Or a lot of us anyway. Or not - would be great if that's true. Hope this isn't a double-tap virus. Bret is doubtful.
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danmanjones (Old Spike)
Is there a study that shows this is the case?
There is now a commercialy available reagent being imported into the US which can test for antibodies (with ~97% accuracy) but I've not seen much in the way of data yet.
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(Old Spike)
Is there a study that shows this is the case?
There is now a commercialy available reagent being imported into the US which can test for antibodies (with ~97% accuracy) but I've not seen much in the way of data yet.
A study of 10k people has started in the US but results aren't out yet https://www.nih.gov/news-events/news-releases/nih-begins-study-quantify-undetected-cases-coronavirus-infection
Preliminary results from a study in Germany showed that in Gangelt (population 12k) 14% of people in a village to have the antibodies, that was most likely a cluster in a heavily hit province though https://www.sciencemediacentre.org/expert-reaction-to-unpublished-preliminary-findings-looking-at-the-presence-of-antibodies-to-sars-cov-2-virus-in-residents-of-gangelt-in-germany/
(Old Spike)
Supposing that the virus reactivates in the infected. Would anyone tell us?
(Old Spike)
There does seem to be some cases where it's occured but whether it's a different mutation or whatever I'm not sure.