Brumby
Major
Nope, his commentary (if you can call it that -- hysteria is a better word for it) was already shut down by other epidemiologists and virologists on Twitter for missing essential context and being needlessly dramatic.
His follower count has benefited significantly from his tweet chain however.
A useful tweet that has a much more accurate and level headed take on the numbers:
Also, the study that he was citing had already updated its R0 score to 2.5 based on newer data.
This is an evolving epidemiological picture, and we are still at the early stages of knowing the extent and lethality of this virus.
People like Dr Feigl-Ding who know that they have some level of public exposure and may generate public "trust" from their positions, should know how important it is to report on things calmly and accurately without unnecessary flourish that might generate panic --- which in turn has the potential to generate harm.
The R0 of 3.8 was the initial number used in the modelling prediction based on assumptions and whatever data set prevailing at that time. The R0 number will change over time as fresh data becomes available. It should also be noted Jonathan Read headed that research paper. Have you actually read the research paper? It can be found here.
The one doing the twitter round and is being criticised for being dramatic was commenting on the R0 of 3.8 as being of pandemic level. The twitter discussions involving Jonathan Read is far from being shut down - that is simply a narrative of your own creation.
I deal with facts and make my own judgment accordingly.
So what are the facts .
(1)The infection rate of this new coronavirus is basically twice as fast as SARs. This is taken from the research paper and corroborates with what we know of SARs in terms of infected population within the same time period.
A comparison of the efficiency of transmission in this outbreak and in SARS outbreaks can be seen as well in simple comparisons of doubling times in each outbreak. In SARS, doubling times varied from 4.6 days to 14.2 days depending on setting (doubling time, Td=6.0 (1358 over 63 days, Singapore), Td=4.6 (425 over 41 days, Hong Kong), Td=14.2 (7919 over 185 days, overall)) (Lipsitch et al. 2003). Using the counts of confirmed cases as of 22 January (444) and assuming the outbreak began on 15 December 2019, we find a doubling time of 4.1. However, using our estimates of the size of the outbreak on 1 and 21 January (24 and 11,257 people respectively) we estimate a doubling time of 2.3. We note this is similar to estimates from the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong (Lipsitch et al. 2003).
(2)The incubation period is basically twice as long as SARs. Just on these two points, how reasonable is WHO's initial;estimate R0 of 1.5 to 2.4 as opposed to SARs of R0 of 2 - 5. The basic facts itself doesn't support the two comparison in terms of incubation period and infection rate as R0 is dependent on these variables, among others.
(3)We then get to the silly R0 comparison that is being used to support the notion that it is not too bad when compared to other infectious diseases.
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The reason why measles, smallpox and rubella has such high R0 is because they are highly contagious and they can infect others while in incubation. SARs in comparison do not infect others during incubation. This leads me to the biggest bombshell to-date that the Chinese government has just dropped.
(4)Over the weekend, the China's health minister Ma Xiaowei made a startling statement Sunday about the Wuhan coronavirus: He said people can spread it before they become symptomatic.
From the same article this is the immediate reaction from experts.
The research paper that is being criticized for a high R0 of 3.8 might just turned out to be the low end of the number given that comparable diseases that can infect during incubation like smallpox has a R0 of 5-7."This is a game changer," said Dr. William Schaffner, a longtime adviser to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
It's much harder to contain a virus -- to track down a patient's contacts and quarantine them immediately -- if the patient was spreading the disease for days or weeks before they even realized they had it.
"It means the infection is much more contagious than we originally thought," said Schaffner, an infectious disease specialist at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. "This is worse than we anticipated."