The majority of people will get he virus and with mild symptoms. Those that do (present symptoms) can isolate for 7 days (if living alone) or 14 days if living with others and actually we need people to get the virus so that we can increase immunity.
I wonder how many mild cases people assumed to be a case of cold or flu.
It's worth mentioning that when
the WHO report on Wuhan says that >80% cases are mild with only 13.8% severe and 6.1% critical, the definition of "mild" is not a bit of a sniffle, but
anything up to full-blown pneumonia. The severe cases need breathing support - oxygen or a ventilator, critical means respiratory or multi-organ failure.
A paper published yesterday suggested that initially 86% of cases went undocumented, but
more recent work in Shenzen suggests only 23% were missed by looking for symptoms. It seems that although people shed virus for a long time they can be infectious for <24h before showing symptoms and 6 days after if the symptoms are mild, but mebbe 10 days or more if symptoms are worse.
When will mask wearing become the norm? I was expecting something to be said about it, but so far no mention at all?
It's discouraged for the general public because they
a) don't wear them properly leaving gaps for virus to get in
b) don't take them off correctly so get infected taking them off
c) despite this they get a false sense of security and take more risks than non-mask wearers
d) they deprive doctors and nurses of masks at a time when the medical supply chain is under huge stress.
You might as well use a scarf or something.
Going vaguely OT, apparently homebrew retailers are snowed under at the moment whilst commercial breweries are looking at financial ruin now that pubs are shut - if you need malt in particular why not ring round local breweries to see if they have some spare that they can sell you? Not only will you be giving them a little bit of cashflow, buying local means that far fewer hands will be touching your bags.