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Forum - View topicNEWS: Japan Lifts COVID-19 State of Emergency Nationwide
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ErikaD.D
Posts: 660 |
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And this won't end well...
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ximpalullaorg
Posts: 396 |
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Why? Aside the fact the virus didn't reach hospitals (likely, the real cause the death toll isn't very high - see also the report by Bloomberg), the ongoing research on the virus suggests that infectivity doesn't last as long as the news said (see for example: https://www.ams.edu.sg/view-pdf.aspx?file=media%5c5556_fi_331.pdf&ofile=Period+of+Infectivity+Position+Statement+(final)+23-5-20+(logos).pdf or the Nature article regarding a similar research done in Germany), that children and boys/girls aren't strongly susceptible to infection and to transmission (there is building evidence, for example the research done in Australia).... Not to mention the better medical/pharmacological treatment (redemisvir, antiviral "cocktail", heparine, plus the ongoing trials for hyperimmune plasma, for example) due to the increasing knowledge about the virus and its mechanisms. The need for a "strong" lockdown right now isn't really based off any real data (and no, the Imperial College model isn't totally reliable - it failed to predict what happened in Sweden). There's need of vigilance of course. |
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Hoppy800
Posts: 3331 |
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Hopefully, anime can slowly be resumed now.
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Kougeru
Posts: 5589 |
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This is blatant misinformation. the infection length seems true, as does redemisvir, but everything else is bad data. Children DO spread the virus, and recent "Kawasaki-like" illnesses have been happening around the world because of COVID-19. There is no "building evidence" about children not spreading it. It's pure BS. Sweden is one of the worst in it's areas right now because of what they did. Tons of people are dying that should not have died. Imperial College model WAS reliable. People just ignore what models are. It was based if we did nothing. A LOT of Swedish citizens tried to stay home which makes their "Experiment" a bit misleading but still proves their idea failed since even though people tried to stay home they ended up worse than most others. If we just stick to PROVEN data we got 1. Redemisvir is helpful taken fairly early (which makes it almost worthless in some countries like the US where you can only get tested if you're already showing bad signs) 2. Sweden is doing terrible All that said, Japan's cases have supposedly fallen like a rock. I don't disagree with them re-opening if their data is accurate. I do have issues with them re-opening crowded events like concerts and such, though. There WILL Be spikes in cases because of that. There WILL be more shut downs in the future if they don't end up closing large events. |
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omiya
Posts: 1852 Location: Adelaide, South Australia |
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http://www.newsonjapan.com/html/newsdesk/article/127264.php
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200407/p2g/00m/0na/017000c
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20200406/p2a/00m/0na/010000c |
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FiendHunter
Posts: 153 |
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What has Japan done right that the rest of the world hasn't? Because they declared State of Emergency much much later than every other country and they're now lifting it way earlier. What's happening...??
It might just be my paranoia, but I feel like it's too soon for some stuff like events and such. |
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ximpalullaorg
Posts: 396 |
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Except there are cases but it's not the standard. The research on school made in Australia shows evidence that children and young boys/girls do not contribute a lot to the spread of the infection. See also: https://adc.bmj.com/content/early/2020/05/19/archdischild-2020-319474 and a few the comments of said article:
Most of the deaths come from nursing care homes. Not from "normal" people. I personally feel that Sweden was extreme in the decision (and I don't agree with it), but closing off isn't the only option. Italy had one of the strictest lockdown in Europe, and helped nothing (and the upcoming economic crisis will kill far more people than the virus). The virus got into hospitals and nursing care houses and that was the reason the death toll is so high.
It's not reliable. There's no way I can test it. Statistical models are good up to a certain point. There's no evidence to tell me it's right or not. And I want to be able to criticize it. Especially since the Imperial College was wrong several times in their prediction in the past (see: mad cow disease, foot and mouth disease).
Even if it happens, the shutdowns aren't sustainable. Especially for a country like Japan which never got out of recession.
As a tragedy as it is, this not what I meant. If you look at New York or Italy you see the bulk of infections come from hospitals or nursing care. In Italy the 80% of the infections came from there. |
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xxmsxx
Posts: 601 |
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Hokkaido will need to get ready for Hokkaido outbreak 3.0.
The rest of the country will need to get ready for Hokkaido outbreak 2.0. Given that many Japanese still ferociously defend their "limit testing" approach, I guess there is not much to do but to open up the economy and wait for the next outbreak. |
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#sukkar
Posts: 120 |
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There are some theories that Japan did a better job at cluster tracing than other countries did. IIRC, they were also the first major Asian country to shut down schools, so that probably contributed as well. That said, Abe did mention the possibility of a second state of emergency should cases begin to rise again. It's still very difficult to get a test in Japan, you need to be all but on your deathbed at times, but I do imagine cases will begin to spike if we get as far as Phase 3. |
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CrowLia
Posts: 5528 Location: Mexico |
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Nothing. Japan has literally done nothing that the rest of the world hasn't, and what they've done (lockdowns, testing) has been in smaller scale. Which is why I don't think anyone in their right mind actually believes the numbers are as low as the government claims. Let's just hope the general population doesn't end up paying the price of Abe's political ambitions. |
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Johan Eriksson 9003
Posts: 281 |
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I mean, this just suggests that the reason it got into nursing homes and hospitals is because our measures were inadequate. If we had followed the lead of our neighbours and locked down hard from the start it would have been much harder for it to spread that far and our total deth-toll would probably only be a couple hundred instad of a couple thousand. |
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FLCLGainax
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A roadmap is always a good thing. Economies need to reopen sooner or later, otherwise the labor market could experience undesirable effects in the long run. Japan has already fallen back into a recession, like the US, so reopening with temporary restrictions makes sense.
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