CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Since things just Got Real-


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Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
all the hand sanatizer I can find are 65%, can I pour some out, then add 91% alcohol to it, to increase it?
I wouldn't. 91% alchohol is pretty strong and you could give yourself a chemical burn, although maybe if you dilute it with the sanitizer it won't be as bad. I'm not a medical person - don't do anything until you hear back from one of them and they tell you it's safe.

HD
 

EMICT

Veteran Member

USDA

Veteran Member
In Nursing school...we were told to use 70% alcohol for disinfecting...high levels of alcohol just sort of fry the outer coating and the virus inside lives on and will reemerge. 70% is soluble enough to penetrate virus and bacterial coatings and kill critter.
For what it is worth.
 

bw

Fringe Ranger
In Nursing school...we were told to use 70% alcohol for disinfecting...high levels of alcohol just sort of fry the outer coating and the virus inside lives on and will reemerge. 70% is soluble enough to penetrate virus and bacterial coatings and kill critter.

That was my understanding.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Zerohedge is turning out to be an excellent source of information on the China Plague. The information dam has broken wide open, and all the information suppression attempts by our Marxist Thugs and War Criminals have failed. At any rate, here is the link to yet another tidbit showing Junior Emperor LI has doomed us all. And yes, the fact it is Harvard is even more impressive in terms of Junior Emperor for Life Li's failed efforts.

NOTE. I HAVE EDITED THIS, SPACED IT TO AVOID THE DREADED RUN ON, IMPALE AND LOOK LIKE ONE HUGE PARAGRAPH.


Harvard Expert Warns, Coronavirus Likely Just Now "Gathering Steam"
Profile picture for user Tyler Durden
by Tyler Durden
Fri, 02/14/2020 - 20:25

Authored by Alvin Powell via The Harvard Gazette,

The number of confirmed cases of the Wuhan coronavirus have continued to surge inside China, sickening tens of thousands, with a death toll of more than 1,000. But outside the Asian giant the numbers remain a fraction of that, a trend Harvard’s Marc Lipsitch views with suspicion.

Lipsitch thinks it is just a matter of time before the virus spreads widely internationally, which means nations so far only lightly hit should prepare for its eventual arrival in force and what may seem like the worst flu season in modern times.
Lipsitch, professor of epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and head of the School’s Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics, talked to the Gazette about recent developments in the outbreak and provided a look ahead.

Q&A with Marc Lipsitch
GAZETTE: We spoke about the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak about a week and a half ago. What do we know now that we didn’t know then?

LIPSITCH: We know that the spread is even greater than it was then. It was likely then that it would spread more widely, but there was still hope for containment. I think now that it’s in more countries — even Singapore, which is really good at tracing cases, has found some cases that aren’t linked to previous known cases — it’s clear that there are probably many cases in countries where we haven’t yet found them. This is really a global problem that’s not going to go away in a week or two.

KABOOM! KABOOM! MY BOLDING

GAZETTE:
You indicated that the rapid increase in cases was largely due to existing cases that hadn’t been diagnosed rather than new infections. Is that still your sense, or is some of the daily increase in cases due to new transmission?

LIPSITCH: It’s clearly partly due to new transmission — and it was partly due to new transmission then. Separating out reporting delays from new transmission is hard, but over the last few days, it appears that the rate of increase in new cases in China has slowed relative to the exponential growth we saw before. Some people are cautiously hopeful that that’s due to the success of control measures rather than the inability to count many cases. I think that’s possible, since the control measures have been rather extreme in some places. So, now the question is whether these control measures are working or whether we’re mostly seeing a saturation in their ability to test thousands of cases.

GAZETTE: When we talk about control measures, I think the one that’s most obvious to people who are following this are the quarantines. Are there other things going on that are also important?

LIPSITCH: For the cutting off of Wuhan, cordon sanitaire is probably a better word for it because the movement restrictions apply to everybody, not just the exposed people. They’re not exactly quarantined. Then there’s the quarantine of people who are sick and may or may not have the coronavirus, along with the isolation of people who have the coronavirus. All of that may be helping. We’ve had some concerns based on news reports that the way they’re doing the bulk quarantine and isolation of cases could be harmful in China, but it’s very hard to get a clear answer on what exactly is being done. The early reports said that they were taking people who were confirmed corona cases and putting them together in mass quarters with people who were not confirmed as corona but might have a fever or respiratory symptoms. If that was true, that could spread the virus further. Since then, I’ve heard a number of times that that’s not actually true. So I don’t know what to think of that. It doesn’t seem like the sort of thing a responsible public health agency would do.

GAZETTE: Has it become apparent that the virus is either easier to transmit or more deadly than previously thought? Or are these increasing case and fatality numbers in line with what our thinking was a week ago?

LIPSITCH: The ease of transmission is still being confirmed. In terms of the so-called “R-nought,” or how many secondary cases a single case infects, experts’ assessment is getting tighter around a level of transmissibility that’s perhaps lower than SARS, which was about 3 and higher than pandemic flu, which can be up to about 2. But what makes this one perhaps harder to control than SARS is that it may be possible to transmit before you are sick, or before you are very sick — so it’s hard to block transmission by just isolating confirmed cases.

GAZETTE:
Is that the most concerning new information, that it might be transmissible before symptoms are apparent? That would seem to make this a lot trickier.

LIPSITCH: Yes. I think that’s the most concerning piece, but the evidence for that so far in the public domain is pretty limited. I’ve seen hints that aren’t published yet, but the evidence for that that’s been peer reviewed is quite limited. On severity, estimates are that it’s worse than seasonal flu, where about one in 1,000 infected cases die, and it’s not as bad as SARS, where 8 or 9 percent of infected cases died. I’ve been working with some colleagues on estimates. They’re preliminary still but bounded by those two. That’s a large range, however, so the important question is where the final figure ends up, because 3 or 4 percent of cases dying would be much more worrisome than 0.4 percent.


GAZETTE: Is it significant that there are so few cases internationally compared with the number in China? Is that an indication that control measures are working or is it just gathering steam internationally?

LIPSITCH: Unfortunately, I think it’s more likely to be that it’s gathering steam. We’ve released a preprint that we’ve been discussing publicly — and trying to get peer reviewed in the meantime — that looks at the numbers internationally, based on how many cases you would expect from normal travel volumes. And a couple of things are striking. One is that there are countries that really should be finding cases and haven’t yet, like Indonesia and maybe Cambodia. They are outside the range of uncertainty you would expect even given variability between countries. So our best guess is that there are undetected cases in those countries. Indonesia said a couple of days ago that it had done 50 tests, but it has a lot of air travel with Wuhan, let alone the rest of China. So 50 tests is not enough to be confident you’re catching all the cases. That’s one bit of evidence that to me was really striking. Second, I was reading The Wall Street Journal that Singapore had three cases so far that were not traced to any other case. Singapore is the opposite of Indonesia, in that they have more cases than you would expect based on their travel volume, probably because they’re better at detection. And even they are finding cases that they don’t have a source for. That makes me think that many other places do as well. Of course, we’re making guesses from limited information, but I think they’re pretty likely to be correct guesses, given the totality of information.


GAZETTE:
People have said a vaccine is probably at least a year away. Do you have a sense that this is going to need a vaccine to finally bring it under control?


LIPSITCH: That seems like the scenario which is most plausible to me right now. Vaccine efforts are very much needed, but I think we should be clear that they won’t necessarily succeed. There’s a lot of effort being put into them, but not every disease has a vaccine. [Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, said Tuesday that a vaccine could be ready in 18 months, according to CNN.]

GAZETTE: But what is most important for the public to know about this?

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LIPSITCH: There’s likely to be a period of widespread transmission in the U.S., and I hope we will avert the kind of chaos that some other places are seeing. That’s likely if we continue to be prepared, but I think it’s going to be a new virus that we have to deal with. That won’t be because the United States government has failed to contain it, it will mean that this is an uncontainable virus. If we’re dealing with it, it’s because everybody’s going to be dealing with it. I think that’s a likely scenario.

GAZETTE: From a treatment standpoint, it seems there are a lot of mild cases and then fewer serious cases that need respiratory support. Should hospitals and the medical establishment start thinking about capacity-building now?

LIPSITCH: To the extent that’s possible, yes, but I don’t know how flexible that capacity is. I think we should be prepared for the equivalent of a very, very bad flu season, or maybe the worst-ever flu season in modern times, since we’ve had ventilators and been able to provide intensive respiratory support. And it might not be real flu “season” because the annual flu season is already passing. One question I’ve gotten a lot is whether it will go away in warmer weather, like SARS did. I’m not at all convinced that SARS went away because of the warmer weather. I think it went away because people got it under control in May and June. But there is some evidence — and we’re working on quantifying it — that coronaviruses do transmit less efficiently in the warmer weather. So it’s possible that we will get some help from that, but I don’t think that will solve the problem, as evidenced by the fact that there’s transmission in Singapore, on the equator.

GAZETTE:
Once people get this and recover, do we know whether they will have immunity?

LIPSITCH: That is a very important question, but we don’t know the answer yet because it’s been too short a time. The evidence from other coronaviruses is that there is some immunity but it doesn’t last for long. Immunity to the seasonal coronaviruses lasts for maybe a couple of years, and then you can get reinfected. There’s a further question of whether that’s because the virus is changing or because your immunity is not very durable. Given that it’s a new virus, we can’t say anything with certainty, but it would be reasonable to expect immunity to be somewhat short-lived, meaning a couple of years, rather than lifelong.
GAZETTE:
So without a vaccine, you may have a respite for a year or two but then you may get it again?

LIPSITCH: Yes, and that is a bit like the flu, although typically people get the flu every five or six years.


Copyright ©2009-2020 ZeroHedge.com/ABC Media, LTD
 

pops88

Girls with Guns Member
all the hand sanatizer I can find are 65%, can I pour some out, then add 91% alcohol to it, to increase it?

I found this link helpful-


I had a pocket sized generic hand sanitizer that I topped off with 91%. I figured it couldn't hurt and the 91% is diluted, but hopefully the starting concentration has been raised a bit. It was a "oh, what the he!!" moment.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
New virus affects supply at Fiat Chrysler's Serbia plant
Fiat Chrysler says it is temporarily shutting down its plant in Serbia due to supplier issues linked to the new virus outbreak in China

By The Associated Press
14 February 2020

MILAN -- Fiat Chrysler said Friday it is temporarily shutting down its plant in Serbia due to supplier issues linked to the new virus outbreak in China.

Fiat Chrysler said it had rescheduled planned downtime at the Kragujevac plant in southern Serbia, where it builds the 500L passenger car, ‘’due to the availability of certain components sourced in China.’’

The disruption affects supply of audio systems, a spokesman said. The carmaker is in the process of securing a future supply and plans to restart production later in February
.

FCA CEO Mike Manley said last week that disruptions in deliveries of auto parts from China could threaten production at a European plant in the next two to four weeks.

New virus affects supply at Fiat Chrysler's Serbia plant
 

jed turtle

a brother in the Lord
There is an old machinist in my town who has a barrel machine sitting outside in his yard that has just rusted down after the tarps on it disintegrated from weather. The knowledge in that head and the machine in that yard are priceless. How much of this stuff across the country? How much could be restored? How many smart old people?

There were all sorts of articles last year about the big ag machines being unable to get into the fields. They would have sunk in the mud. Crops couldn't be planted in Spring in some areas or harvested in Fall in others.

I think we will be seeing a return to non-mechanized agriculture, and many other steps back before the plague and the GSM are done with us. For some that would be horrible. For me- not so much. Work don't scare me none. Builds character.

it is in the interest of EVERYONE -if one is able- to come alongside any working farm to aid in the security of said farm, against any attempt to vandalize it. Without the farms, nothing else is going to keep going...
 

pops88

Girls with Guns Member
Seems time to share an anecdote-

When I worked in NICU (with the top experts at the time), we had a serious, deadly, infection running through the unit (early years of a super bug). We tried about everything- isolation, closing nurseries, swabbing hands...everything they could think of. Even with our babies in isolettes we worked in gowns, gloves and masks. Horrible working in a hot environment like that, especially under a warmer- sweat would literally pool in our gloves. Nothing was working. Finally, an exasperated, world famous neonatologist said, "Well we've tried everything else...," and proceed to bless the room during morning rounds in front of everyone. We had no new cases after that. True story. I go through the motions, but my greatest faith is in prayer and God's protection.

Phil. 4:7
And the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall keep your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus. (KJV)
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
And they couldn't have told us this on week one? What other handy factoids can they let slip, I wonder? It is maddening that other scentists and doctors are having to guess and reverse engineer this thing while China is silent. And in the interim, how many medical personnel are lost because they have no idea what they are dealing with? Oh, it's just another coronavirus, like the flu... No- it's not. These people playing with the facts need to be squeezed real hard.
Still way behind in pages. This appears to comport with what is happening with the virus. It is not triggering an immune response until later in the infection/inflammation.
 
snip/

BTW while venting - that cruise ship in Japan, Princess whatever? Y'all do realize there a good chance that'll turn into 1,000 people dying. Pretty serious stuff. Just what in blue blazes are these people running things thinking! Maybe they're running some lab test with 4,000 souls. That's giving them credit for playing with a very inscrutable full deck. Somebody at US State should have the Marines show up and escort our citizens off and into our quarantine at some nearby base. And - then they might have a better chance of surviving. If not, these people will be force fed Covid-19 (it's got RNA!), with meals, walks, air, and touchy goo.

Today - - -
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.—The U.S. government is preparing to evacuate American citizens from aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship, the site of the biggest outbreak of the novel coronavirus outside China, according to an official at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 380 Americans and their families on the ship, docked in Yokohama, Japan, will be offered seats on two State Department-organized planes flying back to the U.S., said Henry Walke, director of the CDC’s Division of Preparedness and Emerging Infections, on Friday. They are arriving in the U.S. as early as Sunday, he said.

The cruise ship was put under a two-week quarantine on Feb. 5. Since then, the number of confirmed coronavirus cases from the ship has climbed to 218.

A CDC team is on the ground in Japan to assess the health of the passengers, Dr. Walke said. Those with a fever, cough or other symptoms won’t be allowed on the flights.

Evacuees will likely arrive first at Travis Air Force Base near Sacramento, Calif., where they will undergo additional health screenings, said Dr. Walke. Some will likely remain at Travis to undergo a mandatory quarantine, which will likely be 14 days, he said. Others may be moved to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio to quarantine.

Travis is already the quarantine site for roughly 230 people evacuated from Wuhan earlier this month, and Dr. Walke spoke in a town-hall meeting with those people on Friday. These evacuees will be kept separate from the fresh group arriving from the ship, he said.

Write to Shan Li at shan.li@wsj.com

U.S. to Evacuate Some Americans From Diamond Princess Cruise Ship


:)

===

.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Gee, the secondary and third level impacts are incredible. I ordered two holsters from Uncle Mike's who used to make them in Oregon two decades or so ago. I was unaware of this but Uncle Mike has moved all holster production to Vietnam and that is where my holsters were made and then shipped here to CONUS. Now as to whether they made it in Vietnam, and then shipped it to me here at the gun shop, based on the order, or whether they made it six months ago, shipped it here to keep it in stock. Either way, the ability to make and then ship it here, might be impeded by the Chinese Plague.
 
On the topic of cruise ships.

US citizens, passage and crew, regardless of location, should be immediately repatriated.

Further, all future travel should be cancelled immediately.

If possible, these vessels should be remanded unto the US Navy, whereas after rehabilitation worthy of strict sanitary quarantine guidelines, utilized for quarantine purposes.

===
:hof:
;)


.
 

Jubilee on Earth

Veteran Member
Gee, the secondary and third level impacts are incredible. I ordered two holsters from Uncle Mike's who used to make them in Oregon two decades or so ago. I was unaware of this but Uncle Mike has moved all holster production to Vietnam and that is where my holsters were made and then shipped here to CONUS. Now as to whether they made it in Vietnam, and then shipped it to me here at the gun shop, based on the order, or whether they made it six months ago, shipped it here to keep it in stock. Either way, the ability to make and then ship it here, might be impeded by the Chinese Plague.

This week I spent the last of the budget I set aside until the next paycheck. I bought new pillows, a new battery for hubby’s motorcycle, a computer charge cord, screen protectors for our phone, phone chargers, new socks/underwear, and a few boxes of nails and screws. All made in China.

I HAD planned on bugging in as of last week, just to avoid crowds and not have to go back out to the stores. But I have a list of things I wanted to get in the event China supplies all dry up.

I’ll go out one last time next week, and then I’m staying put.
 

KFhunter

Veteran Member
lot of dog lovers on this forum, myself included. This video is really rough to watch with the sounds and all, so here's a screen grab instead of posting the whole vid, it's chinese police clubbing a innocent dog to death over fears pets are spreading the virus.
 

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Old Gray Mare

TB Fanatic
Fair use.
  • Visitor who had ‘cold-like symptoms’ in Hawaii diagnosed with coronavirus in Japan

Visitor who had ‘cold-like symptoms’ in Hawaii diagnosed with coronavirus in Japan
By HNN Staff | February 14, 2020 at 12:15 PM HST - Updated February 14 at 5:46

HONOLULU, Hawaii (HawaiiNewsNow) - A visitor who exhibited “cold-like symptoms” while in the islands earlier this month was diagnosed with coronavirus after returning to Japan, officials confirmed.
In a news conference Friday, state health officials said:
  • The adult male traveler did not have any symptoms while visiting Maui from Jan. 28 to Feb. 3.
  • But he did begin to exhibit “cold-like symptoms” while on Oahu from Feb. 3 to Feb. 7.
  • On Oahu, he stayed at the Grand Waikikian by Hilton Grand Vacations. The state is still seeking more details on his exact itinerary, including which flights he was on.
  • He was diagnosed with the virus on Feb. 8, after returning to Japan. Japanese news reports say that he had a fever of about 102 degrees.
The governor and state Health Department sought to reassure the public about the risk of transmission and stressed that the state’s health care facilities are equipped to handle additional cases if they arise.

“We do believe this is a serious concern,” said Governor David Ige. "As we get more information about his specific itinerary or places that he visited, then we will examine that and identify any of those workers who might have been exposed.”
State Health Director Bruce Anderson said it’s likely the visitor was exposed before he left for Hawaii or while on his way here.

“The Department of Health is sending out a medical advisory to all the health care providers in the state to be on alert for possible cases,” said Anderson.

They also said Hawaii residents can take precautions now to reduce their chances of contracting the coronavirus ― and the seasonal flu.

Those precautions include washing your hands and staying home when you’re sick.


Gov. David Ige said the scenario involving a visitor falling ill “is exactly what we’ve been preparing for.”

“I have every confidence that all of our partners ... are fully aware and we do have systems and protocols in place,” he said. “We are taking the necessary actions that we need to.”

Anderson said the Japanese visitor traveled to the islands with his wife. It’s not yet clear if she’s been tested or exhibiting any symptoms.

State officials said they’re working to track down who else might have had close contact with the man ― and determine whether any are showing signs of illness.

They don’t believe that people who had casual contact with him or with things that he came in contact with, including items in his hotel room, would be at high risk of contracting the disease.

In a statement, Hilton Grand Vacations said it’s working with health officials on next steps.

“We take all potential health risks seriously, and we are responding based on our existing public health protocol and the latest guidance from medical professionals and public health authorities,” they said.

Meanwhile, Hawaiian Airlines said the man was on flight HA265 from Kahului to Honolulu on Feb. 3.

“We extend our sincere wishes for this gentlemen’s full recovery and are cooperating with public health agencies to support notification of passengers as they determine is necessary,” a spokeswoman for Hawaiian Airlines said.

“We are also in the process of reaching out to crew and agents who supported this particular flight to make sure that they are healthy and supported.”

Dr. Sarah Park, state epidemiologist, said the patient was wearing a mask while traveling.

She said that news ― and the fact that he didn’t have a fever in Hawaii ― is positive because it means the likelihood that the visitor passed the coronavirus onto others is lower.

“Our focus is who this person might have sat down with, had conversations with, those are the kinds of things that we’re looking for,” said Dr. Park.

The Mainichi newspaper reports the man is in his 60s, and had not recently traveled to China.
So far, there have no patients diagnosed with coronavirus in Hawaii.

One Hawaii resident who returned from Hubei province in China remains in quarantine at Pearl Harbor while dozens of others who have recently traveled elsewhere in mainland China are being monitored by the state Health Department. None of those people have exhibited symptoms of the disease.

This story will be updated.
Copyright 2020 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.


Link to source:
 

naegling62

Veteran Member
If you can get this and then recover
without developing immunity
how are they going to develop a vaccine?
You don't, that's why it's 2020 and they've been working on one since 2002-3. Cliff High said this would happen on the second of three blooms, if this is a bio weapon. It's happening now though like the body's response with the test animals that they used with the SARS vaccine, which doesn't work by the way. Listen to Cliff High's last couple of videos on YouTube...but not before you retire for the evening.
 

Countrymouse

Country exile in the city
Rather sad to see that OldArcher has been a prolific poster on this thread and hasn't posted since 6:09 am today (11:14 PST for me as I write this.) Kindness and sensitivity goes a long way, and words can't be taken back. I'd hate to see another exodus from a thread. Considering we all ( or many) might be dead in the coming days, weeks, months, how about we try to be kind and considerate to one another. Those of us who might have valued OA's input now may have lost it due to excessive criticism and downright bullying. Scroll if someone bothers you, please. Don't tear them down and pile on till they're driven away. In over 20 years here, I've seen it happen too many times. I had an eye stroke. Reading is very difficult, but I don't demand people change how they post to accommodate my problem. I would certainly never demand someone with a brain stroke who struggles with posting to conform to my liking. As an RN, I'm acutely aware of some of the sequela of a stroke. The first biblical principal I remember being taught was The Golden Rule- do unto other's as you'd have done unto you. Do any of us want to be piled on for how we word our posts? Again, let's try to be kind and understanding as we may not have much time or the opportunity to mend fences.


Yeah--I PM'd him---

Old Archer told me he isn't going to post much here any more as he does not wish to become a distraction from a very important topic / thread.

I hope some of you are ASHAMED of yourselves (and the ones who aren't, HAVE no shame).

"Gentlemen--we must all hang together, or assuredly we shall all hang separately."

--wise words, from a wise man (Benjamin Franklin). MOST applicable.
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
If you can get this and then recover
without developing immunity
how are they going to develop a vaccine?


We don't have a "cold shot" yet … perhaps for the same reason. If this stuff changes deeply enough and often enough, our best hope is that it mutates to become no more lethal to its hosts than the common cold. A successful virus does not kill its host … at least not quickly.
 

bcingu

Senior Member
Prep Item

For hydration of an unconscious individual

Enema / douche bag with multiple replacement tips

Hand bulb for children and infants

Available in disposable and reusable just sanitize
 

bbbuddy

DEPLORABLE ME
So open one of the closed factories and get things going.... the parts you are getting are not that hard to tool up for...
Most of the machinery was sold to China. Most of the machines that make the machines were sold to China.
Most of the machinists are retired or dead. Brave New World. Service economy. "Experts" know best, dontcha know?
 

jward

passin' thru
remember, singapore's #s are widely touted and respected- if ya wanna do some spit balling, use those maybe...

The tables below show confirmed cases of coronavirus (2019-nCoV, officially known as SARS-CoV-2 or COVID-19) in China and other countries. To see a distribution map and a timeline, scroll down. There are currently 67,105 confirmed cases worldwide, including 1,526 fatalities.


Last update: 15 February 2020 at 1:08 a.m. ET

MAINLAND CHINACasesDeathsNotesLinks
Hubei province
(includes Wuhan)
54,4061,4578,276 serious, 1,876 criticalSource
Guangdong province1,294268 serious, 35 criticalSource
Henan province1,2121338 serious, 38 criticalSource
Zhejiang province1,162050 serious, 29 criticalSource
Hunan province1,001253 seriousSource
Anhui province950614 criticalSource
Jiangxi province913163 seriousSource
Jiangsu province60406 serious, 4 criticalSource
Chongqing537531 serious, 19 criticalSource
Shandong province530217 serious, 11 criticalSource
Sichuan province470117 criticalSource
Heilongjiang province4251160 seriousSource
Beijing375421 criticalSource
Shanghai326112 serious, 5 criticalSource
Tianjin1213Source
Other regions2,16715Source
TOTAL66,4931,52311,053 serious
8,096 recovered
8,969 suspected


REGIONSCasesDeathsNotesLinks
Hong Kong5615 critical, 2 serious, 1 recoveredSource
Taiwan1801 recoveredSource
Macau1001 recoveredSource
TOTAL8417 serious


INTERNATIONALCasesDeathsNotesLinks
Japan260*19 serious, 4 recoveredSource
Singapore6706 critical, 17 recoveredSource
Thailand3402 serious, 14 recoveredSource
South Korea2809 recoveredSource
Malaysia2107 recoveredSource
Australia15010 recoveredSource
Germany1601 recoveredSource
Vietnam1607 recoveredSource
United States1503 recoveredSource
France1101 serious, 2 recoveredSource
United Kingdom901 recoveredSource
Canada801 recoveredSource
UAE801 serious, 1 recovered Source
Philippines312 recoveredSource
India301 recoveredSource
Italy302 seriousSource
Russia202 recoveredSource
Spain20Source
Nepal101 recoveredSource
Cambodia101 recoveredSource
Sri Lanka101 recoveredSource
Finland101 recoveredSource
Sweden10Source
Belgium10Source
Egypt10Source
TOTAL528221 serious/critical
Notes

  • Hubei province, China: The numbers include clinically-diagnosed cases, which means they were not confirmed by laboratory testing.
  • Japan: The total includes 4 asymptomatic cases, which are not included in the government’s official count.
  • Japan: The total includes 218 people from the “Diamond Princess” cruise ship. They are not included in the government’s official count.
  • North Korea: Unconfirmed reports about 1, 5, or 7 cases in North Korea cannot be verified. If cases are confirmed by the North Korean government, they will be added to this list.
 

jward

passin' thru
part two

Tracking coronavirus: Map, data and timeline

Timeline (GMT)
15 February

  • 06:05: 1 new case in Thailand. (Source)
  • 05:19: 2 new cases in Malaysia. (Source)
  • 04:30: 3 new cases and 1 new death in Beijing. The death was previously reported by the National Health Commission. (Source)
  • 04:18: 1 new case in Tianjin, China. (Source)
  • 03:18: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 02:33: 7 new cases in Sichuan province, China. (Source)
  • 02:25: 7 new cases in Shandong province, China. (Source)
  • 02:20: 11 new cases in Jiangsu province, China. (Source)
  • 02:02: 13 new cases in Jiangxi province, China. (Source)
  • 02:00: 16 new cases in Anhui province, China. (Source)
  • 01:55: 13 new cases in Hunan province, China. (Source)
  • 01:52: 7 new cases in Zhejiang province, China. (Source)
  • 01:51: 28 new cases in Henan province, China. (Source)
  • 01:04: 33 new cases in Guangdong province, China. (Source)
  • 00:10: China’s National Health Commission reports 193 new cases and 3 new deaths on the mainland, excluding Hubei province. Their locations have not yet been disclosed. When compared to the previous day, there were 221 new cases and 4 new deaths outside Hubei province. (Source)
14 February

  • 23:45: 8 new cases in Shanghai. (Source)
  • 23:35: 7 new cases in Heilongjiang province, China. (Source)
  • 23:30: 5 new cases in Chongqing, China. (Source)
  • 23:10: 2,420 new cases and 139 new deaths in Hubei province, China. (Source)
  • 21:10: 1 new presumptive confirmed case in BC, Canada. (Source)
  • 17:00: First case in Egypt. (Source)
  • 14:03: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 14:00: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 13:54: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 13:50: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 11:05: 9 new cases in Singapore. (Source)
  • 10:09: 2 new cases in Japan. (Source)
  • 09:15: 3 new cases in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 08:47: 3 new cases and 1 new death in Chongqing, China. (Source)
  • 08:02: 4 new cases in Shandong province, China. (Source)
  • 07:51: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 03:25: China’s National Health Commission reports 267 new cases and 5 new deaths on the mainland, excluding Hubei province. Hubei Province deducted 108 prior deaths from the death toll due to double counting. (Source)
  • 00:43: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
13 February

  • 23:45: 4,823 new cases and 116 new deaths in Hubei province, China. 1,043 cases which were previously reported were deducted from the government’s figures. (Source)
  • 14:50: 3 new cases in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 15:10: 1 new case in the United States. First in Texas. (Source)
  • 12:40: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 11:55: 1 new case, a fatality, in Japan. This is the first death in Japan. (Source 1)
  • 11:36: 8 new cases in Singapore. (Source)
  • 11:15: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 10:13: 1 new case in Malaysia. (Source)
  • 09:05: 1 new case in Japan. (Source)
  • 08:15: China’s National Health Commission reports 312 new cases and 12 new deaths on the mainland, excluding Hubei province. (Source)
  • 05:15: 1 new case in Vietnam. (Source)
  • 03:10: 44 new cases in Japan. They were found on the “Diamond Princess” cruise ship off Yokohama, raising the ship’s total to 218. (Source)
  • 00:25: 1 new case in California, United States. (Source)
12 February

  • 23:48: 14,840 new cases, including clinically diagnosed cases, and 242 new deaths in Hubei province, China. (Source)
  • 18:53: 1 new case in the United Kingdom. (Source)
  • 08:24: 1 new case in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 07:00: 3 new cases in Singapore. (Source)
  • 02:53: 1 new case in Japan. It is one of the quarantine officers who was working on board the “Diamond Princess” cruise ship off Yokohama. This case is not included in the total for the ship’s passengers and crew. (Source)
  • 02:14: China’s National Health Commission reports 377 new cases and 3 new deaths across the mainland, excluding Hubei province. The deaths were in Henan province, Hunan province, and Chongqing. (Source)
11 February

  • 23:55: 39 new cases in Japan. They were found on the “Diamond Princess” cruise ship off Yokohama, raising the ship’s total to 174. (Source)
  • 22:17: 1,638 new cases and 94 new deaths in Hubei province, China. (Source)
  • 21:01: 1 new case in Thailand. (Source)
  • 19:25: 2 new cases in Germany. (Source)
  • 16:10: 7 new cases in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 14:59: 2 new cases in Singapore. (Source)
  • 06:57: 2 new cases in Japan. (Source)
  • 02:37: 1 new case in Vietnam. (Source)
  • 01:14: 1 new case in California, United States. (Source)
  • 01:00: 1 new case in South Korea. (Source)
  • 00:13: China’s National Health Commission reports 370 new cases and 5 new deaths on the mainland. Of the deaths, one each in: Beijing, Tianjin, Heilongjiang province, Anhui province, and Henan province. (Source)
10 February

  • 22:10: 2,097 new cases and 103 new deaths in Hubei province, China. (Source)
  • 17:56: 1 new case in the United Arab Emirates. (Source)
  • 16:00: 4 new cases in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 14:20: 2 new cases in Hong Kong. (Source)
  • 12:30: 2 new cases in Singapore. (Source)
  • 09:46: 4 new cases in the United Kingdom. (Source)
  • 05:13: 65 new cases in Japan. They were found on the “Diamond Princess” cruise ship off Yokohama, raising the ship’s total to 135. (Source)
  • 01:01: 1 new case in Malaysia. (Source)
For the full timeline, click here.
Chart
 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
In a community prep event before Y2k, I brought up the possibility that people might try to take others' food. One of the liberal participants found that concept so upsetting that he quit the group.

In a community prep event before Y2k, I brought up the possibility that people might try to take others' food. One of the liberal participants found that concept so upsetting that he quit the group.

Thinning the herd...
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
There are a lot of people who still use their toolboxes. It may not be fun, but we have the ability to regain what we lost.

Even if China dodges the bullet in some miraculous way, I hope both the government and our industrial base learns its lesson.
I was struck by the one physician at the Senate Roundtable this week. Her pharmaceutical company used to be a US standard. Now it is an international company. I got the impression that it has no allegiance to the US.
 
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