Front Office Football Central

Front Office Football Central (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//index.php)
-   Off Topic (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//forumdisplay.php?f=6)
-   -   COVID-19 - Wuhan Coronavirus (a non-political thread, see pg. 36 #1778) (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//showthread.php?t=96561)

tarcone 03-23-2020 06:56 PM

A woman in her 30s died in St. Louis. A 44 year old Marathoner is on a ventilator in Illinois.

I think this thing may be mutating and getting stronger.

2 more counties that border mine issued stay at home orders. My county just got their first case. But just decided to close non-essential businesses. Assuming the stay at home order will come soon.

RainMaker 03-23-2020 07:00 PM

I don't know if that's the case. Viruses tend to weaken over time.

This isn't the flu. While it hurts older people more, the mortality rate among people in their 30's and 40's is still somewhat scary.

For people in their 40's, the mortality rate is 0.4%. That's 1 in every 250 people who come down with it will die. 1 in every 500 in their 30's will die.

When you have hundreds of thousands of cases across the country, we're going to see more stories like that.

Brian Swartz 03-23-2020 07:02 PM

Agree with Rainmaker. In Italy, they have significant numbers in the 20s-50s, not as much as the elderly but still. CDC report from last week that I previously cited; 38% of the early hospitalizations in the US were 20-54 age group.

whomario 03-23-2020 07:11 PM

Yeah, people really underestimate a) how many young people have underlying conditions of some sort and b) that even 0.3/0.4 is quite a lot for a respiratory illness. The flu really is harmless compared to this, not least because there is medication available. Here all you can do is put people on a ventilator and pump them full of antibiotics and steroids to stregthen other systems/prevent bacterial infection and then hope for the best).

Young peope survive a lot more often since their immune system and lungs/heart are stronger, but even then being put on a ventilator is likely a harrowing ordeal.

That being said, taking a few cases and seeing it as a sign of mutation is not going to be a healthy mindset considering how often info will change still because the science community simply cant work miracles.

RainMaker 03-23-2020 07:21 PM

Put it this way. The mortality rate for the flu in ages 18-49 is 0.02%. That means this virus is 10 times deadlier to someone in their 30's and 20 times deadlier to someone in their 40's.

Edward64 03-23-2020 07:21 PM

Yeah, this guy should lose his privilege to carry.

Afraid Of Coronavirus, GA Man Points Gun At Women Wearing Masks | Alpharetta, GA Patch
Quote:

ALPHARETTA, GA — Alpharetta Police arrested a man Sunday for pointing a gun at a woman and her granddaughter for "fear of catching the coronavirus."

Alpharetta Police Sgt. Howard Miller said officers received a call about a person pulling a gun on others at the post office, 4575 Webb Bridge Rd. Officers responded and found both victims, a woman and her adult granddaughter, unharmed. The suspect had left prior to officers arriving.

The women said they were both wearing medical masks and gloves when they entered the post office. They were met by a man who pulled out a handgun, pointed it at both of them, and yelled at them to get back, Miller said. The man then left the building and drove away in his vehicle.

One of the victims was able to get the license plate number of the man's car. Officers went to his house, confronted him in his driveway where he surrendered before taken into custody. He was armed with a holstered firearm at the time of his arrest, police said.

Miller said he cannot go into specific details involving the interview with the suspect, but did say the man admitted to officers that he pointed his gun at the victims "in fear of catching the coronavirus."

Edward64 03-23-2020 07:26 PM

Getting back to whether cruise lines should get bail outs.

If true, I'm inclined to put the non-US companies way down on the priority list or not at all.

Don’t bail out the cruise industry - The Verge
Quote:

They’re not really US companies. Carnival Corporation is incorporated in Panama. Royal Caribbean is incorporated in Liberia. Norwegian Cruise Line is incorporated in Bermuda. These three cruise companies combine to make up around 70 percent or more of the global cruise ship market, depending on how you measure it. And while they operate offices in Miami, Florida, they are all incorporated in countries with very different labor, tax, and other laws than those of the US. Their ships fly flags of these countries, too. What’s more, a large number of cruise ship employees are from Europe, the Caribbean islands, and the Philippines. These companies are not big job creators for US citizens in the way that other bailout targets like Boeing or airlines like Delta, United, and American are. Also...

They pay basically zero federal income tax. With all of that in mind, it shouldn’t surprise many people that these big cruise companies essentially pay no federal income tax in the US. True, each company is actually a conglomeration of a bunch of smaller companies, and there are some cases where their subsidiaries might be subject to federal (and state) income tax laws. But most of those entities don’t have to pay, thanks to Section 883 of the Internal Revenue Code, which exempts:

Gross income derived by a corporation organized in a foreign country from the international operation of a ship or ships if such foreign country grants an equivalent exemption to corporations organized in the United States.

molson 03-23-2020 07:31 PM

And cruise ships pose no value to society. If it takes them a year or more to figure their shit out and re-structure, no real harm done. We don't have that luxury with the airlines.

RainMaker 03-23-2020 07:33 PM

You can look up the fleet and see which flag each cruise line flies. For instance, Carnival flies the flag for Panama, Bahamas, and Malta. Not one cruise ship flies an American flag.

Also as mentioned, most of the labor is not American citizens. And I don't consider cruise ships a vital industry like you can make the case it is for airlines.

Carnival Cruise Line - Wikipedia

Atocep 03-23-2020 07:35 PM

Washington issues a stay at home

RainMaker 03-23-2020 07:37 PM


miked 03-23-2020 07:48 PM

Too bad they are willing to die to save our economy, but I'm sure unwilling to cut pollution to save the planet for their grandchildren.

cartman 03-23-2020 07:50 PM

fuck you Dan Patrick

Lathum 03-23-2020 07:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3271095)


I don't even know what to say.

We can talk butterfly effect, etc...but what is happening now will have almost no bearing on our kids financial status. Pretty sure if given the choice they would choose extra time with their grandparents. Even if it meant Mom and Dad have some struggles.

JonInMiddleGA 03-23-2020 07:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 3271099)
fuck you Dan Patrick


I couldn't figure out for the life of me what a washed up former ESPN talker suddenly had to do with this.

tarcone 03-23-2020 07:54 PM

I think we should err on the side of this is stronger than we thought. We need an overreaction to counter the lack of reaction we had the 1st month of this virus.

CU Tiger 03-23-2020 07:55 PM

S.C. governor issues a notice to arrest any gathering of 3 or more non related people.

Lathum 03-23-2020 08:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by CU Tiger (Post 3271103)
S.C. governor issues a notice to arrest any gathering of 3 or more non related people.


and do what with them?

thesloppy 03-23-2020 08:04 PM

Ticket/fine is considered an arrest, I think.

Lathum 03-23-2020 08:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thesloppy (Post 3271109)
Ticket/fine is considered an arrest, I think.


makes sense

miami_fan 03-23-2020 08:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lathum (Post 3271063)


I am not a doctor so take what I say with a grain of salt.

Please stop randomly taking chloroquine phosphate

Thanks

Mota 03-23-2020 08:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miami_fan (Post 3271111)
I am not a doctor so take what I say with a grain of salt.

Please stop randomly taking chloroquine phosphate

Thanks


But did he avoid getting the COVID? I need to know.

molson 03-23-2020 08:37 PM

You live to your 60s - played little league, fell in love, had your heart broken, graduate high school, get your first job, travel a little, go to weddings and funerals, lose touch with friends and make new ones, learn from mistakes, fall and get back up again, start to think about retirement.....and then one day you die because you drink fish tank cleaner solution. What a world.

Jas_lov 03-23-2020 08:41 PM

Did they drink it because Trump talked about it as a cure?

Lathum 03-23-2020 08:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jas_lov (Post 3271115)
Did they drink it because Trump talked about it as a cure?


You think someone dumb enough to do that is researching the cure on their own?

JPhillips 03-23-2020 08:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jas_lov (Post 3271115)
Did they drink it because Trump talked about it as a cure?


There's an audio interview with the wife who is in the hospital and it's heartbreaking.

Arles 03-23-2020 09:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miami_fan (Post 3271111)
I am not a doctor so take what I say with a grain of salt.

Please stop randomly taking chloroquine phosphate

Thanks

He took the wrong stuff. hydroxychloroquine Is the drug, not chloroquine phosphate. Still, checking with a doc is the prudent move before taking anything

Lathum 03-23-2020 09:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3271119)
There's an audio interview with the wife who is in the hospital and it's heartbreaking.


you have a link?

JPhillips 03-23-2020 09:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lathum (Post 3271122)
you have a link?



Warhammer 03-23-2020 09:53 PM

So according to other articles, it is hydrochloroquine they are distributing and he took something else on his own volition. And that is Trump's fault. He has a lot of other to nail him on rather than this...

Butter 03-23-2020 09:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Warhammer (Post 3271127)
And that is Trump's fault. He has a lot of other to nail him on rather than this...


LOL

JPhillips 03-23-2020 09:59 PM

This is why you don't tout a miracle cure with no evidence. Yes, they should have not taken it, but statistically, it's inevitable that someone is going to do this.

IlliniCub 03-23-2020 10:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3271123)

He took the version they use to clean fish aquariums I believe..... not the version for human consumption

RainMaker 03-23-2020 10:25 PM

Honestly, if you're taking medical advice from the guy with all the evidence that is out there about him, you made your own bed.

panerd 03-23-2020 10:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3271131)
This is why you don't tout a miracle cure with no evidence. Yes, they should have not taken it, but statistically, it's inevitable that someone is going to do this.


LOL. Sometimes I cant tell if you are serious but you cant be serious can you? This idiot wasnt even sick and drank fish tank cleaner. Darwin award nominee, not heart breaking in the least and not inevitable either. Not at all inevitable.

Trump said wash your hands to avoid COVID. I washed them with battery acid. Lets get me on the news to blame Trump. It was inevitable someone would do this!

panerd 03-23-2020 10:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3271136)
Honestly, if you're taking medical advice from the guy with all the evidence that is out there about him, you made your own bed.


Add the fact that he didnt even take medicine, he took fish tank cleaner.

Lathum 03-23-2020 11:10 PM

The bottom line is social media has completely jumped the shark with treatments and prevention for covid 19. Every other post is someone sharing some sketchy article about a miracle cure or prevention.

thesloppy 03-23-2020 11:18 PM

There is some...uhhh irony?...that this particular crisis is hitting all of our weak points, like healthcare, (in)credulous boomers, safety net, unemployment compensation, homeless, rent costs, infrastructure, supply chain, stuffed prisons, foreign reliance, pharma costs, etc. It seems tailor designed for all the shit we've been collectively ignoring.

It's a shame that we can't have a progressive president, or nominee, at the time when we most need progressive measures. I wonder if the Dem primary would have gone differently had this hit a month earlier. Both Biden and Trump have campaigns practically built around returning to some vision of our past, which will probably appeal to plenty of people even more, but seems like the worst possible response to this crisis.

Neon_Chaos 03-24-2020 01:54 AM

Day 8 of Enhanced Community Quarantine here in the Philippines.

So far so good, crime is down, most people appear to be following instructions. Most everyone that can work from home is working from home. Only one person per household is allowed to go outside and buy groceries/essentials. Kinda tough to impose on one island of 40 million people, but hopefully it slows this thing down enough to allow our medical frontliners breathing room.

We've already had a COVID fatality in my suburb, so sad.

We don't have enough testing kits, so we're just at 500 confirmed positive cases in the country with 33 confirmed deaths... but that number is definitely higher.

The tropical heat in the country isn't affecting this thing at all, it seems.

Hope you all are staying safe and keeping your family and friends safe.

RainMaker 03-24-2020 02:35 AM

Good article on how South Korea did it.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/23/w...ten-curve.html

sterlingice 03-24-2020 06:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA (Post 3271101)
I couldn't figure out for the life of me what a washed up former ESPN talker suddenly had to do with this.



I'd rather a washed up former ESPN talker be our Lieutenant Governor than that imbecile.


SI

cuervo72 03-24-2020 07:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thesloppy (Post 3271141)
There is some...uhhh irony?...that this particular crisis is hitting all of our weak points, like healthcare, (in)credulous boomers, safety net, unemployment compensation, homeless, rent costs, infrastructure, supply chain, stuffed prisons, foreign reliance, pharma costs, etc. It seems tailor designed for all the shit we've been collectively ignoring.


Given this list, what haven't we been ignoring?

Edward64 03-24-2020 07:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Neon_Chaos (Post 3271146)
Day 8 of Enhanced Community Quarantine here in the Philippines.

So far so good, crime is down, most people appear to be following instructions. Most everyone that can work from home is working from home. Only one person per household is allowed to go outside and buy groceries/essentials. Kinda tough to impose on one island of 40 million people, but hopefully it slows this thing down enough to allow our medical frontliners breathing room.

We've already had a COVID fatality in my suburb, so sad.

We don't have enough testing kits, so we're just at 500 confirmed positive cases in the country with 33 confirmed deaths... but that number is definitely higher.

The tropical heat in the country isn't affecting this thing at all, it seems.

Hope you all are staying safe and keeping your family and friends safe.


Hang in there. I visited Manila and Palawan, beautiful country and people, wish you guys the best.

Edward64 03-24-2020 07:42 AM

Yeah, no sh*t it's been postponed you dumb f*cks. Go join the WHO who delayed calling it a Pandemic.

https://www.cnn.com/2020/03/24/sport...ntl/index.html
Quote:

Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach agreed Tuesday to postpone the Olympics by about one year.

Abe put the suggestion to Bach, who agreed that the latest date the Olympics will be held is summer 2021.

JPhillips 03-24-2020 08:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3271138)
LOL. Sometimes I cant tell if you are serious but you cant be serious can you? This idiot wasnt even sick and drank fish tank cleaner. Darwin award nominee, not heart breaking in the least and not inevitable either. Not at all inevitable.

Trump said wash your hands to avoid COVID. I washed them with battery acid. Lets get me on the news to blame Trump. It was inevitable someone would do this!


In this time of crisis, who will think of the poor con-man?

ISiddiqui 03-24-2020 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3271070)
It's more the lack of national unity (and I'm not just saying politically here, but at every level) that is really a huge threat to our response.


Part of the issue here (as opposed to a stimulus package) is our system of government. The President simply CAN'T do a nationwide shelter in place (Constitutionally speaking). And Governors are all over the map on it.

panerd 03-24-2020 09:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3271164)
In this time of crisis, who will think of the poor con-man?


You have dived into Obama's birth certificate isnt real territory with the heart breaking link to the guys wife who ate fish aquarium chemicals but to each their own I guess.

Butter 03-24-2020 09:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3271170)
You have dived into Obama's birth certificate isnt real territory with the heart breaking link to the guys wife who ate fish aquarium chemicals but to each their own I guess.


You guys have really lowered the bar on what you expect from the President. I guess you want us to apologize for not doing so, but personally I won't.

He shouldn't be up there touting miracle cures, period. How much better is he than Jim Bakker, really?

panerd 03-24-2020 09:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3271171)
You guys have really lowered the bar on what you expect from the President. I guess you want us to apologize for not doing so, but personally I won't.

He shouldn't be up there touting miracle cures, period. How much better is he than Jim Bakker, really?


I thought there have been pages upon pages of this thread devoted to how South Korea is handling this and we aren't? South Korea uses this and it may be effective, not exactly magic beans? But good thing JPhillips is on top of worrying about a person that didn't even have COVID19 but went ahead and chose to take his own concoction and died. Useful.

Edward64 03-24-2020 09:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3271173)
I thought there have been pages upon pages of this thread devoted to how South Korea is handling this and we aren't? South Korea uses this and it may be effective, not exactly magic beans? But good thing JPhillips is on top of worrying about a person that didn't even have COVID19 but went ahead and chose to take his own concoction and died. Useful.


I agree with you. Because other western-like countries are exploring hydrochloroquine and others, we should be doing the same. I also don't think we can blame Trump on this particular act of Darwin award stupidity.

Trump should be messaging "hope". He thinks he's doing this with his out-of-context statements (with Fauci rolling his eyes behind him). Instead, he should be providing context and saying:
"... hydrochloroquine (and others) has anecdotally shown to be effective. However, we need to go through the process to confirm this. That is why I've asked the CDC/Fauci/Birx to create a specific task force to expedite these studies. We will give you an update on our progress on X date"
My question is how difficult is it to do double-blind tests with these drugs? It would seem with the urgency that we would have some sort of "indicative results" already. Sad to say but there would be no lack of human volunteers.

Brian Swartz 03-24-2020 09:59 AM

Difficult? Not at all. Time-consuming? Yes. That's why we started the vaccine trial a couple weeks ago or whatever but it'll be at least a year until it's widely available. Some of that delay will be producing enough to use in mass quantities. We'll have test results on the effect of various drugs like chloroquine long before that, but you have to wait a certain amount of time in trials like this before you have any actionable information at all.

panerd 03-24-2020 09:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271174)
I agree with you. Because other western-like countries are exploring hydrochloroquine and others, we should be doing the same. I also don't think we can blame Trump on this particular act of Darwin award stupidity.

Trump should be messaging "hope". He thinks he's doing this with his out-of-context statements (with Fauci rolling his eyes behind him). Instead, he should be providing context and saying:
"... hydrochloroquine (and others) has anecdotally shown to be effective. However, we need to go through the process to confirm this. That is why I've asked the CDC/Fauci/Birx to create a specific task force to expedite these studies. We will give you an update on our progress on X date"
My question is how difficult is it to do double-blind tests with these drugs? It would seem with the urgency that we would have some sort of "indicative results" already. Sad to say but there would be no lack of human volunteers.


My impression is they have been using them after the fact to slow down/dampen the effects of COVID and not to prevent you from getting it. And yes it could end up being just a giant placebo but as long as your don't take a fish tank chemical with a similar name you should live!

whomario 03-24-2020 10:03 AM

South Korea certainly isn't doing so well because they use the drug, especially widespread. That's just not the case and highly misleading.

Even in the study from France you see mentioned most often, if you read the fine print, this was not a mircale cure of any sort.

Aside from the small sample size (26 patients), the study also has a lot of issues, not least the fact that they did not actually test if it helps patients recover but only if they are still shed virus (in other words: if they are still contagious). Others:

- 6 of the 26 patients given the drug were 'lost' from follow up after use of the medication because they had to be moved to ICU had to quit it due to bad side effects or died (and one for some reason left the hospital despite still testing positive).
- The average age of patients was also 'only' 51.2.


article on what is the Status Quo of various medications being tried and tested:

Treatments for COVID-19: Drugs being tested against coronavirus | Live Science

whomario 03-24-2020 10:05 AM

Also:

The problem with a guy like Trump is that him deciding that this is the solution without the data actually there to back it up might directly lead to him also deciding other efforts can be put aside. Without actually knowing if the drug is effective enough to allow that.

Say this saves 25% of the severely ill patients from dying and another 25% from getting seriously ill. That would be fantastic ! But not if you spend less attention on protective gear or makeshift-hospitals, quit social distancing regulations and end up with twice the number of patients actually needing hospital care in the first place.

albionmoonlight 03-24-2020 10:13 AM

I'll put this here because I don't think it is a political thought (at least, it isn't a GOP vs Dems thought).

I wonder if we will have trouble dealing with this (as compared to, say, 1918) because we all move so fast now. The idea of a 3 months shutdown seems like forever in a world where we have been moving toward delivery of things in less than 24 hours.

We just aren't used to time frames going this slowly now. Not to make light of it, but "the virus was so last week" seems to be driving some people to already want to move away from social distancing.

Butter 03-24-2020 10:17 AM

The point is, you can't just say shit if you are the President of the United States. Most people get that. But the idea we should just excuse this one because that's how he is. Any other functional adult would've either refrained mentioning the drug specifically, or may have mentioned it as Edward suggests. But no, he just got excited, it's fine. Bullshit.

Ohio and other states have had to start telling doctors either not to prescribe it, or to limit the amount prescribed for people who have conditions who actually need it because there has been a run when there is still limited-to-no data about its effectiveness.

Edward64 03-24-2020 10:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brian Swartz (Post 3271176)
Difficult? Not at all. Time-consuming? Yes. That's why we started the vaccine trial a couple weeks ago or whatever but it'll be at least a year until it's widely available. Some of that delay will be producing enough to use in mass quantities. We'll have test results on the effect of various drugs like chloroquine long before that, but you have to wait a certain amount of time in trials like this before you have any actionable information at all.


Definitely not asking for a vaccine but more a treatment. So my basic questions stand ... is the US actually doing tests on these possibly anecdotal treatments (probably) and more importantly, when will they have "indicative" results (and why haven't they published those dates)?

In project management, if you don't have a "target" due date and make someone accountable, it'll never get done (exaggeration but you get the idea).

I think it would help the public (and definitely me) to know "we are doing these tests, you can believe us because we expect some indicative result by X date or we'll provide a status update every Thu etc.".

JPhillips 03-24-2020 10:26 AM

Cuomo is getting frustrated now at the lack of federal support.

NY cases are doubling every 3 days. The peak will be higher and sooner than thought a few days ago. Hospital bed need increasing from 100k to 140k. 30k or more ventilators needed.

JPhillips 03-24-2020 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271185)
Definitely not asking for a vaccine but more a treatment. So my basic questions stand ... is the US actually doing tests on these possibly anecdotal treatments (probably) and more importantly, when will they have "indicative" results (and why haven't they published those dates)?

In project management, if you don't have a "target" due date and make someone accountable, it'll never get done (exaggeration but you get the idea).

I think it would help the public (and definitely me) to know "we are doing these tests, you can believe us because we expect some indicative result by X date or we'll provide a status update every Thu etc.".


I just read a story on different medical tests. Some therapeutics will have early results in April. Other drugs through the summer and fall. There are a ton of trials going on all over the world.

albionmoonlight 03-24-2020 10:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271185)
Definitely not asking for a vaccine but more a treatment. So my basic questions stand ... is the US actually doing tests on these possibly anecdotal treatments (probably) and more importantly, when will they have "indicative" results (and why haven't they published those dates)?

In project management, if you don't have a "target" due date and make someone accountable, it'll never get done (exaggeration but you get the idea).

I think it would help the public (and definitely me) to know "we are doing these tests, you can believe us because we expect some indicative result by X date or we'll provide a status update every Thu etc.".


My sister in law works in clinical trial data management. And we haven't talked about COVID-19 treatments, but having talked to her in the past, I learned that the process of bringing a drug to market takes a very long time. Years and decades of time. Lots and lots and lots of trials and tests. And even then, sometimes one slips through with unanticipated side effects.

I am sure that they are rushing everything to the super ultimate max for COVID treatments. But that's still a long time.

Arles 03-24-2020 10:33 AM

If you look back on the comments from the media/experts on march 12-13, all hospital beds should have been overrun by March 23. At a minimum, it looks like social distancing is working.

Edward64 03-24-2020 10:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3271190)
My sister in law works in clinical trial data management. And we haven't talked about COVID-19 treatments, but having talked to her in the past, I learned that the process of bringing a drug to market takes a very long time. Years and decades of time. Lots and lots and lots of trials and tests. And even then, sometimes one slips through with unanticipated side effects.

I am sure that they are rushing everything to the super ultimate max for COVID treatments. But that's still a long time.


I get that and that's why I used the phrase "indicative results". If treatment X had indicative results that it seems to work, I'd publish it ... don't over promise, give it the right caveats.

The US public (and world really) needs hope and want to see the light at the end of the tunnel. This hope needs to be backed by science.

Flasch186 03-24-2020 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Butter (Post 3271171)
You guys have really lowered the bar on what you expect from the President. I guess you want us to apologize for not doing so, but personally I won't.

He shouldn't be up there touting miracle cures, period. How much better is he than Jim Bakker, really?


Remember when it was the worst that the prez cheated on his wife?

I'll never forget my uncle in very steely terms telling me how awful Clinton was because he was forced to explain to his daughter what Oral Sex was. I concur. IT was terrible that he had to do that before he was ready (or for some of us at all) but that seems high brow now compared to the bowels we've sunk (or been boiled down to).

NobodyHere 03-24-2020 10:52 AM

I daresay traffic today is about 75% of what it normally is.

ETA:

I live in Ohio btw where the mandatory "stay at home" order was issued starting last midnight.

Arles 03-24-2020 10:55 AM

Yeah, driving to work in Phoenix was like Saturday traffic.

Edward64 03-24-2020 10:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3271198)
I daresay traffic today is about 75% of what it normally is.


Only 75%?

Edward64 03-24-2020 11:14 AM

South Africa and India both going on 3-week lock downs. Not sure how rigorous those will/can be.

Vince, Pt. II 03-24-2020 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271201)
Only 75%?


20-25% here in the Bay Area.

whomario 03-24-2020 11:24 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3271191)
If you look back on the comments from the media/experts on march 12-13, all hospital beds should have been overrun by March 23. At a minimum, it looks like social distancing is working.


Of course it is working. It's pure math, less contacts = leass spread = less infected = less needing hospitalisation.

Even this virus isn't spreading everytime you come into contact with someone and if the average times where people come into contact is severely limited (especially large groups), of course that has an effect.

But just because some worst-case curve has not materialized is hardly reason to say it worked well enough. At least New York is on a pretty damn slippery slope right now it seems.

Must admit it surprises me how big a percentage of cases deaths is in New York.

Arles 03-24-2020 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by whomario (Post 3271212)
Of course it is working. It's pure math, less contacts = leass spread = less infected = less needing hospitalisation.

Even this virus isn't spreading everytime you come into contact with someone and if the average times where people come into contact is severely limited (especially large groups), of course that has an effect.

But just because some worst-case curve has not materialized is hardly reason to say it worked well enough.

The longer we avoid the doomsday scenarios that were everywhere 10 days ago, the more information we get from other countries (and more tests/time we get for treatments). We are kind of just hitting our stride in social distancing in most areas and I don't see too many hospitals overrun. Testing or not, if this thing was spreading like widlfire and the death rates were 2-3%, we would be seeing massive hits on our infrastructure. We have had cases in the US since early March.

Quote:

At least New York is on a pretty damn slippery slope right now it seems.

Must admit it surprises me how big a percentage of cases deaths is in New York.
The math makes sense. We have 49,000 cases in the US and over half are in New York. So, it seems reasonable that 210 of the 616 deaths are there. I do think a lot of people have or have had this virus (prob in the 500K+ range nationally, if not close to a million). While we are probably also under-counting the deaths, it doesn't appear to be very high with all things considered. The hope is if we keep social distancing and can get more of these quick test kits out, we can maybe setup a situation like S Korea in a month. I know a doc office here in AZ is using their normal flu swab and sending that to Sonora Quest to have them do the CovID test. If that works, it opens more options for testing too.

albionmoonlight 03-24-2020 11:46 AM

Where are we on tests?

It seems like some areas (NYC) might be past the place where testing should be a priority.

But other parts of the country might benefit from testing asymptomatic cases to see who has it but does not realize they have it.

Or are we still in a "If you, personally, did not french kiss someone in Whuan in the last two weeks, you can't get a test" place?

albionmoonlight 03-24-2020 11:54 AM

dola:

And I am wrong about this, or should we actually not be testing people with obvious symptoms? Treat them like they have it.

We should be focusing testing on people without symptoms who are in jobs/situations that do not allow them to socially distance.

Right?

Arles 03-24-2020 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3271225)
dola:

And I am wrong about this, or should we actually not be testing people with obvious symptoms? Treat them like they have it.

We should be focusing testing on people without symptoms who are in jobs/situations that do not allow them to socially distance.

Right?

Agree 100%. The doctors office in Mesa, AZ I cited above is testing all their new and current patients for Covid-19 by using the normal flu-test swabs and sending it to a private lab (no different than how they would do the flu test normally). They are doing it to help prepare their staff if one of these people needs medical attention, they will know if they tested positive. This seems like something everyone could do.

Brian Swartz 03-24-2020 12:01 PM

I still think we're past the point where tests are the issue. You need sufficient supplies of PPE to justify testing asymptomatic patients without endangering ORs, more critical patients, etc. We don't have that, we don't have the infrastructure & protocols in place to quickly quarantine those who test positive, etc.

Arles 03-24-2020 12:03 PM

I think if you tested 10,000 in a city and 500 tested positive, those people could return home and self-quarantine. It's certainly better than all 10,000 not knowing. We should setup a way for all people working outside of their house to get tested using mobile testing areas or even normal flu swabs administered by a mobile nurse.

Ben E Lou 03-24-2020 12:05 PM

Trump is live on a Fox News town hall making his case for businesses returning to work.

BishopMVP 03-24-2020 12:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by albionmoonlight (Post 3271225)
dola:

And I am wrong about this, or should we actually not be testing people with obvious symptoms? Treat them like they have it.

We should be focusing testing on people without symptoms who are in jobs/situations that do not allow them to socially distance.

Right?

How much different is the treatment if you have Corona vs a flu (or bronchitis, or a bad cold) with many of the same symptoms?

Mario - I'm willing to bet that the main reason NYC is so high is that it's the one American city where people across incomes & ages really rely on packed public transportation. If you include the Port Authority coming across the river from Newark it's got about 3x the daily ridership of all other US subway systems combined List of United States rapid transit systems by ridership - Wikipedia (yes, that doesn't include trains, but they're generally not quite as packed.) Our spread out, heavily car dependent culture is bad for emissions but probably really helped delay the spread in the rest of the country while states & governors & the CDC got caught up.

Brian Swartz 03-24-2020 12:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles
I think if you tested 10,000 in a city and 500 tested positive, those people could return home and self-quarantine. It's certainly better than all 10,000 not knowing.


Absolutely … if you have enough PPE to pull that off. We don't.

miked 03-24-2020 12:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271194)
I get that and that's why I used the phrase "indicative results". If treatment X had indicative results that it seems to work, I'd publish it ... don't over promise, give it the right caveats.

The US public (and world really) needs hope and want to see the light at the end of the tunnel. This hope needs to be backed by science.


These trials that are double-blind need to have many centers, thousands of patients, and the unblinding occurs after months. Also, you can't just publish things without review. Local IRB offices, FDA approvals, these things can happen quickly, but you cannot rush science or you get bad science.

BishopMVP 03-24-2020 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3271231)
I think if you tested 10,000 in a city and 500 tested positive, those people could return home and self-quarantine. It's certainly better than all 10,000 not knowing. We should setup a way for all people working outside of their house to get tested using mobile testing areas or even normal flu swabs administered by a mobile nurse.

If I go back to work at Amazon tomorrow (and I'm leaning 80-90% towards going for the rest of the week, might as well get back on the wagon) I just assume I'll either catch it at some point or I already had it the 2nd half of February. Once they develop the quicker & easier tests you can self-administer that can tell you if you have antibodies I'll look into those, but no point testing me (and all of us) when 1000+ people will be working together & would just need to be re-tested again in a few days.

spleen1015 03-24-2020 12:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3271232)
Trump is live on a Fox News town hall making his case for businesses returning to work.


It's all good. My parents are going to be dead but I don't care. My 401k and IRAs are going to reach all new heights.

Lord help us.

miked 03-24-2020 12:21 PM

I know quite a few people that have it that can't get testing. In most cases, due to the lack of tests, the only way they are testing people is if it will change their treatment regimen. Right now, it's essentially the assumption you have it and go home and see what happens. So positive tests and mortality should all be taken with a grain of salt.

Butter 03-24-2020 12:23 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3271232)
Trump is live on a Fox News town hall making his case for businesses returning to work.


So we've finally gotten to peak capitalism. Lives be damned, money is at stake!

Arles 03-24-2020 12:23 PM

I'm not sure why more people aren't using the 3-D printing molds out there. They aren't quite as good as regular masks, but are significantly better than nothing and pretty easy to mass produce:

NanoHack, an open-source 3D printed mask against COVID-19 - 3Dnatives

Quote:

Daniel Martinez, Innovation Director of Copper3D explains: “The current virus has caused a breakdown in distribution chains around the world. We know that 3D printing can help, but it still takes time – typically it takes about 2 hours to print these masks so it forced us to think collaboratively. We needed a distributed manufacturing concept, with networks of 3D printers running 24/7 to make a large quantity of masks in a short period of time. That’s why we decided to coordinate a global network of startups, manufacturers, universities and partner companies to help us print these masks.“

According to Copper3D, NanoHack incorporates a scalable filtration system that uses a copper nanocomposite that has been proven to broadly inactivate viruses. This system would include several layers of different geometries to ensure effective filtration of fine particles. The mask is to be printed in several parts and then assembled; the company gives clear instructions on its site.
We have some 3-D printers and are looking at using this for our manufacturing site (along with fever screening cameras). We make the raw materials that help produce devices that help run things like ventilators and other medical equipment, so I don't see use being able to take any time off.

Brian Swartz 03-24-2020 12:31 PM

Deaths in Italy spiking again today, and the rise continues in Spain as well :(

Ironhead 03-24-2020 12:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3271033)
The 14 days is a "possible" range, but most seem to be from 4-6 days. At which point the 1 week lag probably hits a vast majority of cases.


This was a fair point. I was curious what the numbers looked like today and the CDC has started incorporating additional data into the chart using estimated illness dates. They have also increased the suggested lag in the data by a few days.

Cases in U.S. | CDC

miami_fan 03-24-2020 12:44 PM

So since we being rebellious what happens if I refuse to go home after coming to work obviously showing symptoms?

whomario 03-24-2020 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 3271245)
I'm not sure why more people aren't using the 3-D printing molds out there. They aren't quite as good as regular masks, but are significantly better than nothing and pretty easy to mass produce:

NanoHack, an open-source 3D printed mask against COVID-19 - 3Dnatives


We have some 3-D printers and are looking at using this for our manufacturing site (along with fever screening cameras). We make the raw materials that help produce devices that help run things like ventilators and other medical equipment, so I don't see use being able to take any time off.


Doesnt the snippet pretty much explain why not with regard to the time it takes ? Dont you have to swap them out very regularly ? As i understand it in hospitaly, ideally, you should not even wear the same mask for different patients so i assume there is a risk of spreading it after the mask stopped the virus going into your lungs. So at the very least it seems that in a company everybody would have to wear them and only at work.

Might be a solution for a company to produce what they need, but considering the numbers a hospital burns through every day ...

And have they been tested ? Because it is only natural to be less careful when you wear one so if protection ends up being minimal one might actually be worse off. Which is Part of why a lot of scientists are very wary of widespread use of subpar masks in the publics.

Covid-19: 3D-Printed Face Masks for Mass Screening - MedicalExpo e-Magazine

Just to give an idea of the process and timetable even now. Of course you can just print them, but is it really helping then ?

NobodyHere 03-24-2020 12:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271201)
Only 75%?


Ohio has a lot of exemptions to its order.

JAG 03-24-2020 12:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 3271194)
I get that and that's why I used the phrase "indicative results". If treatment X had indicative results that it seems to work, I'd publish it ... don't over promise, give it the right caveats.

The US public (and world really) needs hope and want to see the light at the end of the tunnel. This hope needs to be backed by science.


WHO launches global megatrial of the four most promising coronavirus treatments | Science | AAAS

EDIT: Or if you prefer NIH studies, here are two:

NIH clinical trial of investigational vaccine for COVID-19 begins | National Institutes of Health (NIH)

NIH clinical trial of remdesivir to treat COVID-19 begins | National Institutes of Health (NIH)

That said, this is a small subset of what are probably hundreds if not thousands of studies currently underway.

Radii 03-24-2020 01:35 PM

Regarding New York, their shortage of beds, ventilators and PPE that is coming very soon is going to cause some disaster scenarios, obviously. I just cannot get over my anger at the specific situation where our federal government will not take the lead on managing and distributing critical equipment and protective gear for doctors to the right places. New York is about to see deaths spike in a devastating way, and worst of all since they're running out of PPE we are going to start seeing doctors and nurses getting sick. It does sadly seem inevitable that some level of this would always happen, but the way this is happening is just incredibly maddening.

I wonder if the national view of the situation will begin to change with this.

Indiana finally went to stay at home orders today, along with Ohio it sounds like. Its equally maddening to see a country like India go on lockdown early because they recognize what's happening elsewhere, while we are still being so incredibly lax in every regard.

RainMaker 03-24-2020 01:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 3271173)
I thought there have been pages upon pages of this thread devoted to how South Korea is handling this and we aren't? South Korea uses this and it may be effective, not exactly magic beans? But good thing JPhillips is on top of worrying about a person that didn't even have COVID19 but went ahead and chose to take his own concoction and died. Useful.


I don't think that drug is why South Korea is succeeding. The article above goes into detail on how they were successful. Just a superior system to ours all around.

There has been one tiny study on the drug and it was quite misleading. Maybe it'll help but I highly doubt this is going to be some miracle drug.

Lathum 03-24-2020 01:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Radii (Post 3271265)
Regarding New York, their shortage of beds, ventilators and PPE that is coming very soon is going to cause some disaster scenarios, obviously. I just cannot get over my anger at the specific situation where our federal government will not take the lead on managing and distributing critical equipment and protective gear for doctors to the right places. New York is about to see deaths spike in a devastating way, and worst of all since they're running out of PPE we are going to start seeing doctors and nurses getting sick. It does sadly seem inevitable that some level of this would always happen, but the way this is happening is just incredibly maddening.

I wonder if the national view of the situation will begin to change with this.

.


I don't think it does. The only thing that may change it is when the really red states, the Alabamas, Mississippis, Texas, etc. start getting hammered. I think a lot of people in those areas are currently seeing this situation as happening in NY, Seattle, LA, etc...and not really worried about it. For a lot of them that may as well be another country, hell, a lot of them are probably thinking those liberals are getting what they deserve. Trump spouts off about game changing cures, so they probably think even if it does get to them they will be able to take some pill and be ok. When it hits them hard, and if Trump continues his rhetoric it will, maybe then they will change their tunes.

ISiddiqui 03-24-2020 01:49 PM

Ugh.. went to check the mail and this woman who was already at the mailbox basically decided to walk past me the other way on the sidewalk so having maybe 2-3 ft of distance... I turned my head the other direction while walking past (and no one was coughing or sneezing) so probably ok, but c'mon lady wait (there is a good amount of space around the mailbox that one can back away and give 6 ft to anyone walking to it)

spleen1015 03-24-2020 01:52 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Radii (Post 3271265)
Regarding New York, their shortage of beds, ventilators and PPE that is coming very soon is going to cause some disaster scenarios, obviously. I just cannot get over my anger at the specific situation where our federal government will not take the lead on managing and distributing critical equipment and protective gear for doctors to the right places. New York is about to see deaths spike in a devastating way, and worst of all since they're running out of PPE we are going to start seeing doctors and nurses getting sick. It does sadly seem inevitable that some level of this would always happen, but the way this is happening is just incredibly maddening.

I wonder if the national view of the situation will begin to change with this.

Indiana finally went to stay at home orders today, along with Ohio it sounds like. Its equally maddening to see a country like India go on lockdown early because they recognize what's happening elsewhere, while we are still being so incredibly lax in every regard.


Yeah but that's on Cuomo. He could have bought 16k ventilators in 2015 at a discount. Why should the federal government help them now when they didn't help themselves then?

/sarcasm

sterlingice 03-24-2020 01:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miked (Post 3271243)
I know quite a few people that have it that can't get testing. In most cases, due to the lack of tests, the only way they are testing people is if it will change their treatment regimen. Right now, it's essentially the assumption you have it and go home and see what happens. So positive tests and mortality should all be taken with a grain of salt.



Boulder of salt?


SI

sterlingice 03-24-2020 01:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3271266)
I don't think that drug is why South Korea is succeeding. The article above goes into detail on how they were successful. Just a superior system to ours all around.

There has been one tiny study on the drug and it was quite misleading. Maybe it'll help but I highly doubt this is going to be some miracle drug.


The narrative that has been forming for a while is that South Korea is succeeding because of "trace, test, and treat" not chloroquine

SI

Ironhead 03-24-2020 01:56 PM

I was looking for some information around how long patients who die in ICU typically last after being placed on a ventilator and came across this article that talks a little bit more about what the disease actually looks like if you reach that stage of care. Scary stuff.

A Medical Worker Describes Terrifying Lung Failure From COVID-19 — Even in His Young Patients — ProPublica

SirFozzie 03-24-2020 01:58 PM

So Trump is saying that by easter he wants us to be back to normal.

Apparently we're giving up on older people and the immunocompromised for Lent.

There's a class of "christians" who do not worship God. They worship Mammon. (no one here, before people think I'm referring to them)

Arles 03-24-2020 02:01 PM

If the feds just got 10,000 ventilators, who should get them? Should NY get 5K, Seattle get 2K, LA 1K and maybe the rest split? It's kind of a mess if the Feds manage this. IMO (and this may be what they are doing now), the Feds should be a big expense account for supplies. If Wisconsin finds a way to buy 200,000 masks and 2,000 ventilators, the Feds reimburse them. You could also have the reimbursements occur up to a certain level to make sure one state doesn't hoard everything.

I think expecting the feds to manage the distribution of all the equipment and PPE for all the states is a disaster. Hopefully that is not what is going on.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 10:09 PM.

Powered by vBulletin Version 3.6.0
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.