Tucker: What Is The Actual Death Rate Of COVID-19?

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If coronavirus infection is more widespread than we thought, by definition that means the virus is less deadly; insight from Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Stanford University professor of medicine.


2 COMMENTS

  1. https://www.theblaze.com/steve-deace/new-coronavirus-study-is-a-game-changer?utm_source=theblaze-dailyPM&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Daily-Newsletter__PM%202020-04-17&utm_term=TheBlaze%20Daily%20PM%20-%20last%20270%20days&fbclid=IwAR0rkwEi7onD8Xh5tcYpxfC9Q_pEuJqfz9JnNrfXw2LzbmeKyG0dm_FqXmk

    The Goal

    Stanford set out to do the first random-sample antibody test for SARS-2 coronavirus In the United States. The study focused on areas most affected by the virus, so the worst-case scenarios.

    The presence of antibodies suggests a person has had exposure to the virus, never was sick, or recovered and is now immune. Scientists believe it is highly unlikely a person be infected or reinfected if antibodies are present.

    How soon Americans can return to our usual way of life depends on how widespread antibodies are currently.

    Stanford found that 2.46% of the 4.16% of people it randomly sampled had SARS-2 coronavirus antibodies.

    BlazeTV’s Steve Deace broke down the numbers, and they are shocking.

  2. well basically the death rate may be lower, yet to confirm that we need to test. W\We must ask how come there arent there enough tests?
    another important factor, is the infection rate, because even a small death rate which is wonderful, may still overpower the capacity of treatment if the infection rate is high enough

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