Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #75

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Column: I had COVID-19, and these are the things nobody tells you
A sports columnist with the LA Times got and recovered from covid-19. He says he was being very careful for months, but let his guard down while dining at an outdoor restaurant with friends:


I’m not so sure he was”just following the rules”. I think he was incorrect where he says “you are not required to wear masks at the table.” You take it off to eat the meal, yes, but you don’t keep it off the entire time at the table.

This other article is about San Francisco restaurants being frustrated by diners such as this sports columnist not following their rules, so made a great graphic poster to educate the diners.

The poster illustrates diners are to mask up while waiting for your table, anytime not eating or drinking at the table, when staff or server approach your table, and anytime you leave the table, as in going to the restroom. (To see black and white poster, scroll down a bit at the link)

Frustrated by Diners That Don’t Understand Mask Laws, SF Restaurants Hang Graphics-Heavy Signs

MOO


I read tne article and my first thought was....

Did anybody at the table wash their hands before they picked up eating utensils ?


We've gotten so caught up in the mask, have we forget one of the MOST important step, hand washing.

Moo....
 
Chinese cities find virus in Brazilian chicken wings, Ecuadorian shrimp packaging

A sample taken from the surface of frozen chicken wings imported into the southern city of Shenzhen from Brazil, as well as samples of outer packaging of frozen Ecuadorian shrimp sold in the northwestern Xi'An city, have tested positive for the virus.

The discoveries came a day after traces of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 were found on the packaging of frozen shrimp from Ecuador in a city in eastern Anhui province. China has been stepping up screenings at ports amid the concerns over food imports

Viruses can survive up to two years at temperatures of minus 20 degrees Celsius, but scientists say there is no strong evidence so far the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 can spread via frozen food.
 
Wife Died After Butcher Brought Coronavirus Home From Work: Suit

A North Aurora (IL) woman died shortly after contracting the coronavirus from her husband, who worked “shoulder to shoulder” with others during the first month of the pandemic as a butcher at a North Aurora meat packing facility, according to a lawsuit recently filed in Kane County court.

The wrongful death lawsuit, filed last week by the estate of Esperanza Ugalde, states that Ugalde died of coronavirus-related conditions May 2, just four days after her husband, Ricardo, contracted the coronavirus while working for Aurora Packing Co. in North Aurora. Ugalde was 67.
 
New coronavirus clusters & R number above one - BBC News

On coronavirus, she said that early indications were that the R-number, or rate of transmission of Covid-19, had risen above one in Scotland last week.

Nicola Sturgeon also told the briefing;
 
Coronavirus: Ohioans warned against travel to 6 states

The Ohio Department of Health is warning residents against traveling to six states with coronavirus positivity rates of 15% or more.

The six states include Idaho, Nevada, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi and Florida.

ODH is advising against travel for both business and leisure to those states.

Anyone coming to Ohio from those states should self-quarantine for 14 days.
 
Number of Americans filing for unemployment falls below 1M for first time since pandemic started

The number of laid-off Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell below 1 million last week for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic started in mid-March.

The latest jobless claims figures from the Labor Department, which cover the week ending August 8, show that 963,000 workers sought aid last week, pushing the total number since the shutdown began to nearly 56 million.

Economists surveyed by Refinitiv expected 1.12 million new claims. Last week's total was revised up by 5,000 to 1.186 million.

The figure — the lowest since March 21, just as the pandemic brought the economy to a grinding halt — indicates there's still driving power behind the job market's recovery, despite fears that flare-up in COVID-19 cases and a fresh round of business closures would derail its early recovery.
 

Is this happening in other countries? The UK seems very insistent that children will all be going back to school in 4 weeks and I am worried it will cause another peak.

4 children have died of Covid in the UK, of which only one was “healthy” with no underlying conditions.

Only ONE healthy child has been killed by Covid-19 in Britain, reveals study | Daily Mail Online
 
The Morgans made ends meet before the pandemic, but have lost 40 per cent of their income stream since March. They are among many guilt-stricken families making wrenching decisions around costly animal health care in the thick of unemployment. Some face the prospect of choosing between their pet's care or putting food on the table.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/brit...ckEKBUSFD2IDAoSITkdObqA0H6DqdXqhzUc5unfzSkwas
 
SOUTH CAROLINA - Kershaw County Council votes against enforcing face mask mandate

This was one of the first counties in the state (maybe the first?) with a coronavirus case way back when this whole thing started. Gosh, that seems so long ago.

"But councilmember Tom Gardner, who proposed the ordinance, believes that dealing with enforcement is not the council’s job. "We are elected to take care of our constituents and health and well being is part of that," said Gardner.

Although this ordinance was voted down— the council members WIS spoke with did agree that everyone should wear a mask in public places.

"I told them last night at the meeting that I would much rather wear a mask for 60 days then a ventilator for two weeks," explained Gardner.
 
Watch AZ for issues involving in-person learning. My wife works as a para-educator and the union has reached out asking staff to individually email the District to express concerns over un-readiness (they didn't even have hand sanitizer until yesterday.) They are expecting kids back Monday. News is only covering a handful of districts, which makes it seem like this is being done under the RADAR. Today's presser with the Governor is going to be heated, to say the least.

Queen Creek teachers resign after vote to head back to in-person class

Some Arizona schools plan to open, disregarding benchmarks, Hoffman
 
I think you can only protect yourself from this virus to a degree. There are still asymptomatic persons out there. We still have to go to the grocery store and run errands, maybe go to work/school. There are still kids who tend to be carriers. We can do our best to protect ourselves, but sometimes that isn't enough. I think others also have a responsibility.
 
SOUTH CAROLINA - Kershaw County Council votes against enforcing face mask mandate

This was one of the first counties in the state (maybe the first?) with a coronavirus case way back when this whole thing started. Gosh, that seems so long ago.

"But councilmember Tom Gardner, who proposed the ordinance, believes that dealing with enforcement is not the council’s job. "We are elected to take care of our constituents and health and well being is part of that," said Gardner.

Although this ordinance was voted down— the council members WIS spoke with did agree that everyone should wear a mask in public places.

"I told them last night at the meeting that I would much rather wear a mask for 60 days then a ventilator for two weeks," explained Gardner.
Mandating helps. Guess this city council doesn't understand.
 
Wow! This is exciting!

Here's a link to the AeroNabs info that is easier to access: ‘AeroNabs’ Promise Powerful, Inhalable Protection Against COVID-19

This is the third nasal spray to come out of the labs, but none has been fast tracked by the FDA, that I know of. The first one (a heparin spray) had a pre-print about its effectiveness in early July. I can't remember the composition of the second. I've asked a few doctors I know about them, they haven't heard of them yet.

It is exciting, but I think monoclonal antibodies in some form will come first as that seems to be the focus.

At any rate I sure do hope they can move their nasal spray into human trials and I wish I knew how to volunteer to be a guinea pig! It sounds amazing (it's based on that Llama research some of us read back in April and May).
 
This University of California article reviews the variety of symptoms of COVID 19:

We thought it was just a respiratory virus. We were wrong.

We thought it was just a respiratory virus. We were wrong.

In late January, when hospitals in the United States confirmed the presence of the novel coronavirus, health workers knew to watch for precisely three symptoms: fever, cough, and shortness of breath. But as the number of infections climbed, the symptom list began to grow.

Some patients lost their sense of smell and taste. Some had nausea or diarrhea. Some had arrhythmias or even heart attacks. Some had damaged kidneys or livers. Some had headaches, blood clots, rashes, swelling, or strokes. Many had no symptoms at all.

By June, clinicians were swapping journal papers, news stories, and tweets describing more than three dozen ways that COVID-19, the disease the coronavirus causes, appears to manifest itself. Now researchers at UC San Francisco and around the world have begun taking a closer look at this dizzying array of symptoms to get at the disease’s root causes. They are learning from people inside the hospital and out; people on the brink of death and only mildly sick; people newly exposed and recovered; people young and old, Black, brown, and white. And they are beginning to piece together the story of a virus unlike any known before.
 
Fuel yes. Food and restroom is in the coach.

Depends on the length of the trip.

Eventually the RV has to be dumped, water has to be replaced, and new food purchased. Gas stations/convenience stores/grocery stores are, IMO, CoVid vectors. With good mask and hand sanitizing procedures, this can be gotten around, but it annoys me no end that when California is supposed to have stopped non-essential travel that people are still traveling. I believe we are still restricted from non-essential travel, but hey, that stops no one.

I guess people can just live on canned food, but having walked down PCH where the RV's are, I see lots of BBQ being done. Grocery bags from a local boutique grocery store. Tons of socializing (same at Sturgis). Without masks. It's irritating.

On a slightly different topic, one couple who decided to defy the ban on non-essential travel were delighted to find an "open motel." Of course they're open, for various essential purposes. The one they chose happened to be one where the City of San Francisco was housing quarantined homeless people while they awaited test results (and one floor was positive CoVid people). None of them stayed in their rooms, of course.

An RV would definitely be way safer than a motel in SF, is what I'm saying. We talked about going on a car camping trip (very local to us) but after scoping out the campground situations nearest us and reading about others more distant, we realized we'd be part of the problem. We talk about travel constantly, but we know we won't do it.

And we haven't been to a grocery store since February 20. One trip to a gas station. 3 trips to the pharmacy, that's it.
 
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