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The one that comes to mind is a Japanese study looking at the situation in Hokkaido from Jan onwards. Hokkaido, as they get many Chinese tourists. VERY math heavy (literally pages of calcuations), and impossible to understand in-depth unless you have that sort of background - in maths or statistics. (No intention to sound condescending).
It concluded that monitoring Influenza could be used for monitoring of bioweapons attacks. It showed the sudden drop-off of Infl. cases when SARS-CoV-2 appeared on the scene, prior to when it was officially picked up by SARS-CoV-2 testing.
Absolutely fascinating study, probably my most favourite one of all SARS-CoV-2 studies that I've read so far. Unfortunatel very carefully worded, so carefully in fact, that I can't even find it in my history any more. I printed off a copy to work on it, so I have it somewhere, but can't access it right now. To this day I can't believe I even found the thing. Sheer luck. It didn't get much traction - obviously (impossible to find, near-impossible to understand, and a pretty hot iron).
There have been more studies regarding Influenza lately, as the incidence was monitored in the southern hemisphere during their winter. But in any of those studies, the competing aspect of the viruses is obviously skewed by mask-wearing, distancing and shutdowns, which will, by themselves, reduce the incidence of Influenza to practically zero, SARS-CoV-2 or not.
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[–] Rotteuxx 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Got links or study names?
[–] captainstrange 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
I think he was being sarcastic.
[–] xpat ago
No
[–] xpat ago
The one that comes to mind is a Japanese study looking at the situation in Hokkaido from Jan onwards. Hokkaido, as they get many Chinese tourists. VERY math heavy (literally pages of calcuations), and impossible to understand in-depth unless you have that sort of background - in maths or statistics. (No intention to sound condescending).
It concluded that monitoring Influenza could be used for monitoring of bioweapons attacks. It showed the sudden drop-off of Infl. cases when SARS-CoV-2 appeared on the scene, prior to when it was officially picked up by SARS-CoV-2 testing.
Absolutely fascinating study, probably my most favourite one of all SARS-CoV-2 studies that I've read so far. Unfortunatel very carefully worded, so carefully in fact, that I can't even find it in my history any more. I printed off a copy to work on it, so I have it somewhere, but can't access it right now. To this day I can't believe I even found the thing. Sheer luck. It didn't get much traction - obviously (impossible to find, near-impossible to understand, and a pretty hot iron).
There have been more studies regarding Influenza lately, as the incidence was monitored in the southern hemisphere during their winter. But in any of those studies, the competing aspect of the viruses is obviously skewed by mask-wearing, distancing and shutdowns, which will, by themselves, reduce the incidence of Influenza to practically zero, SARS-CoV-2 or not.
Sorry that I can't be of any more help right now.
[–] Voreason ago
Was this it? https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.04.24.20077800v2.full.pdf+html