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davesparks
The vast majority of people that have had the virus... have very mild symptoms or none at all. So are you suggesting that we should hospitalise everyone that has it ?
Testing is relevant now to find out who has had it (the antibody test) so that we can carry on without being locked down further.
A doctor was quoted the other day as saying that about ⅔ of all those that have died so far would have died anyway within the year... they were that unwell with other things wrong with them.
Has a reliable and affordable antibody test been developed and put into mass production yet?
It was mentioned in a press conference the other week that we would be using it when it is available but nothing has been said about it since.
Presumably it is only 2/3 of the patients that one particular doctor has seen, or are there national statistics showing the percentage of people who have died from covid19 who were also likely to die in the next year?
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I think we should be careful about the testing to identify those people who have recovered from it without needing treatment.
It could lead to all manner of issues.
Will employers want to see a positive test result before you are allowed back to work, will children be kept out of school without it? Will people who pass the test feel safe and start to go out and move around despite the fact they will still be able to carry it and spread the disease?