What do you know about COVID-19? Take this test

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1. True or False: COVID-19 is now the leader of death in the United States.

False. It’s even close. As of July 25, the recent highest date for which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is known, there were 135579 contagion-related deaths, less than 1% of the more than 1.5 million deaths in the United States to date. Year.

COVID-19 is not even the leading cause of death among the elderly, although it accounts for more than 9% of deaths among others over the age of 65. Cancer and diseases at the center continue to cause the most victims in this age group, while unintentional injuries cause the highest number of deaths among others under the age of 45.

What is the way the United States can reopen and resume its activities? The National Coronavirus Recovery Commission, an assignment from the Heritage Foundation, combined American thinkers into perceiving it. To date, it has made more than 260 recommendations. Find out more here.

2. True or False: The United States has the world’s COVID-19 mortality rate.

False. As of August 3, there were 158,706 COVID-19-related deaths nationwide, according to data from Worldometer, the largest in the world. But with a population of 330 million, the United States is also among the most populous in the world.

The exact maximum measure of comparison is the mortality rate consistent with millions of people consistent with millions of people. According to this standard, the United States ranks eighth among countries with 1 million or more population, Belgium, United Kingdom, Spain, Peru, Italy, Sweden and Chile.

3. True or False: The United States has demonstrated more cases than any other country because it has conducted much more intense tests than any country.

False. As of August 2, the United States had conducted approximately 181,000 tests consistent with millions of people. This puts us ninth in the world, United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Denmark, United Kingdom, Singapore, Russia, Lithuania and Israel. All of these countries, with the exception of Bahrain, reported fewer cases consistent with millions of other people than the United States.

4. According to the CDC, how many young people under the age of 15 had died of COVID-19 as of July 25?

(a) 42; b) 420; (c) 4,200; d) 42,000

(a) Of the 135,579 COVID-19-related deaths known through the CDC as of July 25, 42 were for young people under the age of 15. This represents approximately 0.3% of deaths in this age group.

COVID-19 is even one of the 10 most sensible reasons for death among school and preschoolers. Ironically, while young people under the age of 15 account for less than 1% of deaths due to COVID-19 and the elderly account for 80% of deaths, public debate focuses on reopening schools and securing retirement homes.

5. True or false: Sweden, the only country in Europe that has not imposed a blockade, has suffered more COVID-19-related deaths on a demographic basis than any other European country.

False. Supporters of the blockades have denounced Sweden’s refusal to impose them on its population, predicting an epidemic of medieval proportions.

The number of instances shown in Sweden peaked on 24 June (later than in the highest number of closed European countries) and has declined considerably since then. Sweden had fewer COVID-19 deaths consisting of one million inhabitants than Belgium, the United Kingdom, Spain and Italy, all of whom deployed blockades.

6. True or False: Florida’s COVID-19 deaths now rival those of New York.

False. If it’s wrong, in smart company. Dr. Deborah Birx, head of the White House Coronavirus Task, recently announced that the sunshine state, along with Texas and California, is now one of the “three New Yorkers.”

It’s a distortion.

The virus is spreading among Floridians and the number of COVID-19-like deaths is higher and will continue to do so. But as of August 1, deaths consistent with millions of other people in Florida (327) were below the U.S. average (475) and well below rates in New York State (1685) and neighboring states of New Jersey (1790) and Connecticut (1,243).

Equating the conditions in Florida this summer with those that prevailed in New York and the Northeast this past spring is recklessly inaccurate.

In fact, the list of counties with the maximum number of deaths due to coronavirus repair has not replaced much since last April, according to USAFacts.org. Eight of the 10 counties that killed the U.S. By the end of April they were still at the highest sensitivity of 10 at the end of July.

New York City and surrounding counties in New Jersey and on Long Island filled eight of the slots on April 30 and still occupied six of them on July 31, including three of the top five. Only one county from Birx’s “three New Yorks”—Los Angeles County—made the list.

7. Wearing a mask will: a) Prevent you from getting COVID-19; b) Make you sick; c) Both of the above; or d) Neither of the above.

(d) Masks have taken on mythical proportions in the public imagination. 

“I think if we could get everybody to wear a mask now,” CDC Director Dr. Robert Redfield said on July 15, “I think in four, six, eight weeks, we could bring this epidemic under control.”

First, there’s the imprecision of his forecast. (Does he think it’s four, six, or eight weeks? What does he mean by “under control?”) Then, there’s the utopian nature of the hypothetical (How would you go about getting everyone to wear a mask? All the time?) suggests that Redfield was making another of those unsubstantiated, off-the-cuff statements to which public health officials seem prone.

On the other hand, social media resonates with warnings that mask the oxygen frame. So will dressing in a mask save you from a bout of inflammation or plunge you into a hypoxia stupor?

Or.

“Masks can help save others with COVID-19 from transmitting the virus to others,” according to the CDC. They are not the users of the mask, but can others of the mask user.

The CDC says that dressing in a mask “may” have this effect because clinical certainty is not possible. You cannot conduct a well-controlled experiment that provides clinical evidence that the mask’s help saves you from spreading the coronavirus.

If there is no definitive evidence that the mask works, why use it? Above all, unusual sense. Scientists seem pretty sure that COVID-19 spreads through droplets, there is evidence that it is provided in aerosols. Anyway, it’s about our breaths.

There is also evidence that other people who do not know they are inflamed can pass the disease on to others. By imposing a physical barrier, mask the speed and diffusion of our breaths. This is the idea of the threat that a user who does not know that he or she is spreading the virus will spread the infection.

Therefore, it is a smart concept to use one, unless you faint.

8. True or false: 20% of Americans had coronavirus.

False. A survey of 1,000 Americans through foreign survey company Kekst CNC found that the maximum of us the virus has inflamed 20% of the population.

As of August 2, Johns Hopkins University had registered only 4.7 million instances, or about 1.4% of the U.S. population. Of course, many cases of COVID-19 are not diagnosed, so respondents would probably not be as far away as they seem.

It should also be noted that Americans are not the only ones overestimating the scale of the pandemic in their country. The same poll found that others in the UK, Germany, France and Sweden also overestimated the percentage of their compatriots who had contracted the disease.

9. True or false: all people, regardless of age, who contract coronavirus are also at risk of serious illness and death.

As of July 25, the CDC’s highest recent public awareness indicates that others over the age of 65 and over are guilty of 80% of COVID-19 deaths, accounting for less than 17% of the population.

People under forty-five (58% of the population) account for less than 3% of coronavirus deaths.

A recent review by researchers at Syracuse University tried harder, as the threat of mortality from age-related coronavirus infection should be estimated. Researchers used knowledge from studies around the world to estimate the amount of other people inflamed with coronavirus.

This organization is larger than the number of other people who tested positive for contagion. They found that the infection mortality rate, the percentage of others who have been inflamed with the virus (including those who have never been tested) who die, is very different for young people and older adults.

“The estimated [infection fatality rate] is close to zero for children and younger adults,” they concluded, “but rises exponentially with age, reaching about 0.3 percent for ages 50-59, 1 percent for ages 60-69, 4 percent for ages 70-79, and 24 percent for ages 80 and above.”

10. True or false: According to Syracuse University researchers themselves, a user under the age of forty-five involved in a twist of the destination is 3 times more likely to die than a user from the same age organization that hires COVID-19.

True. This examines in comparison the relative threat of death from a turn of fatal injury and coronavirus infection. The authors estimate that other people under the age of forty-five who have a rotation of the injury of fate caused by anything other than a turn of a car’s fate have 0.03% (3 chances out of every 10,000) of dying from that injury, compared to a 0.01% chance of dying (1 in 10,000) if contracted by COVID-19. People in this age organization who are concerned about the shift in traffic from fate have a similar death threat at 10,000.

Evaluate yourself

0-4 correct: mediocre. Don’t blame yourself. He trusted CNN, the New York Times or similar resources for his COVID-19 information.

5-7 correct: Not bad. You understand the pandemic better than most.

8-9 correct: ok. One or two wrong questions place him among the most competent Americans.

10 correct: Excellent. If you’re not too attached to your day job, you might want to apply to run the White House coronavirus task force.

Public health promotes and protects the health of people and the communities where they live, learn, work and play.

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