You Probably Won't Catch the Coronavirus From Frozen Food (nytimes.com) 83
Amid a flurry of concern over reports that frozen chicken wings imported to China from Brazil had tested positive for the coronavirus, experts said on Thursday that the likelihood of catching the virus from food -- especially frozen, packaged food -- is exceedingly low. From a report: "This means somebody probably handled those chicken wings who might have had the virus," said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Columbia University. "But it doesn't mean, 'Oh my god, nobody buy any chicken wings because they're contaminated.'" Guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention maintain that "there is no evidence to suggest that handling food or consuming food is associated with Covid-19." The main route the virus is known to take from person to person is through spray from sneezing, coughing, speaking or even breathing.
"I make no connection between this and any fear that this is the cause of any long-distance transmission events," said C. Brandon Ogbunu, a disease ecologist at Yale University. When the virus crosses international boundaries, it's almost certainly chauffeured by people, rather than the commercial products they ship. The chicken wings were screened on Wednesday in Shenzhen's Longgang district, where officials have been testing imports for the presence of coronavirus genetic material, or RNA. Several samples taken from the outer packaging of frozen seafood, some of which had been shipped in from Ecuador, recently tested positive for virus RNA in China's Anhui, Shaanxi and Shandong provinces as well. Laboratory procedures that search for RNA also form the basis of most of the coronavirus tests performed in people. But RNA is only a proxy for the presence of the virus, which can leave behind bits of its genetic material even after it has been destroyed, Dr. Ogbunu said. "This is just detecting the signature that the virus has been there at some point," he said.
"I make no connection between this and any fear that this is the cause of any long-distance transmission events," said C. Brandon Ogbunu, a disease ecologist at Yale University. When the virus crosses international boundaries, it's almost certainly chauffeured by people, rather than the commercial products they ship. The chicken wings were screened on Wednesday in Shenzhen's Longgang district, where officials have been testing imports for the presence of coronavirus genetic material, or RNA. Several samples taken from the outer packaging of frozen seafood, some of which had been shipped in from Ecuador, recently tested positive for virus RNA in China's Anhui, Shaanxi and Shandong provinces as well. Laboratory procedures that search for RNA also form the basis of most of the coronavirus tests performed in people. But RNA is only a proxy for the presence of the virus, which can leave behind bits of its genetic material even after it has been destroyed, Dr. Ogbunu said. "This is just detecting the signature that the virus has been there at some point," he said.
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Re:Probably (Score:5, Informative)
And what's slashdot got to do with biology and diseases anyway?
Biology nerds are nerds too, and on the scale of things that matter it's quite high.
If you want a site that only talks about Linux Kernel releases all day go to Phoronix
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Oh of course, you are correct. My bad. But then so are watchmaker nerds too and racing car nerds yet I don't remember a single article or news item on the intricacies of il destriero scafusia or technical prowess of aerodynamical design of gordon murray. Do you? Or to bring it back on track, what's travelling salesman got to do with bioinformatics? But anyway, I stand corrected.
No-one is stopping you from creating these stories...
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Did you buy your low UID of someone? Because you can't be the legitimate original owner if you...
But then so are watchmaker nerds
... missed the many stories about the design of the Apple watch, about TAG Heuer's newer watches, or Swatch's efforts over the year to say nothing of the fact that Slashdot ran a story specifically about classical watchmaking https://slashdot.org/story/06/... [slashdot.org]. I mean that in itself would be embarrasing enough to miss but then you also ...
and racing car nerds
somehow missed the story we've had about Audi dropping a driver from their
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Of course biologists are nerds:
You know how sometimes when you program and you simply can't be bothered to work out what the program is doing, so you just try changing stuff at random until it doesn't crash any more, or at least doesn't crash as badly, and you count that as a fix ?
That's how biologists do their work, ALL THE TIME.
And billions of animals are needlessly tortured to death because of it.
https://www.thestatesman.com/f... [thestatesman.com]
Re:Probably (Score:5, Insightful)
They are being scientifically honest. They say that by all the usual indicators there is no risk, but they have done no systematic, peer-reviewed study, so some bizarre unexpected 1 in a 1000000 effects cannot completely be ruled out.
But consider this: You should was your hands after handling frozen food anyways, and you should put that stuff into the oven for a while. If you do that, zero risk. If you insist on eating frozen chicken wings directly, you are far more likely to catch some other unpleasant things anyways, so do not do that.
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They are being scientifically honest. ...
They are being probably honest.
Re: Probably (Score:2)
My mother-in-law used to scrape off a layer of barely melted spinach straight from the microwave and serve it. Yuck.
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I'm sorry science doesn't deal in absolutes so binary, black-or-white simpletons like yourself can understand it better.
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The problem is that RWNJ are dominated by so called evangelicals who treat everything as a matter of faith and for over a century now have waged a war on science that tries to create a false equivalency and a fake competition between science and faith.
Like the strict biblical literalism that so many of them cling to, that is an entirely modern invention that was developed in the 1800s and for which there is no scriptural support for in their bible (and let's face it, even if there was, you can't justify thi
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You'd think they would have thrown out the bible by the end of 2 Genesis when applying those standards. Either God created man before the animals or created man after the animals; both cannot be true at the same time.
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That's part of their mania, they deny that the contradiction exists. They don't apply anywhere near the same sort of rigor to the bible that they do "anything else."
This is the typical response to your particular question - "The answer to this supposed contradiction lies in understanding the purpose of the author. Chapter one gives the order of the events of creation while chapter two fills in the details. Chapter one has already informed us that the animals were created before humanity. Chapter two builds
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A few of the more modern translations actually correct that error. For example, NIV words it in a way that says that God had previously created the animals at some indefinite point in the past:
Genesis 2:19 (NIV): Now the Lord God had formed out of the ground all the wild animals and all the birds in the sky.
I'm not sure whether that was based on correcting a mistranslation of the original text or whether the translators simply decided to correct an obvious and glaring mistake; given that NABRE and other modern translations have not corrected it similarly, I'm guessing that it was the latter.
Either way, the translation
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But believing that the KJV translation isn't a steaming pile of errors is something that I just cannot fathom. :-)
The really hardcore KJ-onlyists believe that not only is the KJV the perfect literal word of God but that it is actually more accurate than even the source language texts. They believe that God's spirit moved through the translators commissioned by King James and thereby corrected all the errors that had slipped into the source languages. And that any translations of the bible into languages other than English should use the KJV as their source.
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Undoubtedly from your point of view they "have no clue", which I take to mean having the kind of unshakable certainty that only the scientifically ignorant can entertain.
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If you are under 49, your total likelihood of dying hasn't increased much.
0.2%..l..
OTH, if your risk of dying was 0.002%, then 0.022% is much higher.
And that ignores the organ damage, possible amputation, etc.
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>"It's true that you're only 10% more likely to die this year (on average) than you were last year,"
Where are you getting such an insane idea? Even if you catch the virus, the best estimates right now show a 0.26% chance of dying. So what is the additional 9.74% you are talking about? The riots? The police "defunding" efforts or lack of law enforcement? Effects from being "locked down" (like increased suicides)?
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10% more total deaths (so far this year) does not mean due to COVID-19, and it doesn't mean any individual's chance of dying is 10% higher (because that rate isn't evenly distributed and is greatly distorted due to initial outbreak wreaking havoc with the elderly and in a few high-density locations).
Oh, and the statistic I posted was ALSO based on the CDC's estimates.
So, please save your "don't let facts or statistics stop you" accusation for someone else. I am just as interested in accurate and statistica
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>"*sigh* I never mentioned Covid-19, you did"
I know. Which is why I was quick to posit what else might be affecting that number in my first reply. But many would assume it was a comment on COVID-19, since that is the topic, afterall. I wasn't sure.
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To quote your post further up the thread:
Can you spot the problem?
Hint: "you're only 10% more likely to die this year" is not the same as "the probability that you die this year is 10%".
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>"Can you spot the problem?"
Yes. On that I apologize. We were, indeed, talking about different things.
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We don't know yet if antibodies give a person immunity. Or if it stops them from being asymptomatic carriers. We don't know anything, really, other than some people will come up with any argument they can to try and get out of being responsible and not unnecessarily risking the lives of others.
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>"We don't know yet if antibodies give a person immunity. Or if it stops them from being asymptomatic carriers. We don't know anything, really,"
We might not have solid proof, but that doesn't mean it isn't reasonable to assume that immunity is conveyed in a similar manner to all other coronaviruses we have been exposed to over the centuries. And that would be that the overwhelming super majority of those exposed will develop antibodies, which will last for at least a few (if not several) months, and the
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Can you sue the governmet because you died from a disease it failed to contain?
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>"Can you sue the governmet because you died from a disease it failed to contain??
No. At least, not in the USA.
And the notion it could be "contained", even with violating many of the principles the country is founded on, is a bit far-fetched.
It would be like thinking you could sue the government because of being killed in a car accident of some sort, because the government "allows" us to drive cars.
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And the notion it could be "contained", even with violating many of the principles the country is founded on, is a bit far-fetched.
Not really, the government has evolved quite a few powers when it comes to public health over the last few hundred years, including obvious ones like the power to quarantine. Typhoid Mary was put under house arrest for life for health reasons and was ruled perfectly legal.
The last SARS was an example here where the government took extreme measures to contain a pandemic early on and kept the deaths down to 23. In that case, containment could work as people were only infectious when showing symptoms, So isola
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>"Typhoid Mary was put under house arrest for life for health reasons and was ruled perfectly legal."
Quarantining people who are known sick and infected is very different than quasi-quarantining everyone.
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Strictly speaking, Typhoid Mary was isolated rather then quarantined. From https://www.cdc.gov/quarantine... [cdc.gov]
Worth reading the whole page for the legal basis.
Then there is the history of quarantine, which is a long history and at times has involved e
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Thanks, at least the AC gets it :)
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The funny thing about right wingers is that they often compare this to the common cold; can you imagine someone saying, "I've had a cold, I'm immune". There is no telling if immunity is lasting, even at least one of the vaccines looks like it needs a booster shot to get to get a proper antibody response, so someone who had the virus mildly might not be really immune. Viruses also mutate, Covid has at least two main strains, does having one protect against the other, will you get it worse or does getting th
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One thing for certain, the more that it spreads the more likely it is to mutate. (duh)
Do you think people who thought evolution is “just a theory” and the world is only 6000 years old, would worry about virus mutation? You give them too much credit.
Yes but (Score:2)
To sue the government you need to first ask a judge for permission to do. Guess who signs the judges paycheck? The government.
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Think about it, all those people who have had corona virus and had only minor or negligible symptoms
As opposed to the 175,000+ who are dead, or the tens of thousands who have organ damage?
a state of fear of getting something they can not catch
Says who? Anyone can catch covid-19, it's only the degree to which it affects them.
fear into those who can neither catch it nor transmit it.
And who might those people be? How do you determine this?
The definition this would have to legally be considered cruel and unu
Well, obviously (Score:5, Funny)
Coronavirus is only transmitted by 5G, nobody sells no frozen 5G.
Re: Well, obviously (Score:2)
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What if the 5G gets on the chicken? I googled "How to remove 5G from raw chicken" and came up with no sensible suggestions.
Like X-ray of bones (Score:5, Informative)
A metaphor would be that RT-qPCR is like an X-ray used to look for bones.
A living, breathing human does have bones. But simply seeing a bone doesn't necessarily mean that the human is living and breathing, nor even that you're actually looking at the bone inside a human and not just some left over bone on a graveyard.
And you need at least a small army of such living, breathing humans, if you want to be able to successfully invade a small country.
The RT-qPCR is a good tool to detect bits of RNA, and the SARS-CoV-2 contains RNA genetic material. ...that the bit you detected actually came from a virus and not just some left over debris. (Even more so because optimisations: the current PCR test only checks for very small sequence of RNA. It's definitely NOT the 48h-long fully genome assembly - that, e.g., we do at work [github.io]). ...that the virus was still functional and able to infect a cell. ...that you have enough virus particles to be able to successfully infect somebody.
But you can't guarantee:
-
-
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For the first two you'd need at least some cell cultures to confirm, for the last you would need to perform even more complicated tests (trying to infect some model organism).
The former is going to be too expensive and cumbersome to be performed en masse, the latter is ethically dubious to sacrifice monkey on an industrial scale just to check the safety of every shipment from a country with active cases such as China, Brazil or the US.
---
Also you're most likely to cook you food.
And cooking was precisely invented by our million year old Homo Erectus ancestors, because not only does it make the food more digestible, but also because it sterilizes it.
So the whole point of checking food product for virus RNA is moot.
Buy domestic (Score:2, Funny)
If you buy chickens from here, no Brazil Covid for you! And domestic food is only handled by US Americans who ... oh ...
Well, I guess you're fucked, America.
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Well, at least int his one number, the US is NUMBER ONE! MAGA achieved!
If it IS live virus it will last a LONG time froze (Score:5, Informative)
"there is no evidence to suggest that handling food or consuming food is associated with Covid-19."
Weasel-wording. Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
We've seen this formulation a lot with SARS-CoV-2, from officials telling us some behavior is probably safe, only to find out months later that it's not - it's just not so glaringly obvious that they'd isolated it from other transmission methods and SHOWN that it happens. (For instance, they're still telling us that it's just droplets, not aerosols, so within 6 feet (rather than 20 feet, or in-the-same-HVAC-air-circulation-zone, or, say, several miles outdoors in a mild breeze) is a risk.)
If SARS-CoV-2 is like other coronaviruses, it could easily survive just fine for more than two YEARS frozen. If so, and it's on the OUTSIDE of a frozen food package (e.g. from handling during shipping and processing), it's not going to die off while the package is in the freezer for the ordinary life of frozen food (and will also contaminate the freezer and the rest of its contents). Handle the stuff months later, touch your mouth or eye, and you might become a statistic.
Now if you get the outside of the package cleaned, and it's a frozen entre' or uncooked chicken parts, IMHO you should be fine even if the inside got contaminated. A frozen entre' will be heated, untouched, before eating, and that will kill the coronairus. So just wash, untouched, anything you used to poke a steam hole in the package, and wash your hands after handling the uncooked inner package (using a different knuckle or finger to close the nuke's door and push it's buttons). The precautions you take with raw chicken to avoid salmonella should also protect you from coronavirus. which is more fragile. (Treat raw pork, raw beef, or other raw or cooked frozen components like raw chicken and you're fine.)
When I get frozen food I handle it with gloves keep it wrapped until I get it home, then (before it accumulates condensation) clean the outide of the package by rubbing it thoroughly with a pad of paper towel soaked in rubbing alcohol. 91% if I have it. If not, 70% and LOTS of care to prevent dilution to below 70ish by condensation or ice on the packages. (Keep the packages dry and refresh the alcohol or use a new pad for each package.) Then into the freezer. (We've been sequestered almost four months and haven't gotten COVID-19 yet, cross fingers...)
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(We've been sequestered almost four months and haven't gotten COVID-19 yet, cross fingers...)
Wife (a food science graduate) agrees wholeheartedly with my previous post, but points out it's a bit over 5 months we've been sequestered. (Since March 10.)
How the time flies when you're stayin' alive, stayin' alive...
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Talk about overdoing it. After handling frozen food, especially chicken, (whether packaged or not) you should wash your hands anyways. And the food itself should be thoroughly cooked. That is designed to kill salmonella and will nicely eliminate Covid-19 as well.
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When the shrimp packing plant of my preferred brand had an outbreak, I didn't stop buying it. I just make extra-sure I follow safe handling practices. When I take it out of the freezer, I make sure not to touch anything else, and then I wash my hands. Easy. Just make sure you really do what you were already supposed to do, and the food is already safe. Amazing how that works!
The only restaurant in town that had an outbreak is the place I had already nicknamed "Zombie BBQ" because they had a giant crowd of u
So what if a route is rare if it gets it to YOU? (Score:2)
Every restaurant has people handling the food. Every restaurant has customers touching surfaces right before eating. Not every customer washes their hands after touching the front door; in fact, there aren't really enough restrooms to make that likely. People touch surfaces in the grocery store all day. None of these situations is causing outbreaks.
ORLY? And how do you know that?
So what if the route is rare? It doesn't make the disease any less dangerous if you get it that way - or airborne from someone w
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ORLY? And how do you know that?
"Durrrrr" to you too.
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Weasel-wording. Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
No. It's that evidence of absence cannot exist, even if "absence" is the true state of affairs. The way to study this problem would be to cough on a thousand pizzas, freeze them, then check them for presence of the virus. If none of them have the virus, you have "absence of evidence that the virus survives freezing". It's not weasel-wording, it's them being honest.
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Good post. Two tweaks from studies:
1. 160*F for 26 minutes is the energy/effectiveness maximum for denaturing 5-9's of nCoV-19.
There are ACE-2 receptors in the gut but probably not enough viral load with cooked food to cause any disease. Low-level variolation may be beneficial.
2. 91% isopropanol is less effective than 70%. Water as a solvent has synergistic effects down to 65%.
Save money and dilute your 91%. Sometimes 91% is the cheapest way to buy, other times it's selling at a premium due to market shor
Re:If it IS live virus it will last a LONG time fr (Score:4, Interesting)
91% isopropanol is less effective than 70%. Water as a solvent has synergistic effects down to 65%
But only slightly less. (As I understand it effectiveness starts falling off rapidly both above 91% and below 70%)
70% and 91% isopropanol are the stock strengths you find in stores. You miss the point of going with the high strength when doing frozen food. The package will have some condensation and/or frost on the surface. The alcohol will act as antifreeze, thawing it. Then the thawed ice will dilute the alcohol.
Use 91% and the sanitizing solution starts out good and gets better, not coming back to where it started until it's soaked up enough water to start pulling it below 70%. That means it can grab about a fifth of its own volume of water before it starts to become ineffective.
Start out at 70% and you'd better not have any substantial amount of frost or condensation at all, because diluting the alcohol only a little brings the mix below 70%, which is the minimum recommended for killing off the virus. You need essentially frost free packages and a lot of rubbing alcohol to be safe.
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But only slightly less. (As I understand it effectiveness starts falling off rapidly both above 91% and below 70%) ...
Start out at 70% and you'd better not have any substantial amount of frost or condensation at all, because diluting the alcohol only a little brings the mix below 70%, which is the minimum recommended for killing off the virus. You need essentially frost free packages and a lot of rubbing alcohol to be safe.
Correction: CDC says down to 60% is OK. So a 70% solution can take a little bit of
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Absence of evidence is NOT evidence of absence.
Indeed, if you have a large enough sample size it only becomes strongly suggestive, rather than "evidence" of what happened.
The data strongly suggests that handling food or consuming food is not associated with Covid-19.
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Here we actually have pretty good evidence that SARS-CoV-2 doesn't survive well on freezing: large samples of frozen food that were definitely contaminated (we can find the viral RNA), but from which no viable virus can be recovered.
Viral survival follows an exponential decay curve, so it's always possible that you might get a piece of food that's on the unlucky tail of the curve. But from a health perspective you have to ask, is it a *practical* risk?
We live in a world full of risks, and in general when a
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That's not weasel-wording. It means exactly what it says.
Wings suck anyway. (Score:1)
Too little meat.
And breast too.
Too dry.
That's why we send them over to the US. ;)
I'll take COVID chicken (Score:2)
Over whatever the fuck the USA is doing: https://www.bloomberg.com/opin... [bloomberg.com]
Wow what a no brainer (Score:2)
First: it is unlikely that enough viruses survive freezing that an infection is even remotely possible. ...
Secondly: the only food you eat frozen is "ice cream". Every frozen food, you most likely heat to "close to boiling" after thawing it: and that definitely does not survive any virus.
Thirdly: digesting a virus, most likely has no chance at all to infect you anyway
So the only remotely possible infection way is: a virus survived thawing and you touch your face during preparing the food and infect you that
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"Siri, remind me on Monday to sell my shares in Freeze Pop Inc."
Wow, one article in a paper (Score:2)
...and the chicken industry chickens out.
New Zealand (Score:4, Insightful)
This little urban legend got a big boost because some people in New Zealand got sick, and one of them worked at a frozen food storage center that had some products from China.
They assumed that it had to be from the frozen products, because they were holding on to the fantasy that the New Zealand shutdown was 100% perfect, and nobody managed to sneak past their border shutdown. Despite, of course, knowing that a ship actually delivered those products, and ships have people on them...
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What about widely spread reports that it can live on a cold metal surface for days at a time?
Incite panic you get panic
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What about widely spread reports that it can live on a cold metal surface for days at a time?
Those are mostly mischaracterizations by media idiots, repeated uncritically by people like you.
What they actually reported was that they found genetic material from the virus in the sample even after it was frozen. That doesn't mean they found the virus.
Consider this: You sit in a chair for most of the day. Then you stand up, and go home. I come in and take the chair. I test the chair for your DNA. I find your DNA on the chair. Did I find evidence that you are in the chair? No! I did not. I place the chair
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"From China" has never factored into the New Zealand case. It is a red herring, this virus is more prevalent in North and South America, South Africa, India and Europe than in China. There is no need to throw that casual racism in there.
They are investigating the possibility of importation on the packaging of frozen products and being kept active longer than usual by the cold temperatures, as the virus RNA of the latest cases does not match that of any previous known cases in NZ. They are also investigat
No corona, frozona (Score:3)
Explain like I'm five .. (Score:1)
Re: Explain like I'm five .. (Score:1)
1. you're supposed to wash your hands after handling raw meat
2. You're supposed to cook your meat at high temperature before consuming it
3. Presumably the virus can't infect dead meat, so it's not like it's going to be any different from sneezing onto an inanimate surface
4. CDC said they couldn't culture thr virus left out on surfaces after a day or so, so if the meat takes longer than that to ship, it'll be fine on the other side
But yeah: No data on how cold you can freeze the virus to pre
The magic word from high school biology is (Score:1)
To preserve virusses... (Score:2)
raw meat (Score:2)