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Thread: Risk vs perception

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by NavyDiver View Post
    Its still a perception of risk not real such as the twit who rear ended the car beside me 20 minutes ago. I wonder if he realized the risk his phone might break when he ran into the person in front of him while looking at his phone rather than the road

    Before you go for a second helping real risk here is Coronary heart disease is the leading underlying cause of death in Australia, followed by dementia and Alzheimer disease, and cerebrovascular disease (which includes stroke). Lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) make up the top 5 leading underlying causes of death in Australia in 2017, for males and females of all ages combined.

    Figure 3.2: Leading underlying causes of death, by age group, 2015–2017

    https://www.aihw.gov.au/getmedia/4a5...d/3-2.png.aspx


    I understand the many thousands of people who have survived Covid 19 ( 98% or so) are being urgent to donate blood for plasma transfusions at the moment. Idea is sound Coronavirus Live Updates: China exploring new treatment with help from survivors | MEAWW

    Personally I still assume almost zero risk until winter here in the southern hemisphere. Sadly of course the flu mutates every single year meaning most of our prior immunity is no use at all
    Of I agree, the risk in this country is tiny, the risk raised by the experts is that of the lack of immunity vs other corona type viruses like the flu and the lack of transparency by the Chinese govt (surprise surprise)

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    Quote Originally Posted by rick130 View Post
    Of I agree, the risk in this country is tiny, the risk raised by the experts is that of the lack of immunity vs other corona type viruses like the flu and the lack of transparency by the Chinese govt (surprise surprise)
    Kettle and black issue re transparency would need to be in Current Affairs to comment

    The stuff ups with information and access are being dealt with Noted" WHO is looking at WHO is investigating 1,716 health workers in China infected with coronavirus"
    A good point on this is "It appears infections among medical workers peaked in mid-January and have “rapidly” decreased since, according to the World Health Organization."

    Reason is being prepared and educated of course.

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    Worth remembering that there are two aspects to risk:-

    1. Probability of the event occurring

    2. Severity of the event

    And we also have to think about what 'event' we are talking about. If we think the risk is that of personal death from COVID19, then yes, the risk for any individual is almost certainly quite low, but the severity high.

    If we think about the risk to the Australian population as a whole, there are too many unknowns. The probability of the virus becoming fairly widespread in Australia is unknown, because we have no clear picture of how infectious it is. And we also have no clear picture of the severity, that is how many deaths would be likely from this risk.

    But if we think about the economic cost of the virus to Australia, there are fewer unknowns. The probability of it having a substantial economic impact is quite high. Already, it is badly impacting tourism and education, two of Australia's major export earners and jobs providers, and it is starting to affect supply chains in almost every industry. So in this case we know the probability is high, approaching 100%, and although we do not know how bad it is going to get, it is already clear it is going to be bad. If, as is fairly likely, it results in a substantial drop in coal and iron ore sales, it will have a major impact, including the state budgets of WA, Qld and NSW, and the federal budget, with all the flow0n effects of this.
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    a lot of wrong information in this thread
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    Quote Originally Posted by NavyDiver View Post
    Risk V preception
    I assume this should read "Risk vs Perception"?

    It had me confused at first - I didn't know what a Risk 5 meant.
    Ron B.
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    From the National museum Australia. defining moments of the influenza pandemic.

    The first ship intercepted in Aus. with cases of the flu was the Mataran, intercepted in in Darwin. There were more cases found in Melbourne, but the Victorian Gov. of the time weren't sure if it was Spanish flu, or normal flu, consequently the flu spread to other States, which caused a certain amount of angst. NZ had the Spanish flu before Aus., and Aus. had time to put in place quarantine arrangements to limit its spread. Still, around 15,000 people died, and 40% of the population were infected. Commonwealth serum laboratories were established during the First World War, and they developed their first experimental vaccine in anticipation of the Spanish flu reaching Australia. Maritime quarantine proved effective, and contained the spread of the virus, and restricted its eventual introduction to Australia to a single entry point, Melbourne. More humans died from the Spanish flu [ named after where it was first found] , 50 to 100 million, than were killed in WW1, 18 million, and Australia's 2.7 / 1000 death rate was one of the lowest recorded in the World during the pandemic.

    Influenza pandemic | National Museum of Australia
    I’m pretty sure the dinosaurs died out when they stopped gathering food and started having meetings to discuss gathering food

    A bookshop is one of the only pieces of evidence we have that people are still thinking

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    Quote Originally Posted by p38arover View Post
    I assume this should read "Risk vs Perception"?

    It had me confused at first - I didn't know what a Risk 5 meant.

    My ability to create typing errors in a real risk not a 'Perception" Edited with thanks

    Xièxiè LǎoshīNoted a Doctor we know in Singapore did provide a elevation of real risk in Singapore. That still Leaves us in a very low risk position despite misconceptions.

    Coronavirus: Why Singapore is so vulnerable to coronavirus spread - BBC News

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by NavyDiver View Post
    My ability to create typing errors in a real risk not a 'Perception" Edited with thanks
    I fixed the displayed thread title, too.
    Ron B.
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  10. #20
    DiscoMick Guest
    I was thinking that face masks are an example of risk Vs perception.
    The perception is that you as a healthy person wearing a face mask reduces the risk of you being infected by a sick person.
    However, various experts have said that is wrong and the mask does little to prevent inhaling the virus.
    It actually goes the opposite way. Wearing a mask may reduce the risk of you as a sick person infecting another person.
    In other words, if this is true, masks should be worn by sick people, not healthy people.

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