(06-17-2021, 03:40 AM)Thryleon date Wrote:What does the data show about long covid?Thry, there is no real long COVID-19 data for Aust but the early USA data is saying 30% of all COVID-19 infections will result in some form of long COVID-19 health impact. They can't tell you what those impacts will be because they are on a spectrum from mild head aches, loss of smell/taste, to in the worst case heart and kidney failure. But they are already getting enough of an idea in the US on the potential cost$ simply because they have so so many cases, there is UK data due out in the coming weeks.
Is it prevalent? I.e. out of 100% of cases, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50% experience long covid??
Even an extrapolated sample size of Australian data is not really telling of the story. We have 800 deaths out of 30000 that was a sample size heavily impacted by outbreaks in aged care settings which will produce biased results.
If the US stats are global, then of our 30000 cases 10000 would suffer long term COVID-19 effects.
Even Flyboys Ivermectin boosters are crapting themselves, because it looks like once long COVID-19 kicks in there is little or no effective treatment for it, and none of them expected asymptomatic types to suffer long COVID-19 but it looks like from the US stats even asymptomatic types can get long COVID-19. Those patients are going to become DALY or QALY statistics. For example, in the US long COVID-19 stats there are indications a percentage of infected will come out of it with diabetes, and that applies as a spectrum across all ages not just elderly.
"Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck ....... Ruck, ruck, ruck, ruck"

