Coronavirus COVID-19 *Global Health Emergency* #16

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  • #341
7FEF4742-8CA8-4DC2-8010-66363D22C258.jpeg

TERROR cops in hazmat suits are forcing coronavirus-infected residents in a Spanish town to stay at home and self-isolate.

Around 30 people infected with the bug in the town of Haro - in the northern province of La Rioja -
were previously warned they face arrest and forced hospital quarantine if they fail to comply.

Terror cops in hazmat suits force coronavirus patients to stay at home in Spain
 
  • #342
  • #343
Must read article from Denver Post today:

States’ patchwork of crisis plans could mean uneven COVID-19 care, but Colorado among the best – The Denver Post


A few snippets: ( BBM for @firebird )

“A possible coronavirus pandemic could overwhelm the nation’s hospitals and force doctors into difficult decisions about how to allocate limited resources. Yet, experts say, only a handful of states have done the work necessary to prepare for such worst-case scenarios.

How would hospitals handle overflowing emergency rooms? What would doctors do if they ran out of medicines or ventilators? How would they decide who gets prioritized if they can’t treat everyone?”

[...]

“In worst-case scenarios, doctors may have to make decisions about who will die and who will live. To be sure, those discussions are not easy.

“They do make politicians nervous because we actually have to set out specific resource allocation schemes,” Hodge said.”

[...]

“For example, ethicists have debated what doctors should do if they run out of ventilators during a flu or coronavirus pandemic. The machines help people with respiratory infections breathe and are often the difference between life and death for critically ill patients. Even with a national emergency stockpile of ventilators, the U.S. health system has only so much capacity.

Doctors may be forced to consider whether to take a ventilator away from a patient who isn’t improving to help save another patient who might.”

[...]

“The plans detail how to deal with staffing issues, particularly as health care workers get sick themselves, such as pulling administrators with medical training back into patient care or asking families to help with feeding and personal hygiene. As hospitals swell with patients, they could be doubled up in rooms or moved to conference rooms or other unused space, grouped among less serious cases.”

[...]

“People don’t understand how close the health system runs to capacity every day. We just don’t have the trained staff to staff much beyond what we have now,” Hick said. “Patients are waiting in the emergency department in many cities on a routine basis. Then you talk about adding a pandemic onto that? There are going to be compromises.””
 
  • #344
That equates to 48 degrees farenheit.
According to Alexia
Source South China Morning Post

Coronavirus ‘highly sensitive’ to high temperatures, but don’t bank on summer killing it off, studies say

Coronavirus ‘highly sensitive’ to high temperatures, Chinese study says

  • Pathogen appears to spread fastest at 8.72 degrees Celsius, so countries in colder climes should ‘adopt the strictest control measures’, according to researchers from Sun Yat-sen University in Guangdong province
  • But head of WHO’s health emergencies programme says it is ‘a false hope’ to think Covid-19 will just disappear like the flu
 
  • #345
“States and cities are going to have to act in the interest of the national interests,” and shut down businesses @ScottGottliebMD tells @margbrennan about #coronavirus. He predicts the federal government will need to provide a significant bailout package to aid economy Face The Nation on Twitter

“We have an epidemic under way here in the United States,” @ScottGottliebMD tells @margbrennan and looks ahead, saying the scope of #coronavirus will change over the next two weeks Face The Nation on Twitter

Former FDA Commissioner @ScottGottliebMD: We’re past the point of containment, we have to move on to broad mitigation strategies @FaceTheNation
 
  • #346
The reason I say bottleneck is because we have an issue with the sheer number of tests that can be processed in a lab. So if a home test is done, who is processing, confirming and prioritizing tests....
Nebraska will process the tests in state at UNMC, but if it tests positive, they send the tests to the CDC who run their own test. I would imagine that will definitely create a bottleneck.

'How we process it': Inside Omaha lab testing for COVID-19

MOO
 
  • #347
We haven't tested enough to have a clear view. Give it 2 weeks....
I know Georgia has not tested enough and who knows how many people are out there that have requested tests and not gotten them. The uncertainty of how widespread it might be in my area is what is haunting my mind. I so badly want to stop at my local juice bar! Am I being silly for worrying about going there? Who knows. Should I disinfect my significant other when he comes home from running errands? He says he’s not worried about the virus. If you are someone who is paying close attention and living with someone who is not it’s harder to protect yourself.
People trying to suppress the numbers, Keep everyone calm and saying it is just going to disappear one day are doing an unspeakable disservice to this country I think.
 
  • #348
Plan for people getting off the sick ship seems backwards. The first people to get off are the sick people. They cough and sneeze from their cabins to land, touching everything along the way. Then people from the US will get off the ship, then people from other countries.

There's either no plan for what to do with the people who have not yet tested sick, or it's a big secret. Very curious to see whether the potentially infected people are free to do as they please.
 
  • #349
  • #350
Here’s another thing that I think is important to mention re: supplies, etc.:

I think rationing is also a big part of this whole equation. For example, I noticed that before this, I would just “pour however much milk I wanted in my coffee”.

Well now I’m thinking about how I can better use all items more sparingly and carefully. This requires a conscious effort to break all habits.

I am practicing more control and restraint with regards to everything.

Do I really need ALL THAT GRATED CHEESE on top of my pizza?

I can list endless examples on how I’ve been consciously using everything around here more carefully. I learned that lesson real fast when I consumed the majority of my food supplies in a short time period.

This is a lesson that I think is beneficial whether or not there is an epidemic, but certainly important going forward as related to the situation at hand and stretching out supplies.
 
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  • #351
But not everybody can afford to be fired. If you are fired, and have no source of income, and going to end up on the street-that's not something people would want.

I agree with that...but just talking about those high up in CDC and FDA...I don't think Dr Fauci is living paycheck to paycheck, he could retire (please don't, good doctor! please don't)
 
  • #352
Meanwhile, I have a large'ish meeting tomorrow with people flying in mostly from the East Coast. One of the principal attendees is a person in their 80's who has lung cancer. The meeting was confirmed, rather than cancelled, on Friday, and I haven't heard a single peep from anyone about any concern with going forward. It will be interesting to see if anyone mentions Corona
 
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  • #353
218 NEW CASES ANNOUNCED IN GERMANY

Germany has said it has 218 new cases today, bringing it up to 1,018, with no deaths announced.

Coronavirus UK updates LIVE: NHS may be forced to CANCEL operations as UK cases hits 273

Many thanks to all of you for your news updates and posts they are very much appreciated.

U.K members I managed to get a few antibacterial soap bottles and antibacterial wipes in B&M stores today so it might be worth a try if you have a store near you. They had a lot in stock but I just bought enough for my Dad and I. I didn’t want to deny them for other people that need them.
 
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  • #356
Just been following a discussion on a Disney page about opting out of mousekeeping whilst on holiday at DW. Not sure which is better- having a dirty room that hasn’t been touched with cleaning products for two weeks, or having an unknown coming in everyday touching and cleaning all the surfaces.
 
  • #357
NEW: Number of coronavirus cases in Germany hits 1,000 with more than 200 new cases so far today Tracking coronavirus: Map, data and timeline

Everybody can test except us...and half our population is completely ignorant of how important that is... needless to say the other half of the testing equation is completely upended as well...contact tracing, dear leader, who claims he has such a high medical understanding, what about contact tracing, anybody?
 
  • #358
Libya reports first 2 presumptive #Coronavirus cases in Tripoli: Arabiya
#COVIDー19
Zaid Sabah on Twitter
 
  • #359
New York in the Age of Coronavirus

As the number of cases climbs, a pall of anxiety has descended on the city.

I look forward to reading this article. It could be especially INSANE to see what happens in NYC.

I’m somehow hoping that miraculously we don’t see anything like Italy or China or South Korea...
Not sure how realistic of a “hope” that is.
 
  • #360
What took him so long....

BREAKING: Oregon Governor Brown declares state of emergency due to coronavirus
BNO Newsroom on Twitter
 
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