Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #31

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  • #121
O/T ICU nurses
One of my daughters came near death just over a year ago. She was intubated and sedated for near a week, it was terrifying to sit near her bedside day and night-not knowing wether she would take a turn for the worse or pull through. The young ICU nurses that attended her were little miracles still developing their skills, while the experienced and life long term ICU nurses were like athletes, perfectly in tune with the patients. I have so much respect for these angels among us.
Thank you to all who give their life to the medical community!
jmo
 
  • #122
CA: 34 yo male that visited Disneyworld dies 2 weeks after returning home

34-Year-Old Calif. Man Dies of Coronavirus 2 Weeks After Visiting Orlando Theme Parks

A 34-year-old California man has died from COVID-19 two weeks after visiting Orlando, Florida theme parks with his friends, his family announced.

Jeffrey Ghazarian died Thursday morning, less than a week after he was first hospitalized during a severe battle with coronavirus, according to a post written by his family on his Facebook page. (TMZ was the first to report the story.)

“Our sweet, loving, fun Jeffrey went to be with Jesus this morning. He suffered a lot and put up a good fight. We will miss our Jeff everyday but we are thankful for all the fun happy memories of the times we had together,” the post read. “Thank you to everyone who has been praying. We love you all.”

The Glendora resident beat testicular cancer in 2016 and had a history of asthma and frequent bronchitis as a child — both of which he had overcome, his family said.


Ghazarian first learned that he had tested positive for the contagious virus on March 13, according to his sister Lauren.

Just one day later, Lauren said Jeff was admitted into the intensive care unit of a hospital once a CT scan confirmed 60-70 percent of his lungs were blocked with pneumonia.

“They’ve decided the best path forward is to intubate,” she wrote on Facebook at the time. “Please pray for him, for God to protect him/keep him safe, for a complete healing so that he comes back home to us soon. Every prayer counts, God hears our prayers!”
 
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@WideOpen Thank you! Scary times indeed. My son is in a graduate program at UNG and was sent notice today the commencement ceremony is cancelled but they will be allowed to walk in the next graduating class. He is supposed to have a job interview in Greenville the end of April but I imagine that will be postponed as well.

I have a daughter and granddaughter in San Diego, her husband is deployed in the Middle East. She is stocked up well and the base family support should help her if she needs anything but I would give anything to be able to charter a plane and fly her home.

I worry about my daughter at the hospital the most. No doubt she will give her patients 110%, I only wish the hospital had her back. I hope your daughters are able to continue their educational pursuits soon and in the best of health.
 
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I don't think I even want to know, but what do the military/officials know that we don't?
Those that dont survive will never know. If I get this this I want someone to come clean with before I die! The Fusco family were exposed MARCH 10TH & 4 membersnare gone 9 days later!
Moo
The family is going to be on Cuomo CNN next it's 11:11pm EST time now.

did they all have underlying conditions?
 
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Walmart employees merit "hazardous duty pay". A bonus doesn't cut it. All grocery store clerks should be getting double pay.

We are lucky that they are working.
 
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C/Net Summary of Status of COVID19 Vaccine.

Coronavirus vaccines, treatments and chloroquine: Everything you need to know

Quotes from article:

When will a vaccine be available?
Fauci, of the infectious diseases institute, posits that a vaccine is roughly a year and a half away, even though we're likely to see human trials start within the next month or two. This, according to a 60 Minutes interview with Fauci in March, is a fast turnaround.

"The good news is we did it more quickly than we've ever done it," Fauci told 60 Minutes. (Note: 60 Minutes and CNET share a common parent company, ViacomCBS.) "The sobering news is that it's not ready for prime time, for what we're going through now."

Why does vaccine production take so long? There are many steps involved and a lot of regulatory hurdles to jump through.

"For any medicine to be sold it needs to go through the standard process of clinical trials including phase 1 [to] 3 trials," said Bruce Thompson, dean of health at Swinburne University in Australia. "We need to ensure that the medicine is safe, will not do harm, and know how effective it is."

Scientists can't assume their vaccine design will just work -- they have to test, test and test again. They have to recruit thousands of people to ensure the safety of a vaccine and how useful it will be. The process can be broken down into six phases:

  • Vaccine design: Scientists study a pathogen and decide on how they will get the immune system to recognize it.
  • Animal studies: A new vaccine is tested in animal models for disease to show that it works and has no extreme adverse effects.
  • Clinical trials (phase I): These represent the first tests in human beings and test the safety, dose and side effects of a vaccine. These trials only enroll a small cohort of patients.
  • Clinical trials (phase II): This is a deeper analysis of how the drug or vaccine actually works biologically. It involves a larger cohort of patients and assesses the physiological responses and interactions with the treatment. For instance, a coronavirus trial may assess if a vaccine stimulates the immune system in a certain way.
  • Clinical trials (phase III): The final phase of trials sees an even greater amount of people tested over a long period of time.
  • Regulatory approval: The final hurdle sees regulatory agencies, like the US Food and Drug Administration, the European Medicines Agency and Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration, take a look at the available evidence from experiments and trials and conclude whether a vaccine should be given the all-clear as a treatment option.
Traditionally, then, it could take a decade or more for a new vaccine to go from design to approval. In addition, once the regulatory processes have concluded a vaccine is safe, the drug companies have to send production into overdrive, so they can manufacture enough of the vaccine to increase immunity in the wider population.

With SARS-CoV-2, the process is being expedited in some instances. As STATnews reports, the vaccine in development by Moderna has moved from design straight into Phase I clinical trials of its mRNA vaccine, skipping tests in animal models. Those tests will take place at Seattle's Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Institute, and patients are now being enrolled.
 
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  • #139
O/T ICU nurses
One of my daughters came near death just over a year ago. She was intubated and sedated for near a week, it was terrifying to sit near her bedside day and night-not knowing wether she would take a turn for the worse or pull through. The young ICU nurses that attended her were little miracles still developing their skills, while the experienced and life long term ICU nurses were like athletes, perfectly in tune with the patients. I have so much respect for these angels among us.
Thank you to all who give their life to the medical community!
jmo
This deserves more than a like.
Nurses are the glue that holds the entire medical system together.
MOO.
 
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