Coronavirus General Discussion

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vnatale
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by vnatale »

Why a Coronavirus Test Result Takes Two Weeks or More

https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-a-coro ... 1585915201


I cannot read the above as it looks like the Wall Street Journal has kept up their paywall for everything, including virus related articles.

How many here ARE able to read the article via having a subscription? Just curious as to how many here maintain a Wall Street Journal subscription.

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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Mountaineer »

MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 8:00 am
dualstow wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 7:03 am
Kriegsspiel wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 2:57 am Good morning yinz
O0
Yep. Learned a new "word" today.
Now you know how to speak "Kreigs". 8)
DNA has its own language (code), and language requires intelligence. There is no known mechanism by which matter can give birth to information, let alone language. It is unreasonable to believe the world could have happened by chance.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by WiseOne »

Now THIS is serious....especially for Kriegspiel!

https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/03/business ... index.html
Production of Corona beer is being temporarily suspended in Mexico because of the coronavirus pandemic.

Grupo Modelo, the company that makes the beer, posted the announcement on Twitter, stating that it's halting production and marketing of its beer because the Mexican government has shuttered non-essential businesses.
Emphasis mine.

Thank heavens liquor has been considered "essential" here in the U.S. What the heck is Mexico thinking? Here come more illegal immigrants and I wouldn't blame them!
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Maddy »

The data from New York is showing that only 1.8 percent of CV-19 deaths did NOT involve a serious co-morbidity. https://www.reddit.com/r/COVID19/commen ... york_city/

And for this the entire world economy has been shut down?
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Maddy »

So what if the hospitals are overwhelmed? So what if there aren't enough ventilators for the small, overwhelmingly co-morbid population who needs them, when we know that as many as 98 percent of those who end up on vents are going to die anyway?

Why do the powers-that-be continue to pretend that medical resources are not already being rationed--and in favor of a co-morbid population who is not only unlikely to survive but whose vulnerabilities were quite often the result of lifestyle choices?

The hospitals have already closed their doors (at least in this region) to anything other than respiratory cases, and in New York even cardiac arrest patients are being denied entry unless they can be rescussitated in the field. Even where facilities remain open, how many people are going to be deterred from seeking treatment for non-CoVid-related conditions when virtually every facility has been turned into a hotbed of contagion? Who's howling about all the non-CoVid emergencies (or emergencies in the making) who can't find so much as a doctor's office with the doors open? Is anybody keeping mortality statistics on that? I didn't think so.

I'll bet you dollar to donuts that this C*******F**** will spawn a new generation of medical ethicists who will bloviate on the public dime for the next ten years about how "in hindsight" we should have approached the issue of health care rationing in a more forthright and intentional way.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Xan »

MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:11 amThis is the part that always angers me, not just in the CV world. Why don't people who smoke or are morbidly obese pay more for health insurance?
Do they not? Every time I've applied for health insurance, the insurance company wants to know about all kinds of things like that. Life insurance too.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by flyingpylon »

MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:11 am This is the part that always angers me, not just in the CV world. Why don't people who smoke or are morbidly obese pay more for health insurance?
My employer self-insures and provides a discount on insurance and a financial incentive for avoiding several risk factors which include tobacco use and obesity.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by flyingpylon »

MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:22 am
flyingpylon wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:21 am
MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:11 am This is the part that always angers me, not just in the CV world. Why don't people who smoke or are morbidly obese pay more for health insurance?
My employer self-insures and provides a discount on insurance and a financial incentive for avoiding several risk factors which include tobacco use and obesity.
Is that the exception or the rule with big corporations?
I don't know except that we are not on the cutting edge of anything ever, so they must have gotten the idea from somewhere.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by dualstow »

MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:11 am This is the part that always angers me, not just in the CV world. Why don't people who smoke or are morbidly obese pay more for health insurance?
In addition to the other replies: smokers at least pay heavy excise taxes.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Cortopassi »

To all of you, what would you have had the government do? Seriously, give me something here that wouldn't have caused hysteria and panic regardless.

Tell those with higher risk to stay at home, the rest go about their lives? Hell, 40% of the country is obese! How many have diabetes?

There are so many back seat drivers on this issue, like Denninger, who can spout how shit should have been done from the glory of his house, but how do you do that governing 350 million people?

So, let me hear your plan, how you would have navigated the last 4 weeks and the coming 4 weeks. And not be crucified by one or another part of the country.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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The crazy thing is that we've been here before. The medical ethicist Henry Caplan made an entire career out of the subject of rationing, convincing us that we needed a centralized top-down medical system to make the lofty life-and-death decisions that the reality of rationing would entail. Unfortunately for Dr. Caplan, who must have envisoned sitting down with the best and brightest at a conference table loaded with crab cocktail to work it all out, the hospital administrators whom he helped vault into positions of power made sure he wasn't even invited to the party.
Last edited by Maddy on Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:53 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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Cortopassi wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:46 am To all of you, what would you have had the government do? Seriously, give me something here that wouldn't have caused hysteria and panic regardless.

Tell those with higher risk to stay at home, the rest go about their lives? Hell, 40% of the country is obese! How many have diabetes?

There are so many back seat drivers on this issue, like Denninger, who can spout how shit should have been done from the glory of his house, but how do you do that governing 350 million people?

So, let me hear your plan, how you would have navigated the last 4 weeks and the coming 4 weeks. And not be crucified by one or another part of the country.
So we're to simply trust that our government knows best? Are we to just open our wallets and avoiding bothering our silly little heads with such important questions?

Denninger is making a lot of sense these days, and as far as I can tell, he's doing nothing more than making logical, and obvious, extrapolations.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Cortopassi »

Maddy wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:21 pm
Cortopassi wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:46 am To all of you, what would you have had the government do? Seriously, give me something here that wouldn't have caused hysteria and panic regardless.

Tell those with higher risk to stay at home, the rest go about their lives? Hell, 40% of the country is obese! How many have diabetes?

There are so many back seat drivers on this issue, like Denninger, who can spout how shit should have been done from the glory of his house, but how do you do that governing 350 million people?

So, let me hear your plan, how you would have navigated the last 4 weeks and the coming 4 weeks. And not be crucified by one or another part of the country.
So we're to simply trust that our government knows best? Are we to just open our wallets and avoiding bothering our silly little heads with such important questions?

Denninger is making a lot of sense these days, and as far as I can tell, he's doing nothing more than making logical, and obvious, extrapolations.
A lot of people outside government make a lot of sense.

My question still is, these ideas work great on a blog on the internet. How do you translate that into the same action at a government level? For Denninger, whether it is CV, or debt, or actually anything, he's got his solutions. And berates everyone who doesn't see his way. Not a good sales strategy.

I think for the most part the government comes around to these ideas, but there is a few days to few weeks lag (which is tough given the circumstances). People and groups need convincing. You usually need to build a consensus. That takes time.

One guy, with possibly the right path based off the data is fine, but I don't see how that can possibly work (as fast or as decisively) across a huge free country. Maybe China. Not here.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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Cortopassi wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:43 pm
A lot of people outside government make a lot of sense.

My question still is, these ideas work great on a blog on the internet. How do you translate that into the same action at a government level? For Denninger, whether it is CV, or debt, or actually anything, he's got his solutions. And berates everyone who doesn't see his way. Not a good sales strategy.

I think for the most part the government comes around to these ideas, but there is a few days to few weeks lag (which is tough given the circumstances). People and groups need convincing. You usually need to build a consensus. That takes time.

One guy, with possibly the right path based off the data is fine, but I don't see how that can possibly work (as fast or as decisively) across a huge free country. Maybe China. Not here.
I don't hear Denninger calling for a government solution. To the contrary, I understand him to be advocating a return to business as usual--in other words, for the government to stop trying to manage this thing.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Cortopassi »

Maddy wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:51 pm
Cortopassi wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 12:43 pm
A lot of people outside government make a lot of sense.

My question still is, these ideas work great on a blog on the internet. How do you translate that into the same action at a government level? For Denninger, whether it is CV, or debt, or actually anything, he's got his solutions. And berates everyone who doesn't see his way. Not a good sales strategy.

I think for the most part the government comes around to these ideas, but there is a few days to few weeks lag (which is tough given the circumstances). People and groups need convincing. You usually need to build a consensus. That takes time.

One guy, with possibly the right path based off the data is fine, but I don't see how that can possibly work (as fast or as decisively) across a huge free country. Maybe China. Not here.
I don't hear Denninger calling for a government solution. To the contrary, I understand him to be advocating a return to business as usual--in other words, for the government to stop trying to manage this thing.
With the way this all rolled out from China and Italy, and the coverage, how could there be any government in the world that didn’t at least try something?

Curious, is this your position as well? Would you have advocated no travel restrictions, no lock downs, nothing? Or what?
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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Cortopassi wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 2:01 pm With the way this all rolled out from China and Italy, and the coverage, how could there be any government in the world that didn’t at least try something?

Curious, is this your position as well? Would you have advocated no travel restrictions, no lock downs, nothing? Or what?
For governments around the world, this pandemic has largely been a global game of Cover Your Ass, and Simon Says.

If a government is hands-off and the worst-case scenario unfolds, they will be blamed. For sure.

But if a government does what all the other governments are doing, then if the worst-case scenario unfolds, they can't really be singled out. But if things turn out well, they can claim credit by having taken "swift action."

So all governments are covering their asses by playing a global game of Simon Says.
Last edited by Tortoise on Fri Apr 03, 2020 2:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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Maddy wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 10:29 am So what if the hospitals are overwhelmed? So what if there aren't enough ventilators for the small, overwhelmingly co-morbid population who needs them, when we know that as many as 98 percent of those who end up on vents are going to die anyway?

Why do the powers-that-be continue to pretend that medical resources are not already being rationed--and in favor of a co-morbid population who is not only unlikely to survive but whose vulnerabilities were quite often the result of lifestyle choices?

The hospitals have already closed their doors (at least in this region) to anything other than respiratory cases, and in New York even cardiac arrest patients are being denied entry unless they can be rescussitated in the field. Even where facilities remain open, how many people are going to be deterred from seeking treatment for non-CoVid-related conditions when virtually every facility has been turned into a hotbed of contagion? Who's howling about all the non-CoVid emergencies (or emergencies in the making) who can't find so much as a doctor's office with the doors open? Is anybody keeping mortality statistics on that? I didn't think so.

I'll bet you dollar to donuts that this C*******F**** will spawn a new generation of medical ethicists who will bloviate on the public dime for the next ten years about how "in hindsight" we should have approached the issue of health care rationing in a more forthright and intentional way.
I think even rich people are horrified at the inability for the health care system to cope with this. No matter how much money you have, can you find a hospital bed in NYC if you have an emergency?

My solution, barring the government getting completely out of the health care business, is that there be a taxpayer-funded crappy system (Medicaid hospitals and doctors) and a completely private system that you subscribe to if you want anything other than the bare minimum of care. That's how some Latin American countries do it, and I suspect it can handle things like this better than the current public/pseudo-private system we have in the US. At least then people who are able and willing to pay for top-notch care will be able to get it rather than being thrown under the bus for the supposed benefit of the "public at large".
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Dieter »

Was it Churchill who said something asking the lines of "America does the right thing. After doing it every other way.".
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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Dieter wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 3:06 pm Was it Churchill who said something asking the lines of "America does the right thing. After doing it every other way.".
Nope.
https://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/11/1 ... ernatives/

It’s one of those apocryphal but entertaining things, like the American ship vs the Canadian lighthouse. When I tell people it* was made up they say, “Well, it’s the kind of thing Americans would’ve done.” O0

*the lighthouse joke
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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dualstow wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 3:34 pm
Dieter wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 3:06 pm Was it Churchill who said something asking the lines of "America does the right thing. After doing it every other way.".
Nope.
https://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/11/1 ... ernatives/

It’s one of those apocryphal but entertaining things, like the American ship vs the Canadian lighthouse. When I tell people it* was made up they say, “Well, it’s the kind of thing Americans would’ve done.” O0

*the lighthouse joke
Thanks.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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It’s a good quote nonetheless.
- - -
NYC mayor Bill DeBlasio is calling for a national draft of doctors.
Remember this is the guy who told citizens to go out and enjoy dinner and a movie, way too late.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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A public post on FB by Jerry Portnoy (no idea who he is ; just want to include prior attribution).

And I haven't verified the details (written on the 22nd) ; I don't recall seeing this on here.

"So I thought I would throw up a little history lesson for everyone on both sides of the political divide. I think it’s important that we understand the truth, especially come November when it’s time to vote. Forgive the length. But, hey we all have time on our hands to read, right?

In December 2013, an 18-month-old boy in Guinea was bitten by a bat. Then there were five more fatal cases. When Ebola spread out of the Guinea borders into neighboring Liberia and Sierra Leone in July 2014, President Obama activated the Emergency Operations Center at the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta. The CDC immediately deployed CDC personnel to West Africa to coordinate a response that included vector tracing, testing, education, logistics and communication.

Altogether, the CDC, under President Obama, trained 24,655 medical workers in West Africa, educating them on how to prevent and control the disease before a single case left Africa or reached the U.S.

Working with the U.N. and the World Health Organization President Obama ordered the re-routing of travelers heading to the U.S. through certain specific airports equipped to handle mass testing.

Back home in America, more than 6,500 people were trained through mock outbreaks and practice scenarios. That was done before a single case hit America.

Three months after President Obama activated this unprecedented response, on September 30, 2014, we got our first case in the U.S.. That man had traveled from West Africa to Dallas, Texas and had somehow slipped through the testing protocol. He was immediately detected and isolated. He died a week later. Two nurses who tended to him contracted Ebola and later recovered. All the protocols had worked. It was contained.

The Ebola epidemic could have easily become a pandemic. But thanks to the actions of our government under Obama, it never did. Those three cases were the ONLY cases of ebola in our country because Obama did what needed to be done three months before the first case.

Ebola is even more contagious than Covid-19. If he Obama not done these things, millions of Americans would have died awful painful deaths like something out of a horror movie (if you’ve ever seen how Ebola kills, it’s horrific).
It’s ironic that BECAUSE President Obama did these things - we forget that he did them, because the disease never reached our shores.

Now the story of Covid 19 and Trump’s response that we know about so far:

Before anyone even knew about the disease (even in China) Trump disbanded the pandemic response team that Obama had put in place. He cut funding to the CDC. And he cut our contribution to the World Health Organization (WHO).

Trump fired Rear Admiral Timothy Ziemer, the person on the National Security Council in charge of stopping the spread of infectious diseases before they reach our country - a position created by the Obama administration.

When the Outbreak started in China, Trump assumed it was China’s problem and sent no research, supplies or help of any kind. We were in a trade war, why should he help them?

In January he received a briefing from our intelligence organizations that the outbreak was much worse than China was admitting and that it would definitely hit our country if something wasn’t done to prevent it. He ignored the report, not trusting our own intelligence.

When the disease spread to Europe, the World Health Organization offered a boatload of tests to the United States. Trump turned them down, saying private companies here would make the tests “better” if we needed them. But he never ordered U.S. companies to make tests and they had no profit motive to do so on their own.

According to scientists at Yale and several public university medical schools, when they asked for permission to start working on our own testing protocol and potential treatments or vaccines, they were denied by Trump’s FDA.

When Trump knew about the first case in the United States he did nothing. It was just one case and the patient was isolated. When doctors and scientists started screaming in the media that this was a mistake, Trump claimed it was a “liberal hoax” conjured up to try to make him “look bad after impeachment failed.”

The next time Trump spoke of Covid-19, we had 64 confirmed cases but Trump went before microphones and told the America public that we only had 15 cases “and pretty soon that number will be close to zero.” All while the disease was spreading. He took no action to get more tests.

What Trump did do is stop flights from China from coming here. This was too late and accomplished nothing according to scientists and doctors. By then the disease was worldwide and was already spreading exponentially in the U.S. by Americans, not Chinese people as Trump would like you to believe.

As of the moment I’m posting this, the morning of March 22, 2020, we have 15,220 CONFIRMED CASES in the U.S. The actual number is undoubtedly much higher. But we don’t know because we don’t have enough tests. Why don’t we have enough tests? Remember back when Trump turned down the tests from the W.H.O. and prevented our own universities from developing them? Remember back when Trump had cut the funding to the CDC?

Every time Mr. Trump goes on camera and blames the previous administration for the mess we are now in, I scream at the reporters from FOX, CNN and MSNBC - “Why aren’t you reporting the actual historical facts?!” How dare Trump try to blame Covid-19 on Obama. He has no one to blame but himself.

I hear Republican pundits try to put the blame on China. And they are correct - after all, the disease started there. And the Chinese government handled it poorly and dishonestly. So it’s fair to blame the government of China for the EXISTENCE of the Covid-19 virus. BUT THAT MISSES THE POINT. Obama didn’t blame Ebola on Guinea. He helped them stop it. Trump let the disease invade the U.S.

And he is still not doing all he could to save lives. He keeps talking about invoking The Defense Production Act, but hasn’t actually done so. He’s making the same mistake twice - waiting until it’s too late to take action.

Invoking that act would require factories with the right equipment and know-how to start producing life saving ventilators for our hospitals, protective masks and other gear for our front line health workers. And the plus is it would actually employ people to do so. UPDATE: he just invoked it, FINALLY, way late.

Them’s the facts. Take them as you will. I’ll go back to trying to find toilet paper on-line.
"
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by Dieter »

The link you shared says Trump dissolved the team. Disband seems quote similar (post didn't say fired).

I agree on the WHO claim - not offered.

While Trump tried to cut finding to CDC, Congress didn't let him.

Snopes calls the "Hoax" claim mixed -- https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/trump ... ly-remark/

But the basic claim that he didn't take it seriously early on are true.

And sure wasn't proactive about it.
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

Post by dualstow »

It’s been a long time since I read about ebola but I remember being impressed with how it was contained in the U.S.
My memory is foggy-I think in rural parts of Africa it was “contained” in that it wiped out entire villages and was unable to spread further. Is that true?
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Re: Coronavirus General Discussion

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dualstow wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:39 am
MangoMan wrote: Fri Apr 03, 2020 11:11 am This is the part that always angers me, not just in the CV world. Why don't people who smoke or are morbidly obese pay more for health insurance?
In addition to the other replies: smokers at least pay heavy excise taxes.
And, they die off early, helping to preserve the viability of both Social Security and Medicare!

Vinny
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