a large [virtual] stack of papers from doctors around the world who have been testing different ways to treat the virus, and some rather interesting indirect ways of preventing transmission (Shycocan), I came to the same conclusion: there is no single way to treat or prevent Covid-19, b

"If it ain't broke, don't fix it." - Bert Lantz

Working...