Covid sound bites – November 2020
Covid science you can trust
It won't be long before we're a year down the line since Covid hit the UK, and new facts about the virus are still emerging. Here are some useful Covid-19 sound-bites to help you calculate the risks you face and figure out the actions you need to take. Thank you, as usual, to New Scientist magazine for the truth.
25 genuine scientific facts about Covid
- The risk the virus poses for an individual, both in absolute and relative terms, depends on your age and your state of health
- While the virus can stay alive for a surprisingly long time on various surfaces, and we all need to bear that in mind, the biggest risk remains person-to-person infection
- Shared indoor spaces are the most dangerous of all, including household to household infection
- The risk of spreading the virus in the home is 10 times higher than passing it on in a hospital and 100 times higher than infecting other people on public transport
- Take a full commercial flight, with every seat taken, and you currently stand a 1 in 4000 chance of catching the virus. If the middle seat is left empty, the risk drops to 1 in 8000, highlighting once more how important it is to stay a safe distance away from other people and wear a mask
- If you're eighty years old you are 1000 times more likely to die from the virus than a 20 year old
- 116 in 1000 people in their mid-70s will die if infected by the virus
- Fewer than 1 in 1000 people under 50 will die if infected
- Men have about twice the risk of dying compared to women
- The theory of 'herd immunity' is again being widely slammed for being 'unscientific and irresponsible', potentially resulting in millions of unnecessary deaths in the UK alone and risking failure anyway, since herd immunity depends on there being a strong immune response in the first place – something that currently looks unlikely
- The theory of herd immunity also completely ignores the risks of Long Covid, hailed as deeply stupid when science is already predicting millions of people around the world will suffer long term health problems because of Covid
- Melbourne's celebrations continue after the region beat the virus thanks to a particularly strict lockdown. The biggest risk remains the same – 'indoor transmissions' are the most likely Down Under, just as they are over here
- One statistic remains unchanged over the past week – 54% of people polled in the USA would refuse a Covid vaccination, which means any vaccine the world comes up with won't work properly to protect the US population
- It looks like the scientists were right – the second wave across Europe is proving worse than the first. Apparently Boris Johnson's suggestion that things will get better in 2021 should be 'treated with caution', since there's no logical reason why spring should bring a respite
- A vaccine is never going to be a quick or easy way out, even if we discover one that works well enough
- In the UK, tracking and tracing remains 'patchy at best'
- The virus is likely to affect our lives for 'years', and it would be wise to 'plan accordingly'
- Lockdowns are 'an admission of government failure', and 'ultimately do nothing to stop the virus spreading' if the time isn't used to improve our testing and contact tracing capabilities
- Brief, planned lockdowns could become a useful tool in the fight to keep infections under control, but only if we have a great, hard-working test, trace and isolation system in place
- No matter what we do now, infections and deaths will go up over the next few weeks
- The highest reported number of daily cases of the virus in Europe has hit 250,000
- These days 1 in 4 cases are being detected, compared to 1 in 50 in the early days
- The age group with the highest rate of Covid is currently those aged 20-29
- Experts predict 120,000 deaths from Covid in the UK between September 2020 and January 2021
- By January 2021 the European death rate could be five times higher than it was in April 2020 'unless countries change course'
As far as we see it, that's 25 very good reasons for investing in our safe, clean and highly effective UVC anti-Covid lights to keep people safe, keep your business alive, and work towards a future when we can all go out and about again with a reasonable level of confidence. Let's talk UVC disinfection.









