That site is really nice.Minnesota just release full data dashboard for COVID: https://mndps.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/f28f84968c1148129932c3bebb1d3a1a
That site is really nice.Minnesota just release full data dashboard for COVID: https://mndps.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/f28f84968c1148129932c3bebb1d3a1a
Yeah I cannot imagine how worse it would have been with out all these mandatesJust came in here to post this. When we started stay at home on 3/21, there were 753 confirmed cases. We are now at 8904.
It's only the spring election, nothing about the district court ruling, or the special session Evers is calling, has anything to do with the general election.Can someone share an article/statement where it specifies that the changes to WI's April 7th election would also extend to November's? What I'm reading says the change only applies to the spring election.
Should just link the site itself. it's got a lot of other good info for the state.Minnesota just release full data dashboard for COVID: https://mndps.maps.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/f28f84968c1148129932c3bebb1d3a1a
They haven't even done legislation for getting rid of the 1-week wave period for Unemployment. I truly don't know how these people keep getting voted back in. Useless.This is going to go nowhere, last time he called a special session was for gun control measures and the GOP-controlled legislature gaveled in and out in less than 2 minutes. That is what is going to happen here as well.
It's only the spring election, nothing about the district court ruling, or the special session Evers is calling, has anything to do with the general election.
Text of the decision is here if you want to read it yourself: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/6824298-Conley-Order.html
Question about asymptomatic carriers:
Can someone clarify this for me? Are there people who get the virus, experience zero symptoms or illness, and recover from it without even knowing it even happened at all?
Or, are they just asymptotic for a while, but eventually everyone that gets it gets ill to some extent?
I'm fairly sure you can have it without recognizing it. I.e. such a minor cough or sniffles you think it's allergies.
Question about asymptomatic carriers:
Can someone clarify this for me? Are there people who get the virus, experience zero symptoms or illness, and recover from it without even knowing it even happened at all?
Or, are they just asymptotic for a while, but eventually everyone that gets it gets ill to some extent?
Question about asymptomatic carriers:
Can someone clarify this for me? Are there people who get the virus, experience zero symptoms or illness, and recover from it without even knowing it even happened at all?
Or, are they just asymptotic for a while, but eventually everyone that gets it gets ill to some extent?
I'm fairly sure you can have it without recognizing it. I.e. such a minor cough or sniffles you think it's allergies.
Both, apparently the mayor of Miami tested positive (and has now tested negative) and had almost no symptoms.
Thanks! Here's hoping that all of us have already had it, successfully recovered without even knowing it, and will now be safe!Symptoms run the entire spectrum from none at all/mild cold to severe illness/death.
I'm almost positive I've had it and had little to no symptoms.Question about asymptomatic carriers:
Can someone clarify this for me? Are there people who get the virus, experience zero symptoms or illness, and recover from it without even knowing it even happened at all?
Or, are they just asymptotic for a while, but eventually everyone that gets it gets ill to some extent?
Polis just called for all Coloradoans to wear face coverings when in public. Not mandatory, but very strongly encouraged and will likely become mandatory if nobody does it.
Polis has a lot of faith in people to do the right thing and wants people to do it on their own, hence him dragging his feet to stay at home the state. He'll give it a week i think.
I believe it's mild to moderate symptoms. You can still feel like shit but not have a need to be hospitalized.I'm almost positive I've had it and had little to no symptoms.
I had a very minor cough (could still ski and go on runs)
But a friend of mine that was on a ski trip with me got an official test and tested positive. We were in very close proximity all the time.
I think it was something like 80% of cases had no to minor symptoms. Stuff you wouldnt even call out of work for.
Hm. I had a really bad dry cough at the start of the year, and my roomie got it too. I live in NYC, but I feel like it would have been a bigger spread if we got it that early. I hope those antibody tests become more available in the weeks to come. Wishful thinking on my part, but man that would be a relief.I'm almost positive I've had it and had little to no symptoms.
I had a very minor cough (could still ski and go on runs)
But a friend of mine that was on a ski trip with me got an official test and tested positive. We were in very close proximity all the time.
I think it was something like 80% of cases had no to minor symptoms. Stuff you wouldnt even call out of work for.
Question about asymptomatic carriers:
Can someone clarify this for me? Are there people who get the virus, experience zero symptoms or illness, and recover from it without even knowing it even happened at all?
Or, are they just asymptotic for a while, but eventually everyone that gets it gets ill to some extent?
I'm almost positive I've had it and had little to no symptoms.
I had a very minor cough (could still ski and go on runs)
But a friend of mine that was on a ski trip with me got an official test and tested positive. We were in very close proximity all the time.
I think it was something like 80% of cases had no to minor symptoms. Stuff you wouldnt even call out of work for.
I love how I'm seeing other states cancel going back to school for the rest of the year meanwhile the district my mom works for wants to get staff back into the building may 1st and just keep students home. How fucking dumb. This is NY, in the metro area.
The briefing has now moved to questions from journalists.
The first question asked if there is anything in the diet, lifestyle or drug protocol that Americans or Europeans use that make this virus more severe
Dr Michael J Ryan, executive director of the WHO's health emergencies programme, said the evidence so far would indicate that antihypertensive drugs that many people are on does not have any impact on the severity of the disease.
The difference in mortality rates between countries could be down to the age profile of the country, some have a higher population of older populations, and the presence of underlying conditions.
Ryan said WHO has repeatedly warned that young people are also at risk from this virus.
He said even in South Korea, which has managed to control the disease, one in six deaths have been of people under 60. In Italy, over the last six weeks, at least 10-15% of people in intensive care have been under 50, Ryan explained.
Ryan said:
It's not that anything has changed. It's that we collectively have been living in a world where we've tried to convince ourselves that this disease is mild in the young people and it's more severe in older people and that's where the problem is.
I think the evidence has been there all along that there is a spectrum of severity and its definitely more severe in older age groups, but there is a spectrum of severity in younger people as well.
While older people are more likely to die if they contract coronavirus, evidence continues to show that younger people are also being severely impacted.
Dr David Hepburn, ICU consultant at Newport's Royal Gwent hospital in south Wales, has said all the patients there are under-50.
Speaking to Channel 4 News, he said:
The pattern of illness that we've seen in Gwent, and I can't speak for anywhere else, is much younger patients than we were expecting. When the reports started coming out of Wuhan, we were led to believe that this was something that was particularly dangerous for the more elderly patients but I would say all the patients we've got an intensive care are in their 50s or younger at the moment.
Our youngest patient is in her early 20s. And there are, you know, there are patients who are very well, you know, a chap who's a fitness professional but you know there are a lot of patients who are not, do not have any pre-existing medical conditions. They're not diabetic or anything like that.
We've got 16 ventilated patients in the intensive care unit at the minute, which has led us to completely run out of space. So we've taken over theatre recovery, and we've got a further eight there. I think by the end of today, we will fill recovery. So that'll bring us up to 25 patients.
And then we have another area prepared, which is the old high dependency unit and coronary care that we've taken over as well. We can fit a further 22 patients in that area. The way things are going at the minute, the rate of growth and the amount of admissions that we're seeing, I would say we will fill that by the end of the week, probably.
The number of funerals in Jakarta rose sharply in March, a development the governor of Indonesia's capital city said suggested that deaths from the new coronavirus may be higher than officially reported.
Nearly 4,400 burials occurred in the month; 40% higher than any month since at least January 2018, according to a Reuters review of statistics from the city's Department of Parks and Cemeteries.
Jakarta's governor, Anies Baswedan, and some public health experts suspect the number of infections and deaths in Jakarta has been significantly under-reported due to one of the world's lowest rates of testing.
It is extremely disturbing. I'm struggling to find another reason than unreported Covid-19 deaths.
I believe it's mild to moderate symptoms. You can still feel like shit but not have a need to be hospitalized.
Just a little story from suburban Utah but a lady in my neighborhood is semi famous locally singer songwriter and she posted on facebook that she was doing a free concert at 2pm. It was heartwarming to see the neighbors outside on a nice day listening to beautiful music. really lifted me and the families spirits.
Humanity is so amazing and horrible all at the same time.
I'm not trying to mitigate the virus, like at all (stay home for a couple of time ok ! ) but the father of my friend got covid-19 from his boss, and he was test positive 2 weeks ago, and he had absoluty nothing more then cough for like 4 days. No fever, no problem with breathing, anything. I know some people got affect way harder then that. But it's still pretty strange.
I heavily suspect almost everybody experiences symptoms.Symptoms run the entire spectrum from none at all/mild cold to severe illness/death.
Does she have options to change before she leaves? I would advise her to just strip down once she gets in the apartment and shower immediately.I'm worried. My girlfriend was a nurse at Mass General but started an office job in another department for MGH but in a satellite building the last week of February. Earlier this week they told her that she (along with many other RNs who were former bedside nurses) would likely be brought back as the surge of patients is happening. Her old floor was turned into a COVID unit. It's looking like that's going to be happening, she may even be called in starting this weekend. I don't know what to do. I was so relieved she got out when she did. Our apartment is a tiny one bedroom. I have no idea how we're going to sterilize everything when she gets home.
I've heard about this. Having different responses to an infection increases the chance of someone in the population surviving.I think a big part of the variance is that its almost less the virus itself being the issue so much as the immune system response to it. And well, theres a pretty large variation when it comes to peoples immune systems.
I'm worried. My girlfriend was a nurse at Mass General but started an office job in another department for MGH but in a satellite building the last week of February. Earlier this week they told her that she (along with many other RNs who were former bedside nurses) would likely be brought back as the surge of patients is happening. Her old floor was turned into a COVID unit. It's looking like that's going to be happening, she may even be called in starting this weekend. I don't know what to do. I was so relieved she got out when she did. Our apartment is a tiny one bedroom. I have no idea how we're going to sterilize everything when she gets home.
They haven't even done legislation for getting rid of the 1-week wave period for Unemployment. I truly don't know how these people keep getting voted back in. Useless.