You don't. If you want to be sure, then go back into quarantine until the all-clear is sounded.SO,,,, we did the 14 day quarantine,, How do we know we didn't re-infect today?
That's the plan,, or ,, try to catch it and get it over with.Stay well, Tom!
Highly recommend this documentary, it's mostly about Jim McEwanScotch
Yup, and they don't really know that much about it. Hopefully a suitable treatment will be found and a vaccine developed. Then hopefully third world crapholes where this originated from will figure out how to feed their population so they are not eating unsuitable things.once the virus is there it is always there, you may catch it anytime.
As soon as you are good to go we'll infect you..dun matter....I'm not coming out....till the rest of all y'all are clear. lol
Squeezing of a pine knot. nasty !Lagavulin is in a class all by itself. Amazing stuff.
Depends on what you mean by "there." My understanding is that viruses outside the body have a limited lifetime.once the virus is there it is always there, you may catch it anytime.
100,000 deaths out of 1 million cases is a 10% CFR... sounds like that estimate assumes that the health system gets overwhelmed to the point where the critically ill can't get adequate care. That is really a nightmare scenario.At this point, we are as a country just trying to figure out how to get past the first wave, which according to the public data I'm looking at and analyzing, will almost certainly result in over a million confirmed cases and over 100,000 fatalities. (Wow.) At some point, we need our leadership team to map out the stages to a return to more normal life, and that will require meeting some benchmarks for hospital capacity, antibody testing, therapeutics, and vaccine deployment. The sooner we get going to meeting those challenges (along with tentative timelines or deadlines) the sooner we can recover from this fustercluck of a mess.
Has anyone else been giving this thought? WHY were we unprepared?The country was sooo unprepared...
Has anyone else been giving this thought? WHY were we unprepared?
I'm wondering if there are various root causes besides the general belief that everything's good...
1. I remember when a warehouse I used to work for switched to "just in time" policies. I generally appreciate that there are good "cash flow" reasons for this, but I wonder if it also has to do with inventory and taxes...
2. Do property taxes and hospital capacity have any correlation?
3. Have we gotten to the point where inventory tax keeps us from stockpiling essential supplies?
Right off hand, it seems to me that various government policies and tax ideas actually contribute significantly to this situation and need to be evaluated as part of the solution.
Yeah, but there are finances involved, too. I know we were getting taxed for everything that sat on our shelves and they decided that even though it was cheaper to order in bulk, we needed to pay higher prices for less stock in order to keep that down.The government shouldn't be in charge of this, that's part of the problem. The hospitals should take some responsibility and keep inventory levels up on stuff like this. That said, I've read before the swine flu of 2009 there were something like 100 million masks in reserve somewhere. These got used up during that episode and were never restocked.
Azure, you know better than to confuse "confirmed" cases with "total" cases. In order to be tested and confirmed, you either have to be admitted to a hospital about to die anyway, or on an NBA team or be a famous Hollywood celebrity.100,000 deaths out of 1 million cases is a 10% CFR... sounds like that estimate assumes that the health system gets overwhelmed to the point where the critically ill can't get adequate care. That is really a nightmare scenario.
Other than that, I agree with everything you say, though.
That..The problem is we don't know how many total cases there are.
stay away from those stealth sponers......That..
plus we have a multitude that have been exposed that are not showing symptoms.
How can anyone see a brand new virus, and tell what we expect.
This is a reactive situation, all the experts can do is react.
There are several ways to tell what to expect, but only to a degree. You are correct that we have to be somewhat reactive, but there were ways we could have been proactive, as well.How can anyone see a brand new virus, and tell what we expect.
This is a reactive situation, all the experts can do is react.
You have a different, but valid take on this with your reference. We had the tools, but we were late putting them to use.True. Yes we weren't as prepared as we could have been, but we were better prepared than anyone else according to a 2019 study.
https://www.ghsindex.org/
Hindsight is perfect. With the information we had prior to this outbreak, we were not perfectly prepared but we were reasonably well prepared. Compromise is always necessary, and preparing for pandemics can't be a country's only focus. Sometimes these things happen and we just have to deal with them as best we can.
Since the outcome of those with current active infections is unknown, a better indicator is to divide deaths by total recovered. That number is around 16% for latest numbers I could find. But as has been said, its unknown how many were infected and recovered without testing. Perhaps if antibody testing becomes widespread, we may end up with a more accurate picture of the actual fatality rate but until then, its anybody's guess.A better way is to divide deaths by total infections.
There are several ways to tell what to expect, but only to a degree. You are correct that we have to be somewhat reactive, but there were ways we could have been proactive, as well.
1) We did get warning from China. People will say that "the Chinese were lying to us", but we still had some very strong indications that all wasn't well there. I was in Hong Kong when it started in China, and my WeChat feed had mention of some sort of virus a couple of days after I left, in late December.I'm sureI know our intelligence agencies had better data than I. When the Chinese started shutting everything down, in early January, that was a very strong warning this wasn't like the viruses in the past, and we should have been taking notice. No matter what they were saying outside, we knew what was happening inside their country. I knew things were shutting down because of our dealers and customers. As I'm no one particularly special, there's lots of people who work with the Chinese, that means our government should have known, too.
2) We've had SARS, MERS, Ebola, and a couple of influenzas prior to this. These gave us information about what to do in case of an infectious disease starts spreading. Although these affected the USA minimally, we could have learned the lessons from those epidemics.Some places, such as Singapore, apparently took those lessons to heart and are comparatively well off now.
You are correct that we can't necessarily react entirely appropriately. The next unusual virus, we may well over-react and shut everything down until we find out it isn't too bad, after all. That may well be the preferred course of action until it seems we have too many "false alarms".
Has anyone else been giving this thought? WHY were we unprepared?
The hospitals should take some responsibility and keep inventory levels up on stuff like this.
... Decides on a shot of steroids (rather than a 5-7 day course of pills) that will reduce any lung inflammation without overly compensating my immune system.
Not sure what your point is. @chemgeek's wording was "over a million confirmed cases" (emphasis mine). 100,000 fatalities out of 1 million confirmed cases is a 10% CFR, by definition. No confusion there. (Could be smaller than 10% since he said over a million, but I assume less than 2 million, so still > 5%.)Azure, you know better than to confuse "confirmed" cases with "total" cases. In order to be tested and confirmed, you either have to be admitted to a hospital about to die anyway, or on an NBA team or be a famous Hollywood celebrity.
Another way to look at it is 100,000 deaths in the US (population ~330,000,000), which gives a death rate of .03%
A better way is to divide deaths by total infections. The problem is we don't know how many total cases there are.
I love his music, sorry to hear that.John Prine is infected. And on a ventilator.
I've been isolating this month, and will go another.
... When all this settles down, the world needs to take a hard look at what happened and China, more specifically, the Chinese communist government, should be held to task as to why this happened the way it did. The issue of whether this virus escaped or worse from a lab hasn't been fully explored either. It's a huge CF.
My point is that CFR is a meaningless number when the number used to create it (number of diagnosed cases) is nowhere close to reality (the actual number of cases).Not sure what your point is. @chemgeek's wording was "over a million confirmed cases" (emphasis mine). 100,000 fatalities out of 1 million confirmed cases is a 10% CFR, by definition. No confusion there. (Could be smaller than 10% since he said over a million, but I assume less than 2 million, so still > 5%.)
My point is that the CFR estimates under conditions where adequate care is available are less than 5% - usually in the 2 to 3% range.
My point is that CFR is a meaningless number when the number used to create it (number of diagnosed cases) is nowhere close to reality (the actual number of cases).
Again, I was hearing about it, from people who lived there. That means our government was hearing about it (or should have heard about it). I also heard about stuff being shut down. Our government should have known, too. When they shut down Spring Festival, that should have been a real wake-up call. It is the equivalent of cancelling Christmas and Thanksgiving over there. If I knew, then the US government should have known.It's all muddied up, but the initial alarm came from a doctor, who was disciplined by the Chinese government for sounding the alarm. This doctor disappeared for a while, then reappeared, but unfortunately succumb to the virus. I believe this doctor spoke up near the end of December. Then there was a lot of muddled information. Apparent misstatements about the severity and many claims that the virus did not pass amongst humans, then only passed during close contact. The WHO urged calm and said it was not an issue and that China was containing it. They weren't.
Then at the end of January the executive branch of the US made an executive decision and shut down travel from the affected areas. In hindsight, travel from all of China should have been shut down. The WHO said it was unnecessary and the decision was panned as xenophobic and racist at the time, the House went so far as to consider a bill limiting the executive branch's ability to ban travel.
Had China been more forth coming with what was going on, this may have been contained. But that unfortunately is water under the bridge at this point. When all this settles down, the world needs to take a hard look at what happened and China, more specifically, the Chinese communist government, should be held to task as to why this happened the way it did. The issue of whether this virus escaped or worse from a lab hasn't been fully explored either. It's a huge CF.