Watch Dr Fauci Strangely predict pandemic coronavirus in 2016

In 2016, Fauci was asked what keeps it at night. His answer is our current reality with COVID-19.


Anthony Fauci, MD, has many ways became the face of the public health of the nation in the middle of thecoronavirus pandemic. The main member of the White House Coronavirus working group and the head of the National Allergy and Infectious Disease Institute (NIAID) provides the latest information and responding to the Americans.Burning questions about COVID-19 As the virus hit the United States, but despite its calm answers during press conferences, Fauci lives its greatest nightmare. During an interview with BuzzFeed News in 2016, was requested what prevents it from the night of public health risks. His answer ifstrangely described what we are fighting with the COVID-19 epidemic of the last months.

During the May 2016 interview, then-science publisher, now chief deputyVirginie Hughesasked for Fuci: "What is really standing at night? What should we really be worried?" His answer? "From the point of view of the broad global impact ... a respiratory disease like influenza, which is easily widespread and very deadly."

Fool upcoronavirus prediction here:

During the interview, when it was a much less known public figure, Fauci described its greatest concerns about an imminent pandemic. After explaining first how the epidemic of the Ebola virus was frightening but "never, always, never" a serious threat to the people of the United States, Fauci said that "a respiratory disease like the flu, which is easily widespread And very deadly "is what the most concerned.

He then put the term "very deadly" in perspective, referencing theMortality rate from 1 to 2% of the Spanish influenza pandemic of a century there is. "So, if you get a 10% mortal infection, it's a total overall catastrophe," warned with falci. "So that's what I'm concerned about something that has a double characteristic of beingpropagate easily withoutsubstantive immunity ... [and] at the same time, [is] very deadly. "

"If you get an influenza that's so new that none of us has experience with her, so you have a problem if it's very deadly," he added. "The things that concern me about the perception of perception aremisinformation and the inability to calculate the relative risk. ... The fear that Ebola has generated [US) was incredibly proportionally to reality. "

Sure,misinformation was a major issue in the case of coronavirusBut some would argue that this created the opposite problem that Fuci is described with Ebola.

UntilCoronavirus mortality rateThe numbers have evolved considerably as medical experts and public health have learned more about fatal contagion. The early warnings of a mortality rate of 2 to 5% soakedto much lower. Nevertheless, the similarities between the current situation and what the faucers described in 2016 give many people.

Look at the full maintenance here (the prediction part is at the 18-minute rating):

And for more coronaviruses made compared to fiction, check13 actual facts that common myths of common coronaviruses.


Categories: Culture
Tags: Coronavirus / News
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