Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #75

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Jetstar passengers crammed together despite rows of empty seats

Jetstar passengers crammed together despite rows of empty seats

Stephen Johnson For Daily Mail Australia

3 hrs ago
A passenger on a packed Gold Coast to Adelaide Jetstar flight was told she wasn't allowed to move to a row of empty seats.

Travellers were bunched up together on the left-hand side of Saturday night flight JQ455.

In economy, strangers were seated right next to each other on the Qantas budget subsidiary flight direct from Coolangatta airport to the South Australian capital.

The passenger was also told travellers had to remain in their allocated seat, even if this breached social distancing rules that would normally apply on buses and trains, so health authorities could more easily carry out contact tracing.
On the right-hand side of the plane, however, some rows of seats remained empty, as the one-hour and 40 minute flight took off at 7.10pm on August 15.

A 'crammed in' passenger on this Jetstar flight, who wished to remain anonymous, said had asked to be allowed to move to an empty row of seats only to be told that was against the rules.

'Just made me angry all the spare seats,' she told Daily Mail Australia.

'Air hostess said it's just been the way the seats are booked.

'I guess she means if there's a COVID case, they need to identify people sitting close but I said to her, "Yes, but the airline allocated the seats".'
Despite the crowding, not all passengers were wearing face masks - as it mandated on public transport in Victoria and strongly advised in New South Wales.

Qantas, Jetstar's parent company, advises travellers to wear face masks on flights but this is not compulsory.
That's real hard to understand. I remember flying to Oz and NZ many times and we were allowed to use the full rows of empty middle seats for ourselves and our children to lay and sleep in as long as you put a seatbelt around your waist they were fine with it. Changing seats is usually allowed too so that is really odd IMO.
 
  • #583
COVID-19 in the classroom becomes stark reality for parents who've sent their children back to school

The number of quarantines since schools in Woodstock and the rest of Cherokee County opened last week is just that - impossible to ignore.
At least 478 students and teachers were asked to quarantine after possible exposure to COVID-19 in the first five days of classes.
By early Tuesday, that number had swelled to 925 students and staff. Nearly one-third of the district's schools - which teach 30,000 students from elementary to high - have been impacted.

Hightower urged people to social distance and wear masks.
"As your Superintendent, I wear a mask whenever I cannot social distance. We know all parents do not believe the scientific research that indicates masks are beneficial, but I believe it and see masks as an important measure to help us keep schools open," he wrote to parents.

COVID-19 in the classroom becomes stark reality for parent
 
  • #584
Aus: One in five international students fear they will be made homeless - survey



A survey of international students in Australia has found that one in five fear they will be made homeless and around one in three are finding it ‘difficult to eat properly’.

pexels-andrew-neel-3132388-1-860x375.jpg
22% of respondents agreed that they "quite often" go without necessities like food’ to pay for their accommodation. Photo: Pexels
study led by the University of Technology Sydney which included two surveys as part of the research, one between August and December 2019 and the other between June and July 2020.

“It is heartbreaking to see this survey”

They found that although students were facing serious hardship before the pandemic struck, the situation has significantly worsened because of the coronavirus.

“It is heartbreaking to see this survey. Students are feeling more stranded than ever, and there is no income anymore,” a spokesperson for the Council of International Students Australia told The PIE News.

“Financial hardship needs to be addressed and support has to be there otherwise this will just impact [their] mental health.

More at link
 
  • #585
Homeless population thus far has avoided worst of pandemic

A few of the nation's homeless shelters have seen large COVID-19 outbreaks, but the virus has not brought devastation to the homeless population as many feared. Researchers and advocates say much is unknown about how the pandemic is affecting the estimated half-million people without housing in the U.S. – and why there appear to be so few outbreaks among them.

Two top CDC officials step down; Birx urges Americans to wear masks indoors and outdoors

I wonder if their immune systems are better than the housed people. They are out in the elements all day and night. Sleeping wherever. Possibly they have a greater resistance to illness than us more 'coddled' people have.

Or sadly, because other people generally seem to avoid them, it is like a kind of social distancing. They don't get near the people who are carrying the virus. Which could actually turn out to be a benefit for the homeless during this time of the pandemic.
 
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Horrible story. Are they short of food due to rice crops being destroyed, as stated in the article?

"Once the pets are rounded up, it’s reported, some go to zoos and some are sold into the restaurant trade, where dogs are regularly consumed. Pyongyang, the Daily Mail reports, has a number of specialized dog eateries.

Chosun Ilbo reports that although pet ownership was long frowned upon in North Korea, the state had seemed to relent since the late 1990s, when the rich of Pyongyang started owning pets as symbols of superiority.

According to the source: “Ordinary people raise pigs and livestock on their porches, but high-ranking officials and the wealthy own pet dogs, which stoked some resentment.”

Crop damage

According to the Daily Mail, a recent report by the UN said up to 60 percent of North Koreans face “widespread food shortages.” In recent weeks, heavy rain and flooding have sparked concern about crop damage and food supplies in the isolated country.

North Korea’s national Red Cross Society is the only organization with access to all nine provinces, and more than 43,000 volunteers have been working alongside health teams on COVID-19 prevention efforts as well as helping flood-related work, said Antony Balmain of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

“Hundreds of homes have been damaged and large areas of rice fields have been submerged due to heavy rain and some flash flooding,” Balmain said, according to Reuters.

North Korea’s Red Cross has deployed 43,000 volunteers to help communities prevent outbreaks of the coronavirus and provide flood assistance."
 
  • #590
Arizona reports no new coronavirus deaths, just 468 more cases

We didn't do anything different in AZ then has been tried in other States, yet our numbers have fallen off a cliff. I still think it's the weather - either the record-breaking heat's effect on the virus, or the fact that people are confined to their homes. If temperature has no effect, and it's just weather keeping people indoors, then that should bode well for winter in the mid west and north east.
 
  • #591
House party links to two Covid clusters

Covid-19 clusters in Glasgow and Lanarkshire have been linked to house parties.

A joint statement from NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and NHS Lanarkshire said the two boards were working together on the outbreak.

A total of 11 linked Covid cases have been identified in north east Glasgow in addition to eight North Lanarkshire cases.

The health boards confirmed on Monday that the cases were linked.

They also said that evidence of social gatherings with no social distancing was a factor in their investigation.
 
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Chicken factory closed after coronavirus cluster

A food processing plant in Perth and Kinross has been closed after four members of staff tested positive for Covid-19.

Two other workers at the 2 Sisters facility in Coupar Angus are awaiting the results of a test for the virus.

NHS Tayside said there are two connected cases in the community and arrangements are being made for the testing of other employees.

2 Sisters said the temporary move was "the responsible action to take."

NHS Tayside Public Health was alerted to the outbreak on Sunday.

Management at the poultry factory, which employs about about 1,000 people, made the decision last night to temporarily close the factory.

It is understood a manager at the factory may have caught the virus from a close relative, who is not an employee of the plant.
 
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College students raise alarm by packing bars, avoiding masks — The Washington Post

“Why?” tweeted Walt Maddox, mayor of Tuscaloosa, Ala., above a photo of hundreds of mostly mask-free University of Alabama students outside downtown restaurants. “We are desperately trying to protect @tuscaloosacity.”

Some universities are already battling coronavirus outbreaks, including the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill — where four viral clusters have emerged one week after in-person classes started — and Oklahoma State University, where a single sorority house has 23 confirmed cases.”
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Why indeed. Will they stay on campus contained if they get sick or take it home?
 
  • #595
MN Governor Quietly Reverses Course on Hydroxychloroquine | RealClearPolitics

This past week Minnesota became the second state to reject regulations that effectively ban the controversial drug hydroxychloroquine for use by COVID-19 patients.

The reversal by Walz, a first-term Democrat, clears the way for doctors to prescribe hydroxychloroquine, a drug commonly used to treat malaria and other conditions but one the FDA has declined to recommend for COVID-19 treatment.

More -

The decision, which comes two weeks after the Ohio Board of Pharmacy reversed an effective ban of its own, was rightfully praised by local health care advocates. “We are pleased that Governor [Tim] Walz lifted his March 27 Executive Order 20-23 restrictions on chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine,” said Twila Brase, president of Citizens’ Council for Health Freedom.
 
  • #596
Please post respectfully and tone down any personalizing and snarky attitudes in this discussion.

Also, off topic posts are a violation of TOS. The thread is to discuss Covid19, not whether members like a certain newspaper, etc.

Please stay on topic. Thank you.
 
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Hey everyone,

This thread is for sharing information, not debating or bickering or winning an argument.

State your opinion, post your link to info, then move on without feeling the need to comment on every single detail of every single post. It takes over the thread and none of us are here to hammer our own opinion into the heads of other members.

Thank you.
 
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