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by __blockcipher__
2166 days ago
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There is abundant evidence that children do not play a serious role in transmission, so concerns about the teachers are unfounded: [COVID-19 Transmission and Children: The Child Is Not to Blame](https://pediatrics.aappublications.org/content/early/2020/07...) - July 2020 -- As far as negative consequences, there is no theoretical basis for long-term consequences of COVID-19. There is basis for medium-term lung abnormalities which happens in general with pneumonia, but that doesn't apply to children except the incredibly small fraction that actually have bad outcomes, which is so rare that we should literally treat it as a rounding error. Even pediatric multi-inflammatory syndrome is incredibly rare. No, most people are dramatically overestimating COVID-19 risk and dramatically underestimating risk of lockdown, universal masking, etc |
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"Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) presents arguably the greatest public health crisis in living memory."
In other comments, you've claimed there's no long-term risk to children, while the article you cite says,
"emerging reports of a novel Kawasaki disease–like multisystem inflammatory syndrome necessitate continued surveillance in pediatric patients"
Then you just plain went to far, when you said "there is no theoretical basis for long-term consequences of COVID-19." Sorry, but "there is no theoretical basis" is an over-statement. If you had said, "The evidence indicates there are no long-term consequences," you would have maintained your aura of authority. But "there is no theoretical basis" is too far, especially since you cited an article that specifically mentions novel Kawasaki disease–like multisystem inflammatory syndrome. That's not just a theoretical basis, that's an example of a concrete basis. "There is no theoretical basis" doesn't mean, "the theory is incorrect," it means, "it's impossible for the theory to be correct," and that's a statement the evidence YOU CITED shows is not true.
I think you're more informed on the subject than average, but I am no longer convinced you have a good grasp of even the evidence you cite, let alone the body of available research. You Google well, but you don't really understand.