That would be wonderful news. Would certainly save a lot of lives and keep us all from going crazy in isolation if they can get a vaccine out there this year and not have to wait until sometime in 2021.
That would be wonderful news. Would certainly save a lot of lives and keep us all from going crazy in isolation if they can get a vaccine out there this year and not have to wait until sometime in 2021.
True, but look how many the flu vaccine prevented from getting it. A vaccine might keep people from freaking out and being scared to death.
There are also plenty of maladies for which a vaccine has never been able to be found. So, there is no guarantee of anything.
Whether it’s available 4 months from now or 16 months from now, or whenever, a Covid-19 vaccine should presumably be effective 40-60 % of the time, hopefully more but who knows.
Yes. It has spread very rapidly.apaladin wrote: ↑Sat May 02, 2020 10:35 amGood news: Texas A&M announced yesterday that they would open all of their 11 campus’s in the fall and be ready for football. University of Iowa president said their football facilities open June 1. Someone said the virus had spread so rapidly but has it? A couple of examples: South Carolina has 5.149 million people and 6,259 cases as of May 1 which is .0012 percent. Greenville County has 523,000 and 730 cases or .0014 percent. As of May 1 there were only 300 people hospitalized in S.C. To put that into perspective, if all 300 people were in Greenville Memorial there would still be over 400 beds available. Remember also that many have very little to no symptoms so only a small percentage are seriously ill. The numbers the media keeps reporting seem alarming and they are but when you put it in perspective the numbers are very small if not tiny.
No one knows the real number of cases because of the lack of testing. SCDHEC reports the possible number of cases at 5,350. I’m thankful that social distancing has worked, which hopefully will lead to some football this fall. I’m just glad I’m not responsible for deciding how to allot tickets at the big schools if social distancing is still in effect. Whether or not to play is only the beginning of huge decisions that have to be made.apaladin wrote: ↑Sat May 02, 2020 10:35 amGood news: Texas A&M announced yesterday that they would open all of their 11 campus’s in the fall and be ready for football. University of Iowa president said their football facilities open June 1. Someone said the virus had spread so rapidly but has it? A couple of examples: South Carolina has 5.149 million people and 6,259 cases as of May 1 which is .0012 percent. Greenville County has 523,000 and 730 cases or .0014 percent. As of May 1 there were only 300 people hospitalized in S.C. To put that into perspective, if all 300 people were in Greenville Memorial there would still be over 400 beds available. Remember also that many have very little to no symptoms so only a small percentage are seriously ill. The numbers the media keeps reporting seem alarming and they are but when you put it in perspective the numbers are very small if not tiny.
Decisions may have to include how to keep tailgaters beyond a 2-mile radius of the stadium if they do not have tickets for entry to the stadium. People make it a huge, non-socially-distanced PARTY whether they ever go in or not.Roundball wrote: ↑Sat May 02, 2020 4:57 pmNo one knows the real number of cases because of the lack of testing. SCDHEC reports the possible number of cases at 5,350. I’m thankful that social distancing has worked, which hopefully will lead to some football this fall. I’m just glad I’m not responsible for deciding how to allot tickets at the big schools if social distancing is still in effect. Deciding whether or not to play is only the beginning of huge decisions that have to be made.apaladin wrote: ↑Sat May 02, 2020 10:35 amGood news: Texas A&M announced yesterday that they would open all of their 11 campus’s in the fall and be ready for football. University of Iowa president said their football facilities open June 1. Someone said the virus had spread so rapidly but has it? A couple of examples: South Carolina has 5.149 million people and 6,259 cases as of May 1 which is .0012 percent. Greenville County has 523,000 and 730 cases or .0014 percent. As of May 1 there were only 300 people hospitalized in S.C. To put that into perspective, if all 300 people were in Greenville Memorial there would still be over 400 beds available. Remember also that many have very little to no symptoms so only a small percentage are seriously ill. The numbers the media keeps reporting seem alarming and they are but when you put it in perspective the numbers are very small if not tiny.
https://scdhec.gov/infectious-diseases/ ... e-covid-19