Anonymous ID: 626465 April 26, 2020, 7:09 p.m. No.8932884   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2892

University of Southern California shows that hundreds of thousands more could have had COVID-19 in the past

 

News is 6 days old but here's the test study

Posted: Apr 20, 2020 / 12:53 PM PDT / Updated: Apr 20, 2020 / 10:29 PM PDT

 

While L.A. County reports total of 13,816 coronavirus cases, antibody study shows hundreds of thousands more could have had COVID-19 in the past

While Los Angeles County has reported a total of 13,816 coronavirus cases, early results from an antibody study conducted with the University of Southern California shows that hundreds of thousands more could have had COVID-19 in the past, officials announced Monday.

 

So far, 863 L.A. County residents have been tested between April 10 and 14 as part of the study.

 

The study estimates a prevalence of COVID-19 antibodies in the county to be 4.1%, with a range that could be as low as 2.8% and as high as 5.6%, when you factor in the reliability of the tests.

 

An estimated 221,000 adults to 442,000 adults at the high end may have been infected at some point before April 9 with COVID-19, suggesting that the number of total people in the county with a past or current infection is 28 to 55 times higher than the number of reported positive cases, Dr. Barbara Ferrer, L.A. County’s public health director said Monday.

 

“Although I report every day that we have thousands of thousands of people that have tested positive, the serology testing lets us know that we have hundreds of thousands of people that have already developed antibodies to the virus because at some point in time over the last couple of months, they have in fact been infected with COVID-19,” Ferrer said.

 

But having up to that many people who may have already had the illness means that the fatality rate from the virus is much lower than originally believed, Neeraj Sood, the USC scientist leading the study said Monday.

 

Residents should assume that they could be infected and that all of the other people they came in contact with can also be infected, and she again stressed the importance of staying home and observing physical distancing requirements, Ferrer said.

 

Although the sample size was relatively small, Ferrer shared some early estimates about who was most likely to be infected:

 

Men were more likely than women to be infected. The estimated prevalence is 6% among men and 2% among women

7% of African Americans, 6% of whites, 4.2% of Asians and 2.5% of people who were Latinx who were tested were found to be positive for COVID-19

2.4% of people who were between the ages of 18-34 were positive

5.6% were between 35 and 54

4.3% who were 55 and older tested positive

“Being positive for COVID-19 antibodies does not mean that a person is immune or that a person is not able to be reinfected. More research is really needed to understand what protection do people have who have already been infected with COVID-19,” Ferrer said.

 

The USC study will continue, and a representative sample of around 1,000 randomly pre-selected people will be tested every two weeks to track the trajectory of the virus in the county, officials said.

 

She also reported an additional 17 coronavirus-related deaths Monday, bringing the death toll to 617 countywide.

 

As of April 20, 2020

10,000,000 million in Los Angeles county 617 deaths = .000637

 

Stanford University released results of antibody testing in Santa Clara County last week, similarly estimating that between 2.5% and 4.2% of Santa Clara County residents had antibodies to the coronavirus in their blood by early April.

Anonymous ID: 626465 April 26, 2020, 8:16 p.m. No.8933384   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8933099

 

look at the number of laws on the books, past to present, civil and criminal and if we all could attain these 2 commandments we'd need no moar laws, none.

 

but I only know of 1 that has attained such perfect obedience.

Anonymous ID: 626465 April 26, 2020, 8:32 p.m. No.8933497   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>8933431

 

Without the public on board and indictments buttoned up tight, all our efforts to expose their evil, go down in flames.

 

Perhaps after General Flynn's exoneration then come the 'handful of indictments', then the declas of the unredacted FISA Warrants and 302's.