Yeah nobody said opening as normal. In the article, even in this divisive thread. It's don't open vs. open with lots of precautionsAnonymous wrote:Opening as normal in the fall is NOT what is being communicated at some VA state schools (per friends with kids who are currently registering for fall classes).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Right, it all depends and it varies. My 25 yo niece simply had what seemed like a cold, although she did lose her sense of taste and smell.
The point is that it varies--but if you look at how the studies which make claims about %ages of mild cases, any case that doesn't meet the threshold for hospitalization counts as mild. The 5% that are not "mild" and not hospitalized are often those in settings (e.g. long-term care, mental health institution) where they may have qualified to be hospitalized but were not.
There's been debate about this--the epidemiological use of "mild" is being conflated with everyday person's view of "mild" and make them overly sanguine about risk.
Right. In this context, "mild" includes people who develop pneumonia from COVID-19 but don't need to be hospitalized. Mild doesn't mean the sniffles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Right, it all depends and it varies. My 25 yo niece simply had what seemed like a cold, although she did lose her sense of taste and smell.
Did she get it back?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Right, it all depends and it varies. My 25 yo niece simply had what seemed like a cold, although she did lose her sense of taste and smell.
The point is that it varies--but if you look at how the studies which make claims about %ages of mild cases, any case that doesn't meet the threshold for hospitalization counts as mild. The 5% that are not "mild" and not hospitalized are often those in settings (e.g. long-term care, mental health institution) where they may have qualified to be hospitalized but were not.
There's been debate about this--the epidemiological use of "mild" is being conflated with everyday person's view of "mild" and make them overly sanguine about risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Right, it all depends and it varies. My 25 yo niece simply had what seemed like a cold, although she did lose her sense of taste and smell.
Anonymous wrote:According to Mike Spivey, a higher education expert who says this is being discussed behind the scenes but that public announcements from each school won't come out until May through July. https://blog.spiveyconsulting.com/universities-colleges-and-law-schools-plan-to-be-open-on-campus-this-fall/
Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Right, it all depends and it varies. My 25 yo niece simply had what seemed like a cold, although she did lose her sense of taste and smell.
Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
A mild case does include 2 weeks of impairment--I have a direct relationship with someone who is classified as a mild case. It was like the worst flu and pneumonia combined but it is categorized as mild if they are not hospitalized. They are part of the 85%.
I don't want to argue about the word "mild." As roughly 5% of infected people are hospitalized, I wouldn't characterize a non-hospitalized case with significant impairment "mild." The studies on the large percentage of asymptomatic and if you prefer barely symptomatic being in the 80s date back to February.
https://www.sciencealert.com/large-chinese-study-finds-most-coronavirus-infections-are-mild
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
A mild case does include 2 weeks of impairment--I have a direct relationship with someone who is classified as a mild case. It was like the worst flu and pneumonia combined but it is categorized as mild if they are not hospitalized. They are part of the 85%.
Anonymous wrote:No, a "mild" case does not mean two weeks of impairment. A mild case means a barely symptomatic case with no actual impairment. It has been estimated that 85% (of the general population, not student age) of infected people have asymptomatic or mild cases.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a big issue is that even if the fatality rates are low in the college-aged population, there's really likely to be high outbreaks in dorms as there are in all the residential settings. If kids are sick for the 2-3 weeks that is typical for a mild case of Covid 19 they will be miserable, likely have to do a medical withdrawal from classes (where they don't get credit, only get some prorated money back for course, but it doesn't harm their GPA). Maybe if they've done enough for the class could get by with an incomplete. But there are pretty high odds that going to campus during a second wave is going to result in a missed semester of classes. As a parent, even my kid is okay with taking the health risk, there's kind of a big academic/financial risk implicit in going to residential classes in the fall. I have a college student who is itching to get back--and I really want them to have the full college experience, but I feel like I don't know what the right decision will be if they offer a hybrid option.
This age group is barely even getting sick from CV. Your scenario is not the likely one.