• zabadoh
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    1 day ago

    I think the government has a good handle on COVID-19 now with more-or-less mass vaccination, so it’s not going to cause mass deaths and disabilities.

    I’m more worried about H5N1 bird flu, more currently the affect it’s having on milk and egg prices (over USD$12/doz. yikes!) and the potential to mutate to direct human-to-human transmission.

    From https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/22401-bird-flu dated 12/5/2024

    What’s the mortality rate of bird flu?

    Overall, the mortality (death) rate for bird flu in humans is high — historically, about half of all people with known infections have died. But most recent cases in the U.S. have been mild.

    • orcrist@lemm.ee
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      8 hours ago

      Except it is causing mass deaths. Have you read the 2024 numbers? Much lower than a few years ago but much higher than zero.

      • zabadoh
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        4 hours ago

        Sure, I’ll bite:

        In 2024 up to week 50, there have been 45,447 deaths involving COVID-19. This is compared to 159,940 deaths involving flu or pneumonia and 2,892,661 deaths from all causes in the same time frame.

        https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/covid19/index.htm

        For comparisons sake, traffic accident deaths in the first three quarters of 2024 were 29,135.

      • kinther@lemmy.world
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        16 hours ago

        Depends where you shop and where they source them from. Once that source gets hit and they have to cull their entire flock, you’ll see the price increase.

    • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      Overall, the mortality (death) rate for bird flu in humans is high — historically, about half of all people with known infections have died. But most recent cases in the U.S. have been mild.

      This is a good thing in immunology, actually. Diseases with extremely high severity rates tend to not spread through a population because it incapacitates their host too quickly- Ebola is a classic example. Fucking insane severity, but bad to the point where it hasn’t ever spread to epidemic proportions because it’s super easy to recognize then isolate. Ebola outbreaks have been (mostly, sans 2014) limited to small geographic areas of small populations.

      • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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        23 hours ago

        This only matters if it incapacitates the host quickly enough that they don’t spread it, which isn’t necessarily closely related to its deadliness. In the 1980s, AIDS was a death sentence, but that didn’t make HIV less transmissible.

    • Landsharkgun@midwest.social
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      23 hours ago

      Easy way to avoid high egg/dairy prices, drastically or completely eliminate your chance of getting it, and reduce the spread of it overall: just don’t eat 'em. Consider making some chili instead.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        There is someone out there right now with a family recipe who is incensed at your implication that you can’t put eggs in chili.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      I think you mean “for now” rather than “now.” Less than a month from now will likely be a very different story.