Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #65

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https://twitter.com/sfchronicle/status/1278543840367050757

JUST IN: More than 40 South Bay school principals are in quarantine after being exposed to COVID-19 during an in-person meeting to plan the reopening of schools.

People going to the meeting questioned the wisdom of holding an in-person gathering of that many, and now...

A pre-symptomatic individual at the school reopening planning meeting on June 19 tested positive for the coronavirus just a few days after school administrators congregated.
 
Also, mask non-compliance ticketing reportedly to start happening in some areas of LA:

https://twitter.com/WHDLASD/status/1278531866501365762

LASD West Hollywood
@WHDLASD

Update: The fine is $250 and a fee of $50 for a total of $300 for the first offense.

Beginning soon...

West Hollywood Sheriff’s Station has been educating people about face covers/masks since the first Order. Beginning this month, we will start issuing Administrative Citations for people who are not conforming to the Order to wear a face cover/mask in public.
https://twitter.com/WHDLASD/status/1278514143906066433
 
Do they have to live in metro Atlanta? Or can they live in a neighboring county?

No not metro Atlanta. Her work is a little north of 285 near 19, so they will probably end up in that general area. Since I posted, she emailed that they may wait until January. It’s frustrating because they were really excited about the move, but coronavirus makes it so chaotic right now. It may be possible to continue to work remotely in San Diego or somewhere else even if they don’t go to Atlanta. As I pointed out to her in my reply, the opportunity to move was offered in the fall of 2019 when life was totally different. The Atlanta and the Georgia they planned to move to no longer exist. Neither do the country and the world for that matter. So it’s almost like they need to scrap what they thought they’d be getting and rewind to before Atlanta was even a possibility, and decide what they really want. They have options, fortunately, unlike many. But there are lots of moving parts to juggle.
 
As we know, our state of Victoria - well, the city of Melbourne - is really having a struggle now. Cases rising, 16 suburbs locked down, roadblocks making sure people are leaving their suburb only for good and acceptable reason.

And now they are finding that some school children have innocently passed the virus to each other. (No link, I am watching the early evening news.)

Plus, at least several people have decided to take the back roads into my state! WTH. Our borders are closed to them.

And the Victorian motor vehicle depts have noticed a spike in people wanting to change the address on their drivers license. Presumably to avoid lockdown and get the heck out of Dodge.

Apparently we have our fair share of covidiots. o_O

Their Premier has warned them that if they don't quit fooling around he will shut down their whole state.
 
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Internal messages reveal crisis at Houston hospitals as coronavirus cases surge

A day later, the top physician executive at the Houston Methodist hospital system wrote to staff members warning that its coronavirus caseload was surging: “It has become necessary to consider delaying more surgical services to create further capacity for COVID-19 patients,” Dr. Robert Phillips said in the note, an abrupt turn from three days earlier, when the hospital system sent a note to thousands of patients, inviting them to keep their surgical appointments.

And at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, staff members were alerted recently that the hospital would soon begin taking in cancer patients with COVID-19 from the city’s overburdened public hospital system, a highly unusual move for the specialty hospital.

These internal messages highlight the growing strain that the coronavirus crisis is putting on hospital systems in the Houston region, where the number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 has nearly quadrupled since Memorial Day. As of Tuesday, more than 3,000 people were hospitalized for the coronavirus in the region, including nearly 800 in intensive care.

“To tell you the truth, what worries me is not this week, where we’re still kind of handling it,” said Roberta Schwartz, Houston Methodist’s chief innovation officer, who’s been helping lead the system’s efforts to expand beds for COVID-19 patents. “I’m really worried about next week.”

What’s happening in Houston draws eerie parallels to New York City in late March, when every day brought steep increases in the number of patients seeking care at overburdened hospitals — though, so far, with far fewer deaths. But as coronavirus cases surge in Texas, state officials here have not reimplemented the same lockdown measures that experts say helped bring New York’s outbreak under control, raising concern among public health officials that Houston won’t be able to flatten the curve.

“The time to act and time to be alarmed is not when you’ve hit capacity, but it’s much earlier when you start to see hospitalizations increase at a very fast rate,” said Lauren Ancel Meyers, a professor of integrative biology who leads the University of Texas at Austin COVID-19 Modeling Consortium. “It is definitely time to take some kind of action. It is time to be alarmed.”
 
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I’m so pissed, disappointed and weary of this.
Why can’t the U.S. be proactive vs. reactive to coronavirus?
Everything is so *advertiser censored* backward it’s not even funny.
Instead of sending more military doctors and nurses into ground zero in Texas, or throwing drugs and money at the problem in TX, FL, AZ, why not start with the basics?
Mandate masks across the board! Mandate social distancing across the board. If need be violators can be fined.
What were our leaders thinking would happen after lockdown?
We aren’t learning anything from countries who are also dealing with this and how these clusters rise again.
 
Internal messages reveal crisis at Houston hospitals as coronavirus cases surge

A day later, the top physician executive at the Houston Methodist hospital system wrote to staff members warning that its coronavirus caseload was surging: “It has become necessary to consider delaying more surgical services to create further capacity for COVID-19 patients,” Dr. Robert Phillips said in the note, an abrupt turn from three days earlier, when the hospital system sent a note to thousands of patients, inviting them to keep their surgical appointments.

And at The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, staff members were alerted recently that the hospital would soon begin taking in cancer patients with COVID-19 from the city’s overburdened public hospital system, a highly unusual move for the specialty hospital.

These internal messages highlight the growing strain that the coronavirus crisis is putting on hospital systems in the Houston region, where the number of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 has nearly quadrupled since Memorial Day. As of Tuesday, more than 3,000 people were hospitalized for the coronavirus in the region, including nearly 800 in intensive care.

“To tell you the truth, what worries me is not this week, where we’re still kind of handling it,” said Roberta Schwartz, Houston Methodist’s chief innovation officer, who’s been helping lead the system’s efforts to expand beds for COVID-19 patents. “I’m really worried about next week.”

What’s happening in Houston draws eerie parallels to New York City in late March, when every day brought steep increases in the number of patients seeking care at overburdened hospitals — though, so far, with far fewer deaths. But as coronavirus cases surge in Texas, state officials here have not reimplemented the same lockdown measures that experts say helped bring New York’s outbreak under control, raising concern among public health officials that Houston won’t be able to flatten the curve.

“The time to act and time to be alarmed is not when you’ve hit capacity, but it’s much earlier when you start to see hospitalizations increase at a very fast rate,” said Lauren Ancel Meyers, a professor of integrative biology who leads the University of Texas at Austin COVID-19 Modeling Consortium. “It is definitely time to take some kind of action. It is time to be alarmed.”
Cancer patients with COVID...
I hate to even read that.

Moo
 
Trump says he still believes coronavirus will ‘sort of just disappear’

Despite a recent surge in novel coronavirus cases, United States President Donald Trump said he still believes the virus will “just sort of disappear” at some point.

“I think we’re going to be very good with the coronavirus. I think at some point that’s going to sort of just disappear, I hope,” he said during an interview on Fox Business on Wednesday.

When asked if he still believed that, Trump replied: “I do. Sure. At some point, and I think we’re going to have a vaccine very soon too.”
He is going to be right at some point or we are all doomed.
 
Is this any more dangerous than the massive protests that have been going on for 30 days already?

This event lasts for 2 hours. It is outside in the open air.



Fireworks are being launched from an area more than a mile in length, from Inlet Bridge at the south end of West Potomac Park to north of the Lincoln Memorial, as well as on the grounds of the Washington Monument. The show will be approximately 35 minutes long and will be visible throughout the District and Northern Virginia.

More than 10,000 fireworks will be launched at this year’s show.

More than 800 acres of National Mall and Memorial Parks, equivalent to more than 600 football fields, are accessible for viewing the flyovers and fireworks, including the:

  • Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool;
  • Thomas Jefferson Memorial;
  • World War II Memorial;
  • East Potomac Park;
  • Washington Monument grounds; and
  • National Mall grounds between 4th and 14th Streets.
The firework display is viewable three miles away from the launch site, making other public locations, such as Anacostia Park, Meridian Hill Park, and the George Washington Memorial Parkway options for experiencing the show. This includes the:

  • U.S. Marine Corps War Memorial;
  • Netherlands Carillon grounds;
  • Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Grove;
  • Gravelly Point Park: and
  • Mount Vernon Trail from the 14th Street Bridge to Theodore Roosevelt Island.
Parking is allowed in designated parking areas only.

Schedule of Events
Military flyovers above the National Mall and across the District: ~6:45 p.m. to 8:00 p.m.
Monumental fireworks display from the National Mall, viewable from the District and Northern Virginia: 9:07 p.m. – 9:44 p.m.

Public Health Considerations
For any fireworks viewing location, the public is encouraged to prevent the spread of infectious diseases by following guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for events and public gatherings:

A supply of more than 300,000 cloth face coverings will be available and distributed to visitors attending the Independence Day celebration at the National Mall. These cloth face coverings are not surgical masks or respirators, and visitors should familiarize themselves with CDC considerations for wearing a cloth face covering. Per CDC guidance, visitors are also strongly encouraged to bring and wear their own cloth face coverings when social distancing cannot be maintained in an effort to help prevent the spread of infectious diseases. As supplies are limited, visitors should not rely upon receiving a mask.

If you are a person who has been identified by the CDC to be at an increased risk of becoming severely ill if exposed to COVID-19, please review CDC recommendations prior to attending this event.
Sounds like you will be able to watch it from indoors or your own back garden too so you won't necessarily have to mingle at all. Anyone on here who lives or work in the DC area who will be able to see this?
 
Alabama students throwing 'COVID parties' to see who gets infected: Officials

Students in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 have been attending parties in the city and surrounding area as part of a disturbing contest to see who can catch the virus first, a city council member told ABC News on Wednesday.

Tuscaloosa City Councilor Sonya McKinstry said students have been organizing "COVID parties" as a game to intentionally infect each other with the contagion that has killed more than 127,000 people in the United States. She said she recently learned of the behavior and informed the city council of the parties occurring in the city.

She said the organizers of the parties are purposely inviting guests who have COVID-19.

"They put money in a pot and they try to get COVID. Whoever gets COVID first gets the pot. It makes no sense," McKinstry said. "They're intentionally doing it."

Tuscaloosa Fire Chief Randy Smith told the City Council on Tuesday that he has confirmed the students' careless behavior.
There is no curing stupid that's for sure.
 
well this is better news than what I saw... I hope this is the case for other countries as well... IF their is a second wave in countries that have come way way down in cases, the availability of the remdesivir would really help keep the numbers down...
UK is still contributing to WHO so will be one of the 127 countries getting the Indian manufactured product. USA no longer belong to WHO so will be on their own now. MOO
 
For those who were insisting that Houston hospitals were just fine and not at 100 % capacity. No, the hospitals are not fine. They are transferring patients to other cities.
"Harris Health Systems, the public health system which operates Ben Taub and LBJ hospitals is now transferring COVID-19 patients to other healthcare facilities in outlying areas like Kingwood and the Woodlands. According to Harris Health Systems officials, 49 percent of the patients in Ben Taub's ICU are COVID-19 positive. Combined ICUs at Ben Taub and LBJ Hospitals are now at 85 percent capacity."
Brink of capacity: Houston hospitals now transferring COVID-19 patients to other cities

They were saying they were ok just on Friday.

Houston-area hospital system CEO confident it has capacity to respond to coronavirus surge

Here's another article about capacity.

Houston hospitals hit 100% base ICU capacity. Then they stopped reporting data.

And this link says they were ok a week ago and had plenty of capacity.

Leaders of Houston’s 4 largest hospitals say capacity is in good shape as coronavirus cases increase

The CEOs of Houston Methodist, Memorial Hermann Health System, St. Luke’s Health and Texas Children’s Hospital held a virtual news conference aimed at reassuring the public that the systems are ready to handle whatever may come.

According to data released by the Texas Medical Center, the Houston-area ICUs are currently at 100% capacity with less than a third of those patients having COVID-19.

Still, CEOs from four leading hospitals in the medical center say they’re prepared to handle surge capacity.

“There is not a scenario, in my opinion, to where the demand for our beds, especially ICUs, ventilators, PPE, etcetera, would eclipse our capability,” said Mark Wallace, the President and CEO of Texas Children’s Hospital said.

h-TMC-2-week-projection-using-bed-occupancy-growth-NEW-6-24-2020.png



"Dr. Marc Boom, of Houston Methodist, said those numbers don’t fully tell the capacity story.

“Just that number is being misinterpreted and, quite frankly, we’re concerned that there is a level of alarm in the community that is unwarranted right now,” Boom said.

All four CEOs agreed they are concerned about the increasing number of coronavirus cases and asked Houstonians to do everything they can to help flatten the current curve. However, the hospitals in the Texas Medical Center are equipped to deal with a surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations.

The CEOs said they have a sustained surge protection plan in place, meaning other beds in other rooms could be used to house patients if it becomes necessary.

“We have plenty of capacity,” said Dr. David Callender, of Memorial Hermann.

Dr. Thomas Giordano, the Chief of Infectious Disease at the Department of Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, said the next two weeks are critical to determining the severity of the surge."

More at link

Harris County/Houston dashboard.

ArcGIS Dashboards
 
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More Than 300 Children In Texas Day Cares Have Caught COVID-19, And The Numbers Are Rising

As of Tuesday, there were 950 reported positive cases of COVID-19 — 307 children and 643 staff members — at 668 child care locations. Statewide, 12,207 licensed child care operations are open, and total reported coronavirus cases have risen from 59 cases in mid-May and 576 on June 23.

The rise comes as experts and health officials appear to diverge on how risky it is for children to gather in group settings like day care and school classrooms. The American Academy of Pediatrics is recommending that students be "physically present" in schools, saying that the educational advantages outweigh health risks. The academy says it thinks 3 feet of social distancing is sufficient for classrooms and stated that "the relative impact of physical distancing among children is likely small based on current evidence and certainly difficult to implement."
 
Wow! Some people gonna be mad! Not me. Masks to be required in public spaces in St. Louis City and County

I don’t know how some businesses will handle non compliance.
There is a company called Menards that operates in Minnesota - much like Home Depot. They absolutely require masks, have a security guard (beefed up) at the door. No mask? Buy one for $1.00 or go elsewhere. This works for me (and others). IMO the sooner more businesses require masks, the more people will wear them.
 
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