Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #66

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  • #641
I know there are hardly any other Latvians on this forum besides me - but just in case! :)

A couple of weeks ago...

Third day in a row without new COVID-19 cases in Latvia

June 23, 2020

Latvia recorded no new cases of COVID-19 on June 23 for the third day in a row, the total number of cases remaining at 1,111 on Tuesday.

No further fatalities were recorded either, with the death toll remaining on 30.

The Disease Prevention and Control Center (SPKC) said 1,413 tests had been conducted during the previous 24-hour period.

In total 140,437 tests have been carried out since February 29.

So far 903 patients have recovered.

Nine patients are in hospital, most of whom have moderate symptoms of the disease but one of whom is designated as being in a serious condition.



So - I looked here:
Coronavirus - Bloomberg

And Latvia has 1,127 cases - so 16 new ones in the last 2 weeks & with still 30 deaths. Sounds good!
Hurrah for Latvia, and our lovely Niner!
 
  • #642
Yes. I know that in 2018 we sent 130 firefighters to help with the California fires. And the US and Canada helped us earlier this year.

This handling of covid by the US is going to test our friendships, I think. How to keep our own safe if we are asked to send our firefighters to assist in the US this year, if the wildfires happen?

Just don't send them. We're already aware here in California that much aid will not be coming. A major portion of wildland firefighting is done by prison crews and they cannot serve this year, as all prisons have CoVid at high rates and no one knows exactly how long people are contagious.

That could change, but we're definitely more or less on our own this year. I suppose we'll still work within our Western state alliances to aid each other (Canada has always been superb at helping - they won't be coming, of course).

We have 2000 acre wildfire in NorCal right now that needs to be contained soon, and fire season is just starting. Evacuation orders were given early, and so far, so good. 20% contained.
 
  • #643
The mayor of Phoenix, Arizona, said she was left "begging" for help with insufficient coronavirus testing as her state experiences a fresh wave of cases after reopening its economy.

"We are in a crisis related to testing. I was visiting a testing facility this weekend, people waiting—still—eight hours. It's really, really difficult," she told ABC.

"I've been spending time begging everyone from Walgreens to open up testing, out-of-state testing companies to come in because it's awful to see people waiting in a car while you're feeling sick.

"People were running out of gas. And this is as many months in. We've asked FEMA if they could come and do community-based testing here.

"We were told they're moving away from that, which feels like they're declaring victory while we're still in crisis mode."

https://www.newsweek.com/arizona-phoenix-coronavirus-testing-crisis-mayor-gallego-1515583

Despite rising test positivity rates across some states, including Texas and Florida, which shows an accelerating spread of infection, President Donald Trump claimed the rising number of cases was down to a large-scale testing effort.

"New China Virus Cases up (because of massive testing), deaths are down, 'low and steady'," Trump tweeted on Sunday. "The Fake News Media should report this and also, that new job numbers are setting records!"
From your link:

"New China Virus Cases up (because of massive testing), deaths are down, 'low and steady'," Trump tweeted on Sunday. "The Fake News Media should report this and also, that new job numbers are setting records!"
_________________________________

I wish he would stop calling it the China Virus. It makes us Americans look like xenophobes. Which the vast majority of us assuredly are NOT.
 
  • #644
When they say positivity rate do they mean out of those tested?

Yes. If CoVid isn't increasing, then with increased tests, the positivity rate should go down.

But that's not what's happening in places like Florida, Texas, Arizona, South Carolina - and even California (ours has climbed to just under 7% which isn't too bad, but if the virus is decreasing, the number should go down with more testing, not up).

Florida has positivity rates of 20-27% (yikes!) and lines are so long for testing that not everyone is getting tested. They're experiencing lags in reporting results, too. With positivity rates that high, instead of letting people know within 24 hours that they're positive, they may not know for 5-7 days.

At the beginning of the pandemic, due to test shortages, it wasn't mostly (very) symptomatic people who were tested. Now that there are more tests, here's what our national data look like:

Daily State-by-State Testing Trends

That uptick at the end is what is the concern. Hospitalizations of course are going up at almost exactly the same rate (despite the patients being younger).

Arizona's data are here:

Daily State-by-State Testing Trends

A whopping 25% of Arizonans test positive, and they too are seeing a huge rush to testing (the governor laments that they can't get enough tests - not realizing, apparently, that it's been each state on their own since the beginning, someone blew it in Arizona for not stocking up, I guess).

That means 1 in 4 people an Arizonan meets (especially in a city) may be positive for CoVid. For Texas the rate is only 13%, but anything over 5% is considered a serious health problem when it comes to CoVid, high potential for things rapidly rising if people don't change behavior.
 
  • #645
Texas had more than 8,000 hospitalized Covid-19 patients on Sunday, a record number of hospitalizations and one of the highest in the country.

The number of people hospitalized with Covid-19 grew by 5% or more Sunday in 23 states, based on a seven-day moving average.

California, Arizona, Nevada and Georgia have also seen growing Covid-19 hospitalizations. Florida only tracks the number of people who have been hospitalized since the beginning of the outbreak and not those currently in the hospital with Covid-19.

Coronavirus hospitalizations grow in 23 states as Texas admissions soar to new record
 
  • #646
It’s a terrible way to die.

My mother is 83. She looks 63. She has an incredible social life. Way better than mine. She’s got a ton of friends of all ages, all walks of life, etc.
She’s very empathetic and mothers anyone who needs it. She’s such a welcoming, compassionate and positive person.

She’s now working on her master’s degree in anthropology after completing a double major in philosophy and liberal studies last year.

She’s a rock star.

The world would lose if she died of this disease. She has longevity in her family so I expect her to live much longer.

But even if that wasn’t in the cards for her, those of us who love her will take every moment we can.

wow I wish I knew her!
 
  • #647
:eek:

Cruise ship staff still adrift after 110 days and counting

Thousands of cruise ship workers, including some Australians, are still trapped on ships unable to dock because of COVID-19 restrictions.

Many are no longer being paid, and the mental health of people still stuck at sea during the pandemic is reportedly declining as some cruise staff clock up more than 110 days afloat.

At least two cruise ship workers have died in apparent suicides since the industry shut down cruising on March 13.

The No Sail Order was extended on April 15 and hundreds of thousands of seafarers are also stuck on board cargo ships.

Citing the strained mental health of people still stuck at sea during the pandemic, the United Nations has called on countries around the world to lift their travel restrictions for seafarers.

it's like a family secret no one talks about
 
  • #648
it's like a family secret no one talks about

Manila Bay in the Philippines has became the world’s biggest “parking lot” for cruise ships, with thousands of crew still on board.
d09f5800adcde1ff36a10089eb647f72


Vessels in the stretch of sea between the coast of Florida and the Bahamas:
69df3c86eca38d4f26000d1948b0d64c


Cruise companies claim cruises will resume in August, as the US sail ban expires on July 24, but that could be reviewed.

https://www.news.com.au/travel/trav...g/news-story/fb7b81b83c7807420133096c2088feca
 
  • #649
Manila Bay in the Philippines has became the world’s biggest “parking lot” for cruise ships, with thousands of crew still on board.
d09f5800adcde1ff36a10089eb647f72


Vessels in the stretch of sea between the coast of Florida and the Bahamas:
69df3c86eca38d4f26000d1948b0d64c


Cruise companies claim cruises will resume in August, as the US sail ban expires on July 24, but that could be reviewed.

https://www.news.com.au/travel/trav...g/news-story/fb7b81b83c7807420133096c2088feca

omg it doesn't seem possible but there they all are
 
  • #650
From your link:

"New China Virus Cases up (because of massive testing), deaths are down, 'low and steady'," Trump tweeted on Sunday. "The Fake News Media should report this and also, that new job numbers are setting records!"
_________________________________

I wish he would stop calling it the China Virus. It makes us Americans look like xenophobes. Which the vast majority of us assuredly are NOT.

Well add to that the Spanish Flu didn’t start in Spain, it was named that because the Spanish were hit hard but were also reporting about it more than many countries (because of war time media blackouts).

The 2020 American Flu pandemic, anyone?
 
  • #651
NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson, wife cope with coronavirus in Aspen

Jimmie Johnson and his family took every precaution to avoid the coronavirus. They washed their hands frequently, diligently followed the face-mask guidelines and even left their home in Charlotte, North Carolina, for the less densely populated Aspen.

And yet both Johnson and his wife still tested positive for the virus this week — knocking the seven-time NASCAR champion out of what was expected to be his final Brickyard 400.

Johnson is the first NASCAR driver to test positive for the virus that causes COVID-19 and it will end his streak of 663 consecutive Cup starts. It’s also temporarily disrupting his family life as he and wife, Chani, attempt to quarantine while still raising their two daughters. Both girls tested negative, Johnson said.

Johnson was in Indianapolis on Wednesday to test on Dallara’s simulator. He then flew back to Aspen and was scheduled to return to Indy for Sunday’s race.

He didn’t have an inkling anything was wrong until Friday.

Chani Johnson had been experiencing seasonal allergy symptoms in the summer mountain air, and the 44-year-old Johnson was using a routine prescription to treat his own seasonal issues.

Chani Johnson, a “rule follower” her husband said, went for a coronavirus test because of the allergies. Her results came back positive Friday morning and Johnson and their daughters immediately went for their own tests.

The good news is doctors believe Johnson’s wife already endured the worst of COVID-19. Johnson said aside from a tickle in his throat, he’s asymptomatic.

But the ramifications reverberate around the racing community.

Johnson said he has spoken with representatives from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as part of a contact tracing initiative and continues to seek out answers to a litany of questions. One thing he’s not certain about is a positive test for antibodies he said he received early in the pandemic.

“I was warned by my physician then that although I did test positive for the antibodies, there’s a 20% chance that it’s incorrect,” Johnson said. “On top of the fact that they don’t know what the antibodies mean. Still today, I don’t know what they mean.

“Once I clear this and go back into life, I assume I still need to be very cautious and I could be re-infected once again. There are just so many questions regarding this virus and what means what. I still don’t have clarity. The longer I get into this and the more issues I deal with, the more questions I have.”

He can’t return to racing unless he’s free of symptoms and has two negative tests in a 24-hour span.


Dont ya all wonder when people get the virus and say they did everything right-. to my way
of thinking there was a breach somewhere along the way, a mistake, not recognized, and
that scares me because i think i do everything right,but i have slipped up occasionally,
and then i pray for 7 days
 
  • #652
https://www.volkskrant.nl/nieuws-achtergrond/op-de-dag-dat-het-rivm-nul-doden-meldde-stierf-verpleegkundige-boy-ettema-aan-corona~bf67bcd7
google translate- translated from Dutch to English;


Thomas Borst and Maud Effting 5 July 2020, 5:02 PM

OSTUUM BOY ETTEMA (1978-2020) On the day RIVM reported zero deaths, nurse Boy Ettema died of corona


Boy Ettema, a surgery nurse who worked in the Covid department, was healthy, cycled a lot, was not overweight and was only 42 years old. However, he died of corona on the first day that RIVM reported zero deaths.


For RIVM it was a question of statistics, of simply adding up all reports. And they never came that day. But for Boys' family, the RIVM statement came as a blow to the face.

It felt as if the death of Boy, a surgery nurse who had worked in the hospital's covid ward for many weeks, was ignored. As if he didn't matter.

It was the reason that Boy's brother called Thomas de Volkskrant. Because the ice-cold statistic with those zero kills - that's the big story.

But there is also another reality. Boy Ettema is the youngest healthcare provider in the Netherlands who died of corona at the age of 42 - a total of thirteen died. He was healthy, cycled a lot, was not overweight and did not smoke, his girlfriend said.

It is mid-May when the surgery nurse returns home from his covid service at St. Antonius Hospital in Nieuwegein in the evening. That day he helped a critically ill patient who had unexpectedly coughed in his face. He felt something in between his glasses and mask.

"I have the idea," he said anxiously to his girlfriend, who is also a nurse, "that I was infected today."

At home they have been kept apart for weeks. They don't meet anyone and she does the shopping. Boy warns everyone to watch out. "Even if they arrange things differently at work, please stay at home," he tells his brother.

Two days later, he wakes up on a Tuesday with a high fever and headache. He sees flashes before his eyes. The stuffiness doesn't start until a few days later. "I'm deathly ill," Boy says to his brother Thomas. "But don't worry too much. It will be fine.'

His brother Thomas had previously asked him if he would do those covid services. "It has to be done," Boy replied. He felt it his duty to contribute. He sends cheerful photos of himself in his corona gear to his friends and family.

That nice brother

Boy Ettema is a striking appearance in the surgery department of the St. Antonius Hospital. His laughter is loud, he talks a lot and makes contact with patients quickly. Sometimes they ask specifically for "that nice brother".

If there is a difficult patient, Boy is put on it.

At home he is cheerful, gentle and caring, says his girlfriend Lizahn (31), whom he proposed to last March and with whom he was engaged. Boy doesn't care about money, stuff or status; he prefers to spend time with nature, with friends, reading newspapers and books, doing fun things. He is concerned about inequality in the world. At the age of 35, he studied nursing after studying sociology. It turned out to be a golden move. He wanted to mean something to others, his brother says.

He is at home for days, where he is getting sicker. His girlfriend Lizahn calls the GP post three times. "I said Boy was getting exhausted," she says. "But the doctor brushed us off and said, well, he still speaks full sentences. We could come in with a fever of more than 41 degrees. I felt we weren't taken seriously because Boy was still young. "

On day eight, Boy says, "This is really not good."

Within fifteen minutes they drive urgently to his own hospital, where Lizahn can see him that day. "I'm scared," says Boy, lying in bed panting. It's all he can say. His blood still contains 80 percent oxygen.

Lizahn: "He knew exactly how it could go. He has taken so many people to the morgue himself. His greatest fear was the ICU. "

The following night she is woken up at half past four with his telephone number. In the picture is a nurse. "It really is no longer with Boy," he says. "We have to intubate him now."

Then she sees Boy lying there, gasping for breath. He says he loves her. And that he is afraid. He has to cry, but it only makes him more anxious. Lizahn can say just a little before the nurse takes the phone. Lizahn drives to the hospital as fast as she can, but when she arrives, he is already asleep.

This isn't really happening, Lizahn thinks. She feels that he can walk around the corner laughing any moment.

His brother Thomas arrives without being able to say anything to his brother.

Heart lung machine

The nurse is in his own intensive care unit for sixteen days, while his lung pictures get worse and his family hardly sleeps anymore. Doctors and nurses at the ICU skip breaks, work longer, do everything for their colleagues.

Lizahn and her family receive extra visiting hours. It always seems to go better, but he always gets a backlash. "I thought a thousand times he was going to make it, and a thousand times he would die," says brother Thomas. Because his lungs can't make it, he is put on the heart-lung machine, where the blood gets oxygen outside the body and blood thinners are needed.

It is June 22 when Lizahn receives a call from an ICU doctor at a quarter to five in the morning. "He said it was a good idea that I would come and asked if I wanted to call his parents and brother," she said. "Then I knew: this is wrong. I've worked here long enough to know that. "

That night Boy had a massive cerebral hemorrhage with major brain damage as a result. He doesn't respond to anything anymore. The doctor says that the state of his brain can no longer be reconciled with life. There are tears in his eyes. That morning he struggled to enter the department, he says. Lizahn drops to her knees when she hears that. "This just can't be true," she says.

"Then you know," says his brother Thomas, "that your brother is dying."

It is three o'clock in the afternoon when the doctor switches off the heart lung machine and the other devices in the presence of family and friends. In the room, someone plays Guns N 'Roses on the guitar: Boy was a fan of punk and hard rock.

While his girlfriend Lizahn is holding him, his heart beats for another two minutes. In the room it becomes very quiet. Nurses cry in the hallway. Afterwards, Lizahn barely manages to leave him.

Boy's motto was memento mori - remember to die. "He was always aware," says his brother Thomas, "that life could just be over."

The next morning, Boy's father reads the news. "Zero corona deaths for the first time," it says.
*******
 
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  • #653
Well add to that the Spanish Flu didn’t start in Spain, it was named that because the Spanish were hit hard but were also reporting about it more than many countries (because of war time media blackouts).

The 2020 American Flu pandemic, anyone?
I know. Poor Spain.

WHO stopped the practice of naming outbreaks after places/groups a few years back as it can be quite stigmatizing. Back in the day, SARS-CoV2 would certainly have been named Wuhan virus. But we don't do that anymore <modsnip>.
 
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  • #654
Restaurants and gyms must close again in Florida's Miami-Dade County

Starting Wednesday, these businesses must close, according to the mayor:



    • Restaurants (except for takeout and delivery services)
    • Ballrooms
    • Banquet facilities
    • Party venues
    • Gyms and fitness centers
    • Short-term rentals
Giménez said outdoor activities — including condominium and hotel pools — can stay open strict social distancing and masks rules. Summer camps and child care centers can also stay open with certain capacity limits.

Office buildings, retail stores and salons are also allowed to stay open.

Beaches will reopen tomorrow, "but, if we see crowding and people not following the public health rules, I will be forced to close the beaches again," he said.

It’s just a shame that we didn’t have a cohesive response taking this seriously, across the board. Because now it’s hard to get people to comply with things like masks and social distancing when this thing was minimized for so long. And that hurts our economy because we have to keep shutting down, illness and hospitalizations increase and a chuck of the population won’t go out and spend money at local businesses.

I hope that attitudes can be changed. It’s still going to be an uphill battle but I do think that not approaching people with anger or automatically dismissing what they say because we think it supports a “side” with which we don’t agree, is going to help.

The more people feel attacked, the more they feel defensive and become entrenched. And I don’t want to discount something just because someone in government who I don’t like, mentioned it or supports it.

I believe we can come together and act as a national team, as long as we don’t constantly react to one another with anger and suspicion.

It’s hard. Because everyone has their beliefs. And this is life or death and sickness and health and solvency vs. insolvency. So everyone feels strongly about their positions. I know I do. But I try not to be closed minded. It accomplished nothing.
 
  • #655
Heartbreaking story tabitha. Thanks for sharing it. RIP Nurse Boy. You have more than earned your wings.
 
  • #656
<modsnip: quoted post was removed>

What I’ve been seeing and reading is that it’s a workplace issue. These groups aren’t unsanitary. They’re as clean as anyone else. However, in the old days, if there was an outbreak of let’s say, salmonella or E-coli in a meat-packing plant, the CDC would come in, shut it down and then issue strict orders for reopening.

Now, inexplicably, the CDC has only issued “suggestions” for mask wearing, social distancing and hand washing stations. And governments have: 1) Refused to allow such plants to close. 2) Refused to mandate testing of workers where there are clear out breaks. 3) Have refused to notify the workers or the public of outbreaks unless the numbers of positive people at a plant exceed a certain amount. Like 15!

This leads to spread.

So the workers are at the mercy of their employers. THEY don’t need lessons in sanitation. They just have no say in their working conditions.

As a result, many have gone on strike or in fear have stayed home. But when you’re living hand to mouth or don’t have documentation to be here legally, there’s little choice.

That’s been the deal in our country forever.

Emails Reveal Chaos as Meatpacking Companies Fought Health Agencies Over COVID-19 Outbreaks in Their Plants — ProPublica
 
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  • #657
Iowa news today: 412 (IMO)-413 new confirmed cases and 1 (IMO) more has passed way after the news article was written. As of 11:00 a.m. today, we now have 31,655 (news says 31,656) confirmed cases of which 24,981 (news says 24,958 at 10:00 a.m.) have recovered. 722 have passed away. Iowa COVID-19 Information
July 6: 413 new cases, 287 recoveries, no additional deaths
39 inmates test positive for COVID-19 at Fort Dodge facility
Four more people associated with Hawkeye Athletics test positive for COVID-19
Plans emerge for Cedar Valley schools to return to learning
County residents urged to 'mask up' as Iowa coronavirus cases rise
 
  • #658
Well add to that the Spanish Flu didn’t start in Spain, it was named that because the Spanish were hit hard but were also reporting about it more than many countries (because of war time media blackouts).

The 2020 American Flu pandemic, anyone?

Right. I read the Great Influenza about it and it is thought to have originated in Kansas.
 
  • #659
I wish he would stop calling it the China Virus. It makes us Americans look like xenophobes. Which the vast majority of us assuredly are NOT.

At this point, I think there's an argument to start calling it the America Virus.
 
  • #660
Coronavirus cases are rising in Texas child care facilities

Texas Department of Health and Human Services reported at least 1,335 positive Covid-19 cases throughout the state's open child care facilities.

Of those cases, 894 are among staff and 441 are children.

The positive cases are reported in 883 of the state's child care facilities. The department said that there are 12,220 open child care operations throughout the state.

How these numbers compare: On May 15, the state reported a total of 59 cases in 53 child care facilities — 36 staff and 23 children. And on June 15, there were 210 reported cases in 177 facilities, 141 staff and 69 children.

Coronavirus pandemic: Updates from around the world

Yikes, those numbers are rising indeed.
 
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