Posted on 03/14/2020 8:36:34 AM PDT by Hojczyk
Thirty-seven deaths (77% of total) are in Washington state.
Two women in their 90s at Life Care Center died on March 6.
A woman in her 80s at Life Care Center died on March 6.
A man in his 70s at Overlake Medical Center died on March 4.
A man in his 80s at Swedish Issaquah hospital, died on March 9.
Woman in her 70s with underlying health conditions died on March 11.
Four Washington state deaths are from Snohomish County
A woman in her 70s with underlying health conditions died March 11.
Woman in her 80s with underlying health conditions died March 10.
Man in his 80s with underlying health conditions, died March 9 at the Josephine Caring Community
A man in his 40s with underlying health conditions died but the date has not been specified. One Washington State death is from Grant County, a patient in his or her 80s.
Four deaths are in California:
A woman, 90s, in assisted living.
A woman, 60s, hospitalized in Santa Clara.
An elderly man in assisted living.
A man, 71, with underlying health conditions who had been on a Grand Princess cruise ship.
Two deaths are in Florida:
A man and woman, both in their 70s, died after returning from foreign travel. One death is in New Jersey:
A man, 69, who is diabetic and suffered two cardiac arrests, has died. One death is in South Dakota:
A man in his 60s with underlying medical conditions has died. One death is in Georgia:
A man, 67, with underlying medical conditions has died. One death is in Kansas:
A man in his 70s with underlying health conditions died at the Life Care Center in Kansas City. One death in is Colorado:
A woman in her 80s with underlying health conditions has died.
(Excerpt) Read more at justthenews.com ...
Not the 1917/1918 Spanish flu.
It actually took out the young and fit.
There was a death in Washington yesterday of a 60 year old woman who was still working, went home with flu symptoms, and was found dead at home the next day. It was reported locally as Covid-19.
It appears not to be listed here. Maybe it was determined it was the flu and not Covid-19
From the article
U.S. health officials said the early pattern of deaths suggests those most at risk are the elderly and those with more serious health issues like diabetes, lung disease or coronary ailments.
If you are an elderly person with an underlying condition, if you get infected, the risk of getting into trouble is considerable. So it’s our responsibility to protect the vulnerable, Dr. Anthony Fauci, America’s top infectious disease expert, declared recently.
Something is going to kill every single one of us one day, but not on the same day. And it AIN’T gonna be the Chinese Flu but for a very few.
What will this do to the federal judiciary?
November election is key.
Look at the ages...
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_current_United_States_circuit_judges
I live in SW Florida and went to Culvers last night..the place was full...and it looked like a nursing home..well Florida is a nursing home I guess..
The lawyer in NYC was 50 and had an issue (we suspect asthma).
last we heard he was in the ICU in a coma.
50 isn’t elderly and there are a LOT of people with asthma.
This AIN’T the Spanish Flu, and it AIN’T 1918. But what it is, is a bunch of paranoids who have let themselves be stampeded into a blind panic, just like a herd of lowing cattle or sheep.
Someone posted a picture in my community Facebook page of the young person who died in WA. He looks to be about 40, and was obese. I am wondering diabetes?
The model was designed by climate change scientists.
LOL
I represent the Old Fart, thank you very much.
They had no choice - their healthcare system was overwhelmed.
That’s what we’re trying to avoid in the US.
This disease destroys the lungs with viral pneumonia. Is that dangerous to asthmatics?
Judges should have to retire at a certain age...and take a medical and mental test...Like pilots when they renew there license
Teens in Cali are calling it the ‘Boomer Remover’.
Sure is a good thing none of us know anyone who is older with health conditions.
You are right and wrong.
We still don’t know what it is.
It will have a devastating effect, if not on public health, certainly on the economy.
It is coming, gradually, then suddenly. It is a black swan event and many folks still succumb to normalcy bias.
Time will tell. Only after the fact do we have to count the bodies and tally up the costs.
I think the OH state doc was speculating total numbers, including those that have not been reported/tested.
Just like those unreported numbers/cases....there could also be cases that were labeled ‘regular flu’, so they are not being counted in deaths.
Her numbers are probably significantly off and it takes about a month for a patient to progress to death.
Also, our healthcare system can save many of the more serious cases now, but the question is what happens when the capacity is seriously exceeded.
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