[...] on a Monday night conference call with manufacturers, who have been urged to join a national effort to produce more medical ventilators for the impending medical crisis. Politico reports that some of the business leaders were "less than impressed" with Johnson's conduct on the call, with one saying: "He couldn't help but act the clown, even though he was a on call with serious CEOs from goodness knows how many companies." [...] The prime minister "joked" that the emergency project to build more life-saving ventilators could be known as "Operation Last Gasp."'
https://www.thedaily...report?ref=home
'High Temperature and High Humidity Reduce the Transmission of COVID-19
[...] In July, the arrival of summer and rainy season in the northern hemisphere can effectively reduce the transmission of the COVID-19; however, risks remain in some countries in the southern hemisphere (e.g. Australia and South Africa). If we plug the normal summer temperature and relative humidity of Tokyo (28 °C and 85%, respectively) into Equation (1), the transmission of the COVID19 in Tokyo will be seriously reduced between March and the Olympics: the estimated R value decreases from 1.914 to 0.992, a 48% drop!'
I'd guess this will probably have a lesser effect in areas that don't get very hot.
'India has reported around 125 cases of the coronavirus, and it is a bit of a mystery how the world's second-most-populous nation, with 1.3 billion people, has remained relatively unscathed while the number of cases explodes to its east and west. [...]
Doctors say it is either that there are many more cases in India than have been detected, because of the difficulties of getting tested, or that India has indeed managed to so far escape the worst, possibly because of quick and strict efforts right from the start.'
https://www.nytimes....oronavirus.html
The temperature in Singapore is already about 28 °C, which could be contributing to the ease with which they've contained the outbreak. But Miami is almost as hot right now, and they don't seem to be doing nearly as well....
'With a vaccine for COVID-19 still a long way from being realized, Johns Hopkins immunologist Arturo Casadevall is working to revive a century-old blood-derived treatment for use in the United States in hopes of slowing the spread of the disease.
[...] The technique uses antibodies from the blood plasma or serum of people who have recovered from COVID-19 infection to boost the immunity of newly infected patients and those at risk of contracting the disease.
"Deployment of this option requires no research or development," he says. "It could be deployed within a couple of weeks since it relies on standard blood-banking practices."'
https://hub.jhu.edu/...eSpkpa5Q3kgCzLU
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 17 March 2020 - 02:49 PM