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Medicine United States

How the Pandemic Will End? (theatlantic.com) 179

Ed Yong, writing for The Atlantic: The world is experienced at making flu vaccines and does so every year. But there are no existing vaccines for coronaviruses -- until now, these viruses seemed to cause diseases that were mild or rare -- so researchers must start from scratch. The first steps have been impressively quick. Last Monday, a possible vaccine created by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health went into early clinical testing. That marks a 63-day gap between scientists sequencing the virus's genes for the first time and doctors injecting a vaccine candidate into a person's arm. "It's overwhelmingly the world record," Fauci said. But it's also the fastest step among many subsequent slow ones. The initial trial will simply tell researchers if the vaccine seems safe, and if it can actually mobilize the immune system. Researchers will then need to check that it actually prevents infection from SARS-CoV-2. They'll need to do animal tests and large-scale trials to ensure that the vaccine doesn't cause severe side effects. They'll need to work out what dose is required, how many shots people need, if the vaccine works in elderly people, and if it requires other chemicals to boost its effectiveness.

"Even if it works, they don't have an easy way to manufacture it at a massive scale," said Seth Berkley of Gavi. That's because Moderna is using a new approach to vaccination. Existing vaccines work by providing the body with inactivated or fragmented viruses, allowing the immune system to prep its defenses ahead of time. By contrast, Moderna's vaccine comprises a sliver of SARS-CoV-2's genetic material -- its RNA. The idea is that the body can use this sliver to build its own viral fragments, which would then form the basis of the immune system's preparations. This approach works in animals, but is unproven in humans. By contrast, French scientists are trying to modify the existing measles vaccine using fragments of the new coronavirus. "The advantage of that is that if we needed hundreds of doses tomorrow, a lot of plants in the world know how to do it," Berkley said. No matter which strategy is faster, Berkley and others estimate that it will take 12 to 18 months to develop a proven vaccine, and then longer still to make it, ship it, and inject it into people's arms.

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How the Pandemic Will End?

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  • Say what again? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:09PM (#59879256)

    "until now, these viruses seemed to cause diseases that were mild or rare"

    Uh... the people who've died from SARS and MERS would like a word with you, Mr. Yong.

    Tbree serious pandemics in the past two decades doesn't really qualify as "rare".

    • Uh... "Tbree" is the Vulcan word for "three".

      • Good example of FP haste, if not abuse. Can't even count, and a typo for the incorrect count, too. Or did you [93 Escort Wagon] mean to include a third example on your list? Ebola could be a candidate, but it doesn't seem to fit the context. (I just borrowed a book about Ebola...)

        As for The Atlantic article itself, it is NOT too long, but it was too much for me to digest properly in a single sitting. I first focused on the beginning and the ending, scanned the rest, and then went through and focused on all

    • and a much higher instance of people who are going to need hospitalization. I think that's what he's getting at, albeit imprecisely.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      Considering how many countless virus strains there are of the common cold and what we call "the flu", yes.... 3 pandemics caused by three distinct viruses even in the past two decades *is* rare.
    • I think the word rare, for the 3 heavy variants in 2 decades qualifies in light of the fact that the common cold, with generally comparatively mild symptoms, is supposedly caused by corona viruses in about a third of the cases. So every winter practically the whole world and its dog gets some corona virus, and about once a decade it's really mean. For mankind, as you interpreted, I agree it's way beyond rare, considering every 18 year old has had 3 events going on in their lifetime.
  • It will never end (Score:5, Insightful)

    by michaelmalak ( 91262 ) <michael@michaelmalak.com> on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:10PM (#59879260) Homepage

    It will never end, or at least its impacts will never end.

    Was there ever a post-9/11 world? People today just laugh and assume the NSA is listening. There are still prisoners at Guantanamo Bay.

    Two years from now, will it be possible to go anywhere without an official government tracking app? Without a full suite of vaccines? Will the independent merchant - the last voting bastion of fiscal conservatism - still exist? Will churches be allowed to use their full capacity?

    • by Dorianny ( 1847922 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:46PM (#59879426) Journal
      Most people still don't get themselves vaccinated against the flu and diseases caused by preventable causes such as smoking and obesity far surpass the number of deaths this disease can cause. It is human nature to panic with fear of a new and unfamiliar risk but they quickly get accustomed to the new normal. It is really jarring to watch videos of people stuck in the Syrian warzone, not even flinching while bombs explode around them.
      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Most people still don't get themselves vaccinated against the flu and diseases caused by preventable causes such as smoking and obesity far surpass the number of deaths this disease can cause. It is human nature to panic with fear of a new and unfamiliar risk but they quickly get accustomed to the new normal. It is really jarring to watch videos of people stuck in the Syrian warzone, not even flinching while bombs explode around them.

        Exactly. Think about it this way - what was the average number of deaths d

        • Agency (Score:4, Insightful)

          by ghoul ( 157158 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @06:50PM (#59879986)

          What makes people more scared is the lack of agency. They are willing to take on much more risk if they are the one in control (like driving a car) than someone else (like flying on a plane flown by someone else).
          9/11 was something that happened to people in a office who had no agency. Car crashes happen to people driving and everyone thinks it wont happen to them because they are a better driver. (Everyone including the guy who crashes is car thinks till that moment it wont happen to him)

          A virus is something which takes away your agency so its scary. Just think instructors in parachute schools who do hundreds of jumps a year are social distancing over a virus which kills 0.1% of health adults.

        • There is 3287 road deaths per day Globally

          https://www.asirt.org/safe-travel/road-safety-facts/

          And 102 per day in the USA

          https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_vehicle_fatality_rate_in_U.S._by_year

          first two links of a simple search. I do declare you a fool.

        • And I'm pretty sure more people have died from car accidents since the new year than COVID-19.
          Yes, and the car accidents infected the people around to make more accidents ... facepalm.

          Oh, corvir19 is officially in USA ... since? 15th of Februar? Already 1000 dead. In a week it will be 5000, and that is far above your car analogy, idiot.

          • by multimed ( 189254 ) <{moc.oohay} {ta} {aidemitlumrm}> on Saturday March 28, 2020 @02:33AM (#59881130)
            Also - car accidents and smokers don't overwhelm hospitals the way this virus is. Ultimately, in addition to the direct deaths, in many places there has been/will be a significant number of deaths due to countless other things (including car accidents and smoking, but any other condition that requires ICU or ventilators) because there aren't enough people or equipment to service everyone.
      • "Most people still don't get themselves vaccinated against the flu and diseases caused by preventable causes such as smoking and obesity far surpass the number of deaths this disease can cause. "

        This disease kills the smokers and the fat people with high blood pressure.

      • Smokers or obese people do not fill up hospital beds.
        They don't infect people who are not smoking or are not obese.
        You are an idiot.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by tarks ( 529856 )
        I am not so sure about the 'far surpass'. I do expect at least a 100 million Covid deaths this year and some more in the west in the coming year. Realize that the roughly 2% death rate of all cases, including the asymptomatic in China and Korea was maintained with a top notch medical system. For at least 5 billion people in the world, all sever cases will die and then some more from complications that also a manageable in the west. Even if you optimistically count 60% resistance as enough for heard immunity
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by mvdwege ( 243851 )

      Will tinfoil be outlawed?

      • Oh no! But aluminum doesn't offer the same grade of protection! We'll have to wear hat and hood both.

        Or lead if you have the back strength.

    • Time destroys everything. Including the last copy of Windows 95, or SARS-CoV-2.

      Humankind so far eradicated only 2 diseases: smallpox, and rinderpest. Given the present # of cases, I don't see COVID-19 going anywhere soon. More likely it'll be like a bushfire: spreading from one area to the next, some areas spared entirely, a flame up here & there, smoldering below the surface, but still burning somewhere at any given time like a coal seam fire. Much surface area burnt, and a long time before the fir

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Good comment and deserves the "Insightful" moderation. I wish I could nudge up your reputation in a more enduring way. (If MEPR is the solution, then what is the problem?)

      I would add that it is quite likely we will wind up with frequent mass arrests on the presumption of being guilty of carrying various viruses until proven innocent.

      And don't forget that this was just a bio-accident. Wait until someone releases an actual bio-weapon. (That's the monstrosity that I've been publicly warning about for a few yea

  • The advantage of the RNA vaccines is that it can be quickly developed and infact its already being tested. Even if an RNA vaccine can't be quickly produced in massive scale at first, it can be used to vaccinate the highest risk population, buying time while production scales up or a more conventional vaccine is developed and tested.
  • possible vaccine created by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health went into early clinical testing.

    I hope they are not going through usual drawn-out medical safety testing process, have asked for volunteers and intentionally infecting consenting volunteers to determine effectiveness of this vaccine.

    • I think the current process is that you tweet that you're doing it, and the FDA holds a press conference to approve whatever you did.

  • by chispito ( 1870390 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:26PM (#59879332)
    The construction of the headline makes it sound like an accidental question. "How will the pandemic end?" would be much clearer.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:28PM (#59879336) Homepage Journal

    Either because (a) we lose control and eventually the majority of the people in the world have had it or (b) we manage to flatten the curve for long enough that most people have had it but not too many at any given time -- or we develop treatments and/or vaccines.

    Either way is economically costly, but I think trying to "take it on the chin" is likely to be devastating. But we can't really afford indefinite social distancing either. We should be doing everything we can to push up that line under which the curve should be "flattened": our capacity to handle simultaneous cases.

    • With three pandemics in the past two decades, I wouldn't be surprised if eventually this gets rolled into the existing flu mass vaccination program - they'll investigate which new coronavirus strains are most likely to spread each year, make the vaccines and distribute them. Might even just be one shot which includes both influenza and coronavirus.

      • With three pandemics in the past two decades...

        You keep using that word. I don't think it means what you think it means.

    • It is not yet known how long immunity to this new corona virus will last. Immunity to the other similar virus types lasts from 2 to 10 years. If immunity turns out to be rather short, we may need regular vaccinations, like for the flu, or rely on early detection and better antiviral treatments. We may also try to eliminate it "completely" by being very vigilant about detection and isolating any new cases when COVID-19 is on the decline.
    • We needed to do that a decade ago, though. It takes time to train humans. We'll see a reduction in capacity at first, as medical personnel will be hit hard during this first mass-wave.
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Sure there are things we needed to start doing years ago, and things that we stopped doing that we should have continued. But you can't change the past. There's still things that need to be done *right now* that aren't being done.

        • Absolutely. But we need to be frank and realistic so we can address the bottlenecks. The idea that we can ramp up the number of doctors by a substantial number, within the time frame necessary, is overly hopeful. And I didn't intend to sound like I was disagreeing with your post or thoughts. We're of the same opinion, I believe.
          • by hey! ( 33014 )

            I can think of two critical resources coming up as well: respiratory therapists and speech therapists. Respiratory therapists are needed to operate ventilators, and speech therapists are important in post ventilator rehab -- speech therapists do more than speech, they also do swallowing. You can't conjure people to do those jobs out of thin air.

            Hospitals are giving people crash courses to nurses to run ventilators, and while that's far from ideal (there's a shortage of nurses already), it also optimistica

    • No, the path to herd immunity is littered with 100 million dead. Even with non-over-stressed medical care the morbidity is between 0.1 and 1%. The correct plan, now that we missed early containment, is:

      • 1. Widespread social distancing or isolation to "flatten the curve" until testing is broad.
      • 2. Once testing is working at scale, a transition period to allow the number of active cases to decline and to verify testing and tracking is working.
      • 3. Targeted isolation and monitoring until a vaccine is deploye
  • by ZombieCatInABox ( 5665338 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:30PM (#59879342)

    A more interesting question is: How many years, decades, before a significant movement denying that the pandemic even happened starts developping ?

    Most people today were born after WWII, and there's an increasing number of holocaust deniers. After fifthy years, there is no shortage of moon landing hoaxers. Today, there's a significant percentage of the world population that was born after 9-11 and we not only see 9-11 conspiracy theorists, but downright 9-11 deniers, people that actually claim that 9-11 never happened, and that the twin towers never even existed, that it's all CGI, etc.

    So how long till people start denying that the coronavirus pandemic even happened ?

    • Most people today were born after WWII, and there's an increasing number of holocaust deniers. After fifthy years, there is no shortage of moon landing hoaxers.

      I don't think either of these groups are necessarily increasing in number - it's just that the internet gives them voice (like it does with most everything, both good and bad). Plus I would argue the current political climate in many countries (not just the US, but certainly incuding the US) has emboldened them to rant and rave.

    • A month ago most of the armchair geniuses here were saying this was all overblown and not a big deal.

    • by mspring ( 126862 )
      One outcome of this pandemic should be to go after the science and fact deniers with a carot and stick approach.
    • Pretty nice to invent strawmen, at least in the quantity you seem to think exist, and then ride your high horse all over them.

      Very smug and well done!

    • A more interesting question is: How many years, decades, before a significant movement denying that the pandemic even happened starts developping ?

      Depends on how long the lockdown goes on. Eventually I can imagine some grandpa trying to explain his past vacation to a young person who has read a blog denying that Europe exists, or that there were once planes and ships to get there on.

  • by Proudrooster ( 580120 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:32PM (#59879358) Homepage

    All Pandemics end with the Zombie Apocalypse

    https://youtu.be/KkV42m5wVTk [youtu.be]

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:34PM (#59879366)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by thevirtualcat ( 1071504 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:35PM (#59879378)

    When a vaccine is widely available in (hopefully) 12-18 months, most countries with reasonable healthcare systems will make it available to their citizens. Even in countries like the US, insurance companies generally find it cheaper to offer free or cheap vaccinations than to pay for ER care for a few percent of their customers. Sure, you'll have a few holdouts who can't or won't take a vaccine, but most people will. After that, the coronavirus vaccine will (probably) just be part of the annual flu shot.

    • by HiThere ( 15173 )

      That's a possibly correct, but somewhat optimistic, scenario. Vaccines are guaranteed possible, and it's not certain that a coronavirus vaccine can be durable. But it's possible.

      What's nearly certain is that earlier than the vaccine there will be antiviral drugs that can be taken when the disease shows up. They may well have sufficient side effects that medical observation is quite desirable, but they may already be approved (for some other disease) if we can once identify them. (Some of the plausible d

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @04:53PM (#59879454)
    that we could have been well on our way to a vaccine [youtube.com] already. Nobody want to spend the money on it because the ROI wasn't good enough (hindsight's 20/20) and there were plenty of other investments with higher returns and less risk.

    Meanwhile decades of constant funding cuts mean a lot less Basic Research gets done. Those tax cuts have to come from somewhere, and the government doesn't waste all that much money outside of the military.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by unimacs ( 597299 )
        Yes, everyone got caught with their pants down. But the lack of virtually any kind of central coordination until recently, the lack of availability of tests, and the slowness to mobilize has lead the US to the top of the heap in the number of people who've contracted the virus. This even though we saw it coming.

        Many other countries have done a much better job of keeping a lid on it than we have. In fact, due to the lack of testing, the numbers of infected people in this country are likely vastly higher t
  • The last of humanity will lay quivering in a hole somewhere. According to the game :|
  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @06:41PM (#59879950) Journal

    1. World economy goes into the dumps
    2. Mass riots and wars start
    3. War increases until we have WW3
    4. Everybody nukes each other
    5. Workers abandon all nuke power plants, spreading yet more radiation
    6. All humans dies off
    7. Dogs survive and become the next technological species
    8. Ruff ruff, bow wow, yelp sniff* ruff. (Don't worry, future dogs will know what this means.)

    * Biden will be their iconic hero

    • by kbahey ( 102895 )

      No, no, no ...

      It goes like this:

      1. Virus kills nearly all humans.
      2. Wars take care of the rest.
      3. Centuries pass, and forests take over cities.
      4. A probe sent from another interstellar civilization reaches earth.
      5. The probe sends images and telemetry about skyscrapers.
      6. Those who sent the probe are puzzled how these structures were built.
      7. They conclude that dolphins did.
      8. Thanks for all the fish ...

  • Not with a bang, but with a whimper...
  • by ubergeek65536 ( 862868 ) on Friday March 27, 2020 @06:50PM (#59879988)

    "This approach works in animals, but is unproven in humans."

    If we aren't animals, what are we?

  • The pandemic has turned a lot of assumptions on their head. We got to see how the assumed normality of the world is actually quite fragile. Empty shelves and such ought to shock anyone out of complacency. Preppers are having a moment, as are people who push back against public transportation. I haven't heard a peep from the open borders crowd. Social distancing works best for lower population densities. Homeschooling is now for everyone. Looks like the lesson learned is that the best way to turn ever
  • Remember when the Swine Flu infected 1.4 billion people and killed up to 284,000 people and we had to shut down the world economy? No, neither do I... :-/
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    Incidentally, the estimated death toll was between 18,000 (WHO) and 284,000 (CDC), which is broad to say the least and makes you wonder about the error margins in this data. I would guess that the global number of infected people from Coronavirus is 100x higher than the number of positive tests, making the fatality rat

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

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