Posted on 03/06/2020 12:19:11 PM PST by Vermont Lt
The CDC guidance comes as two top infectious disease experts with ties to the federal government have advised people over 60 and those with underlying health problems to strongly consider avoiding activities that involve large crowds.
Dr. William Schaffner, a Vanderbilt University professor and longtime adviser to the CDC, said these two groups should consider avoiding activities such as traveling by airplane, going to movie theaters, attending family events, shopping at crowded malls, and going to religious services.
People in these two groups “should strongly consider not doing these activities at this juncture,”
Everyone who had Coronavirus developed irrepairably damaged lungs? Funny I havent heard this! Provide your source!
Its this type of unsourced, conjecture that is fueling this hysteria! Ill guarentee this is absolutely not the case!
You people sound like unhinged libs....
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Am I seriously reading this, on FR???
We’ve had NUMEROUS CV threads, chock full of great information....explaining, especially, the medical repercussions of this horrid disease.
You could take the time to search, on your own, for your ‘proof’, since you are in complete denial.
Here....I’ve take the time to do your legwork....for a few sources.....
https://www.bing.com/search?q=coronavirus+causes+permanent+lung+damage&form=APMCS1&PC=APMC
You could also take the time to kindly search older CV threads....the links to older threads are very nicely provided, on lates threads.
Now....until you take the time to actually research for yourself....rather than blast off drive by smears, please take a break from these threads.
When you’ve read up, for yourself, and want to discuss, rather than attack, please come back.
In the meantime...I sure hope you’ve at least taken time to prepare by having meds/necessities you may need, as the CDC recommends, for a few weeks.
Did they ever give an age?
Funny thing, that broccoli....some love the smell, some detest.
I fall into the latter catagory.
I love eating and cooking wtih, though.
The outdoor porch would be great, but I think our humidity is too high :(
Oregon ping..Two Salem Keizer School district employees under quarantine
Thank you for that information.
I will pass it along.
Yes, it is one of his great pleasures and he has been attending Celtics games for forty years.
So, I think it will be hard to convince him to stay home.
But we’ll see.
Long but a lot of good points here, its a twitter thread so excuse the choppiness:
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Liz Specht
@LizSpecht
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3 hours ago, 35 tweets, 6 min read
I think most people arent aware of the risk of systemic healthcare failure due to #COVID19 because they simply havent run the numbers yet. Lets talk math.
Lets conservatively assume that there are 2,000 current cases in the US today, March 6th. This is about 8x the number of confirmed (lab-diagnosed) cases. We know there is substantial under-Dx due to lack of test kits; Ill address implications later of under-/over-estimate.
We can expect that well continue to see a doubling of cases every 6 days (this is a typical doubling time across several epidemiological studies). Here I mean *actual* cases. Confirmed cases may appear to rise faster in the short term due to new test kit rollouts.
Were looking at about 1M US cases by the end of April, 2M by ~May 5, 4M by ~May 11, and so on. Exponentials are hard to grasp, but this is how they go.
As the healthcare system begins to saturate under this case load, it will become increasingly hard to detect, track, and contain new transmission chains. In absence of extreme interventions, this likely wont slow significantly until hitting >>1% of susceptible population.
What does a case load of this size mean for healthcare system? Well examine just two factors hospital beds and masks among many, many other things that will be impacted.
The US has about 2.8 hospital beds per 1000 people. With a population of 330M, this is ~1M beds. At any given time, 65% of those beds are already occupied. That leaves about 330k beds available nationwide (perhaps a bit fewer this time of year with regular flu season, etc).
Lets trust Italys numbers and assume that about 10% of cases are serious enough to require hospitalization. (Keep in mind that for many patients, hospitalization lasts for *weeks* in other words, turnover will be *very* slow as beds fill with COVID19 patients).
By this estimate, by about May 8th, all open hospital beds in the US will be filled. (This says nothing, of course, about whether these beds are suitable for isolation of patients with a highly infectious virus.)
If were wrong by a factor of two regarding the fraction of severe cases, that only changes the timeline of bed saturation by 6 days in either direction. If 20% of cases require hospitalization, we run out of beds by ~May 2nd.
If only 5% of cases require it, we can make it until ~May 14th. 2.5% gets us to May 20th. This, of course, assumes that there is no uptick in demand for beds from *other* (non-COVID19) causes, which seems like a dubious assumption.
As healthcare system becomes increasingly burdened, Rx shortages, etc, people w/ chronic conditions that are normally well-managed may find themselves slipping into severe states of medical distress requiring intensive care & hospitalization. But lets ignore that for now.
Alright, so thats beds. Now masks. Feds say we have a national stockpile of 12M N95 masks and 30M surgical masks (which are not ideal, but better than nothing).
There are about 18M healthcare workers in the US. Lets assume only 6M HCW are working on any given day. (This is likely an underestimate as most people work most days of the week, but again, Im playing conservative at every turn.)
As COVID19 cases saturate virtually every state and county, which seems likely to happen any day now, it will soon be irresponsible for all HCWs to not wear a mask. These HCWs would burn through N95 stockpile in 2 days if each HCW only got ONE mask per day.
One per day would be neither sanitary nor pragmatic, though this is indeed what we saw in Wuhan, with HCWs collapsing on their shift from dehydration because they were trying to avoid changing their PPE suits as they cannot be reused.
How quickly could we ramp up production of new masks? Not very fast at all. The vast majority are manufactured overseas, almost all in China. Even when manufactured here in US, the raw materials are predominantly from overseas... again, predominantly from China.
Keep in mind that all countries globally will be going through the exact same crises and shortages simultaneously. We cant force trade in our favor.
Now consider how these 2 factors bed and mask shortages compound each others severity. Full hospitals + few masks + HCWs running around between beds without proper PPE = very bad mix.
HCWs are already getting infected even w/ access to full PPE. In the face of PPE limitations this severe, its only a matter of time. HCWs will start dropping from the workforce for weeks at a time, leading to a shortage of HCWs that then further compounds both issues above.
We could go on and on about thousands of factors # of ventilators, or even simple things like saline drip bags. You see where this is going. 21/n
Importantly, I cannot stress this enough: even if Im wrong even VERY wrong about core assumptions like % of severe cases or current case #, it only changes the timeline by days or weeks. This is how exponential growth in an immunologically naïve population works.
Undeserved panic does no one any good. But neither does ill-informed complacency. Its wrong to assuage the public by saying only 2% will die. People arent adequately grasping the national and global systemic burden wrought by this swift-moving of a disease.
Im an engineer. This is what my mind does all day: I run back-of-the-envelope calculations to try to estimate order-of-magnitude impacts. Ive been on high alarm about this disease since ~Jan 19 after reading clinical indicators in the first papers emerging from Wuhan.
Nothing in the last 6 weeks has dampened my alarm in the slightest. To the contrary, were seeing abject refusal of many countries to adequately respond or prepare. Of course some of these estimates will be wrong, even substantially wrong.
But I have no reason to think theyll be orders-of-magnitude wrong. Even if your personal risk of death is very, very low, dont mock decisions like canceling events or closing workplaces as undue panic.
These measures are the bare minimum we should be doing to try to shift the peak to slow the rise in cases so that healthcare systems are less overwhelmed. Each day that we can delay an extra case is a big win for the HC system.
And yes, you really should prepare to buckle down for a bit. All services and supply chains will be impacted. Why risk the stress of being ill-prepared?
Worst case, Im massively wrong and you now have a huge bag of rice and black beans to burn through over the next few months and enough Robitussin to trip out.
One more thought: youve probably seen multiple respected epidemiologists have estimated that 20-70% of world will be infected within the next year. If you use 6-day doubling rate I mentioned above, we land at ~2-6 billion infected by sometime in July of this year.
Obviously I think the doubling time will start to slow once a sizeable fraction of the population has been infected, simply because of herd immunity and a smaller susceptible population.
But take the scenarios above (full beds, no PPE, etc, at just 1% of the US population infected) and stretch them out over just a couple extra months.
That timeline roughly fits with consensus end-game numbers from these highly esteemed epidemiologists. Again, were talking about discrepancies of mere days or weeks one direction or another, but not disagreements in the overall magnitude of the challenge.
This is not some hypothetical, fear-mongering, worst-case scenario. This is reality, as far as anyone can tell with the current available data.
Thats all for now. Standard disclaimers apply: Im a PhD biologist but *not* an epidemiologist. Thoughts my own. Yadda yadda. Stay safe out there. /end
It’s not the pike place one...it’s on University...probably LOTS of students
Just do a little research on “pneumonia lung damage”. Pneumonia is the main and most dangerous symptom of this Coronavirus.
well said.
And my closest Wally-World (which has the low or no salt canned veggies for 50 cents a can) is no longer open 24 hours...
Regarding stocking up on supplies:
Hand sanitizer is no longer available in our oil patch community and we are at the end of the supply line. A couple of long threads ago, I saw some information on making your own using isopropyl alcohol.
I can’t go back through thousands of threads so if anyone knows where on the threads the info is, I’d appreciate a link. (Though hand sanitizer is not available, I think the alcohol still is.)
I have a neighbor already going down that road.
I read somewhere 2/3 cup alcohol and 1/3 cup aloe vera gel works for sanitizer. Hope that helps.
What makes the hospital situation even more complex is that not all areas will be hit hard while others will be hit very hard.
So, for example, Seattle hospitals might be overwhelmed very quickly while Des Moines hospitals might be fine for many months.
Is the health care system prepared to start flying thousands of seriously ill patients all over the country? Has the CDC prepared for that?
yeah, right.
60
RE. Hand sanitizer ....from a freeper...I was using 91% alcohol and they told me the following...told me I needed to dilute the 91% alcohol to make it work better....here’s the explanation...and a recipe...
91% straight is going to dry your skin out like a long day at the beach. Add a little bottled water to it to take the % down a tad and decrease flammability. (might add some aloe gel too, if youre going to use it as a hand sanitizer)
The CDC website recommends 70-91%.
Why not use 95 or 99%?
When you sear a roast, youre protecting the juices inside the meat. The higher percentage alcohol you use, the faster youre going to sear or seal the outside of a cell and the alcohol isnt going to get inside that cell. Water prevents searing and acts as a tool for the alcohol to enter the cell. The pressure difference between the water on the outside and pressure inside of the cell sucks that alcohol right in. Water also has a static charge that will help Velcro onto both the virus and the alcohol, reducing evaporation time and giving the alcohol more time to do its thing.
RECIPE - reducing 91% to 70%
In cups, from eHOW.co.uk
Measure out one cup of 91 per cent rubbing alcohol, and pour it into the plastic container.
Add one-third of a cup of water and stir to mix the solution. The solution is now 70 per cent rubbing alcohol.
In grams (from answers.com)
measure 77 g of 91% alcohol and add 23 g of water.
A woman --> NOT a man.
Dinked around, likely spreading it, for 12 days.
Just like the dingbat in St. Paul MN.
Make your final purchases tomorrow, if you dare. Then weld yourself in.
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