Of those hospitalized.
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Grooming #1, touching is deadly:
https://youtu.be/oQOX1M0OthA
Grooming #2, kids are gross:
https://youtu.be/b1x59vSglyg
Grooming part 3, tinklie piano, bathing is gross unless Clorox:
https://youtu.be/K16T7vamNsg
Retro-grooming, it actually sanitizes the air
https://youtu.be/Juqrt89F_ns
As a military brat I remember mid-west and Mormon kid's households were a lot like that retro commercial. Once, at my friends house, I dropped a banana and picked it up and ate it and horrified everyone.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/a...nia-study.html
Americans may be overestimating their risk of contracting the novel coronavirus, a controversial new study from California suggests.
Researchers found that, on average, a person who has a single contact with an infected individual has a one in about 4,000 chance of becoming sick, without using preventive measures such as social distancing or wearing a mask.
For the middle-aged, the risk of hospitalization is nearly one in a million and the risk of death is almost one in 20 million.
For a person between ages 50 and 64, the odds of being hospitalized with the virus after having a single contact is one in 852,000.
The risk of fatality is even smaller. with people the same age having a one in 19.1 million chance of dying from COVID-19, based on rates seen in the final week of May.
Under the New Normal, Winter is a time when we DON'T get sick.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...uarantine.html
A second wave of coronavirus may not hit the UK until spring 2021 with a cold winter likely to impose its own 'mini-quarantine', a scientist has warned.
A cold snap could keep people indoors and get them to wear 'natural' PPE in the form of scarves and gloves, driving down transmission rates.
https://youtu.be/Su0wMysBYPM
There's not going to be "second wave". The "Pandemic" is over.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Famine...-19_pandemiche COVID-19 pandemic–related famines, also known as the coronavirus famine or coronavirus food crisis, are a series of currently ongoing famines that began in late 2019.[3][4] The famines are a result of the 2019–20 locust infestation, the COVID-19 recession and measures taken to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.[5][4][6] Ongoing wars and political turmoil in some nations are also considered to be local causes.[7] It is projected by Oxfam that by the end of 2020 "12,000 people per day could die from COVID-19 linked hunger",[1] with the United Nations stating that a total of 265 million people face acute food insecurity – an increase of 135 million people as a result of the pandemic.[8] Altogether, at least 10% and as much as 20% of the global population is believed to be affected in some form or another due to famines caused in 2020.[4][9] The famines are widely considered to be the worst series of famines since the Great Chinese Famine in 1959–61, and is projected to be among the worst famines in human history.[10][11][12][13][14]