I think we had a bit of a turning point this weekend with the virus with the news of many more outbreaks in Italy, Iran, and South Korea. Sounds like the definition of a pandemic to me. And it's pretty clear to me that if nations with advanced medical systems are having trouble keeping a handle on it, a lot of people are really screwed now that you're seeing cases in places with far less advanced medical systems like Iran (and the first case in Afghanistan). If it's mainly killing older people or other immunocompromised ones, it's obviously going to get really bad in areas with bad hygiene and where life is physically much harder. (Like good Lord, it getting into a refugee camp.)
I mean, I know you're still more likely to die of the flu, blah blah blah. But it certainly doesn't seem like a picnic either. And while it sounds like I'd survive it if I personally got it eventually, there's plenty of folks I know who probably shouldn't be getting coronavirus or the flu.
By the way, it's also interesting at work because normally you see people coming through from China. Met a new postdoc last week who just made it out before they shut down the border to all Chinese passports, then went into self-imposed quarantine for two weeks before starting work. A little more weird was a few weeks ago we had a talk by a Chinese student who clearly wanted to make a light joke about coronavirus at the start of his talk by saying he's from Beijing... but then mentioned he flew on the same flight as the guy who got coronavirus in Massachusetts, just three days later. Yeah dude, not your best joke.

Strange times. I do wonder in particular though what's going to happen to air travel now that it's in multiple countries an if it becomes an even greater pandemic.