CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Deaths, intubations swamp New Orleans doctors in coronavirus surge

Brad Brooks

(Reuters) - Emergency room doctor Thomas Krajewski stopped at the hospital room door at 2 a.m. to glance at the chart. He knew instantly the long odds faced by the patient inside: A man in his 70s, with a fever, short of breath.

“Do you mind calling my son?” the patient asked him. “My two grandsons tomorrow morning are going to crawl in my bed because they wake me up on the weekends, and if I’m not there, they will wonder.”

Twelve hours later, the man needed a ventilator. After a day, his kidneys started to fail. In three days, he was dead - one of 151 people who had succumbed to COVID-19 in Louisiana by late Sunday. The state has confirmed 3,540 cases since March 9 - among the world’s fastest-growing infection rates. That pace, Governor John Bel Edwards has said, signals that the state could become the next Italy, with overwhelmed hospitals forced to turn patients away.

Frontline health workers scrambled to prepare for that grim prophecy as patients started to stream through their doors last week. The governor said on Face the Nation on Sunday that the state has only a tiny fraction of the 13,000 ventilators it will need, and that it has yet to receive federal approval to tap a national stockpile. In New Orleans, the state’s epicenter, authorities are setting up a field hospital to handle the expected overflow of patients at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center - the same site where thousands of Hurricane Katrina refugees suffered in 2005.

Then as now, many doctors fear they will not get enough supplies and support to keep up with the deluge of victims. This time they are fighting a pathogen that threatens them - and their families - every time they extend a hand to help a patient.

Krajewski, a 31-year-old Cincinnati native who is just two years out of residency, works the overnight shift at St. Bernard Parish Hospital, in a working-class suburb just east of the city. After work, Krajewski comes home to his newborn son, Cal, just three weeks old, and his wife, Genevieve. He strips off his clothes on the porch before entering his house. He drops his glasses and phone into a small UV light sterilizer and heads straight to the shower.

“I come home – and I’m horrified,” Krajewski said. “I’m wearing an N95 respirator-level face mask anytime I’m near my child, and that is after I’ve fully decontaminated.”

Doctors across New Orleans are calling colleagues in New York and Seattle, sharing intelligence on the virus. They trade suggestions on how to hook two patients up to a single respirator. Some health workers are renting apartments to quarantine themselves from their families, said Joseph Kanter, an emergency room physician and lead public health official for the New Orleans area.

Emergency medicine physician Thomas Krajewski wears a mask as he holds his baby Cal with his wife Genevieve after finishing his shift amid an outbreak of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S., March 27, 2020. Picture taken March 27, 2020. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn
“They’re using all these stop-gap measures” to protect themselves, said Kanter, calling it a “damning indictment” of the nation’s lack of preparedness for such a pandemic.

‘IT CAN HAPPEN TO ME’
With more than 142,000 confirmed cases and nearly 2,500 dead in the United States, health workers in hard-hit places like New Orleans are feeling the strain of taking in hundreds of contagious patients who often deteriorate quickly.

While older patients are by far the most at-risk, some Louisiana doctors say they have been shocked at the severity of cases in which younger people have just one underlying condition, such as hypertension or diabetes. Some patients in their 30s or 40s have been quickly put on life support, said Jeff Elder, an emergency physician at University Medical Center in downtown New Orleans.
Such cases are worrisome because doctors are still struggling to understand why certain younger patients are hit so much harder than others - and because they make younger caregivers fear for their own safety.

“You treat them and think, ‘If it is happening to him, it can happen to me,’” said Elder, who is 40.

EXPONENTIAL RISE
Louisiana’s soaring infection rates mean some hospitals will have to start turning away patients in the next week unless statewide efforts to curtail social contact start to show an impact, Governor Edwards has said. The governor’s pleas in daily news conferences for residents to stay home have become increasingly laced with anger and frustration.

“It’s not that hard to understand!” Edwards said on Friday, talking about what awaits New Orleans. “The trajectory we’re on right now takes us to a place where we cannot meet the demands on our health care system.”

Even as fears rise inside overtaxed hospitals, caregivers are working in an unsettling silence. Many have bans or severe limitations on patients’ visiting family members, who normally fill their hallways with conversation, comforting loved ones and waiting on scraps of news.

Patients with COVID-19 suffer quietly, too. In survival mode, they focus almost solely on breathing. Fevers make them sweat through their hospital gowns as they sit upright in bed, the position that makes it easiest to breathe. Ventilators hum in the background.

Krajewski said he decided early in college to become a doctor, in part because of a self-described hero complex. In his young career, he has thrived on seeing patients get well in response to his treatments.

That’s all changed in the last few days. He has put about a dozen patients on life support, and only one has come off. Five have died.

“There is a sense of gravity when you know you are one of the last people that will talk to somebody,” Krajewski said. “Those conversations are happening more often.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment


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Coronavirus: The Latest
Man refuses to let son back in house after spring break trip amid coronavirus outbreak

Posted: Mar 30, 2020 / 07:33 AM PDT / Updated: Mar 30, 2020 / 07:33 AM PDT
Door.jpg

File photo of a front door. (Photo by Chris Hondros/Getty Images)

NANUET, N.Y. (WJW) — A New York man refused to let his 21-year-old son back into his home after the college student went on a spring break trip to Texas.

According to the New York Post, 51-year-old Peter Levine tried to get his son, Matt, to end his vacation early.

Matt Levine and his friends from Springfield College visited South Padre Island, a popular destination for spring breakers. The group spent many days congregating outdoors and listening to live music.

Peter Levine says he spoke with his son every day, urging him to come home.

“I was aggravated. The news here was getting worse and worse,” said Peter Levine, referring to the coronavirus outbreak.

When Matt Levine and his friends were ready to return from their trip, Peter Levine told them there was “no chance” he would pick them up from the airport.

When they arrived at his home via car service, he stopped them from entering the house.

“They got out of the car near our driveway, and I said, ‘Stay right there! Do not go any further!’” Peter Levine told the newspaper.

He told the college students that they were no longer able to stay with the family as originally planned because he couldn’t risk Matt’s grandparents getting exposed to COVID-19 or any other potential germs the group may have encountered.

“I love my son, but they were not sleeping here,” Peter Levine added, “I said, ‘If any of you have to pee, we have some bushes.’ Two of them took me up on it.”

Matt Levine and his friends were forced to drive two hours to their on-campus apartments.

Peter Levine did, however, fill Matt’s car with bags of groceries and gave him $300 in cash before sending them on their way.

“Their lease ends in June, and none of the parents want them home. It’s too risky,” Peter said.
Latest Headlines:
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
Yes. An agent based computer simulation of persons and environment would generate a better model as it would take all those factors into account.
And never hit on 13.....so many ways to add it up.... but what does one's gut tell ya? I'd say RO....5 plus or minus. Bout to get real.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment


New York governor begs for help amid `staggering' death toll
by JOCELYN NOVECK, LARRY NEUMEISTER and MARINA VILLENEUVE Associated Press
Monday, March 30th 2020
AA
4672b575-bef1-4582-9447-1422c31ece3c-large16x9_AP20090521081788.jpg

The Navy hospital ship USNS Comfort passes lower Manhattan on its way to docking in New York, Monday, March 30, 2020. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig)
email.svg


NEW YORK (AP) — New York's governor issued an urgent appeal for medical volunteers Monday amid a “staggering” number of deaths from the coronavirus, saying: “Please come help us in New York, now.” And tens of thousands of retired or sidelined nurses and doctors were already answering the call.

The plea from Gov. Andrew Cuomo came as the death toll in New York State climbed past 1,200 — with most of the victims in the big city — and authorities warned that the crisis pushing New York's hospitals to the breaking point is just a preview of what other cities across the U.S. could soon face.

Cuomo said the city needs 1 one million additional health care workers.

“We've lost over 1,000 New Yorkers," he said. "To me, we're beyond staggering already. We've reached staggering.”
At the same time the governor's appeal went out, a Navy hospital ship, also sent to the city after 9/11, pulled into port with 1,000 beds to help relieve pressure on New York's hospitals. And an estimated 80,000 former medical professionals were stepping up to volunteer.

Andrew Cuomo
@NYGovCuomo

View: https://twitter.com/NYGovCuomo/status/1244680452323106819


I am asking healthcare workers across the country:

If things are not urgent in your own community, please come to New York.

We need relief for nurses. We need relief for doctors.

If you can, help us: http://health.ny.gov/assistance

We will return the favor in your hour of need.
33.6K
10:38 AM - Mar 30, 2020
"Whatever it is that they need, I’m willing to do,” said Jerry Kops, a musician and former nurse whose tour with the show Blue Man Group was abruptly halted by the outbreak. He returned to his Long Island home, where he volunteered to be a nurse again.

In Europe, meanwhile, hard-hit Italy and Spain saw their death tolls climb by more than 800 each, but the World Health Organization's emergency chief said cases there were “potentially stabilizing.” At the same time, he warned that this is no time to let up on tough containment measures.

"We have to now push the virus down, and that will not happen by itself," said Dr. Michael Ryan.
Three-quarters of a million people around the world have become infected and over 35,000 have died, according to a running count kept by Johns Hopkins University.

The U.S. reported over 140,000 infections and more than 2,500 deaths, with New York City the nation's worst hot spot, but New Orleans, Detroit and other cities are also seeing alarming clusters.


Andrew Cuomo
@NYGovCuomo

View: https://twitter.com/NYGovCuomo/status/1244679562971267079


The key battle in this fight is taking place in hospitals across the city, the state and this country.

Our healthcare workers are on the front line.

They are the soldiers fighting this battle on behalf of all of us.

Support them — stay home.
5,976
10:35 AM - Mar 30, 2020
“Anyone who says this situation is a New York City-only situation is in a state of denial," Cuomo said. “You see this virus move across the state, you see this virus move across the nation. There is no American who is immune to this virus."
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the U.S. government's top infectious-disease expert, similarly warned that smaller cities are likely about to see cases “take off” the way they have in New York City.
“What we’ve learned from painful experience with this outbreak is that it goes along almost on a straight line, then a little acceleration, acceleration, then it goes way up," he said on ABC's “Good Morning America.”
 
Last edited:
11 veterans have died at a Soldier's Home in Massachusetts. Five of them tested positive for coronavirus


Eleven veteran residents of the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke, Massachusetts have died -- and five of them tested positive for coronavirus, Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse confirmed to CNN.

Test results are still pending for five of the remaining veterans.

The status of the last veteran who died is unknown, according to Mike Bloomberg, Morse’s chief of staff.

Soldiers’ Home houses 233 residents and is run by the state of Massachusetts. Eleven additional veterans and five staff members have also tested positive for Covid-19, Morse said.

Bennett Walsh, the facility’s superintendent, has been placed on paid administrative leave, effective immediately, according to a statement from Massachusetts Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Dan Tsai.

Walsh did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

All of the residents at Soldiers’ Home have been isolated and symptomatic employees have been advised to quarantine.


===

So far in the last few months, I've read every single post here, scanned thousands of news articles, papers, and watched hundreds of videos. It is not easy to keep the wall up sometimes.

This simple story, devoid of emotion, will likely be lost like tears in the rain. I've always been struck by that line from the movie Blade Runner. I've never used that quote in any context, yet at this moment it seems to adequately define value lost.

===
.
 

bassaholic

Veteran Member
I was thinking about R0 and how imprecise it is. True infectiousness probably follows a Gaussian Curve as a first approximation and if social distancing can cut the middle part of the curve out it should help a lot.....

The US's version of social distancing isn't going to work. People are still out and about in large numbers. Just because you are 6 feet away from someone in line (the places that are doing this are very few) isn't going to help much.

They are going to have to shut down restaurants, Costco's, Targets, Walmarts, etc, etc.

A real social distancing.

This will have to be enforced with the help of the military.

This party is just getting started.
 

Ractivist

Pride comes before the fall.....Pride month ended.
... and fathers turn against sons, and daughters against mothers, brothers against......


Almighty Creator has decided.

we have been weighed and measured...we have come up short.

I hope I am wrong. but....look around. what do you see?
Living it right now. Son won't listen to me......thinks Im nuts and the virus is basically a hoax....economy blown up for sure, but the virus a nothing burger.....drives me nuts for a multitude of reasons. Four of his five businesses are shut down and I think he's basically in a state of shock.....doesn't want to believe it could go on. Had dinner with him last night and he's planning on business as usual in a month or two..........God bless him. I stated that inflation and taxation is going to really suck, he just said, suck it up and make more money.....work smarter..... hurts, never saw denial like this..
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
Our 18 month old granddaughter had a low grade fever for a week. Then it spiked but she was acting fine. Pediatrician watched her on telemed thing and said keep an eye on behavior. Next day fever up higher and baby lethargic. Dr. said take her to children's hospital in Troy (Oakland County, MI). Son said hospital was very quiet, everyone suited up. They tested for many things, found nothing, but no test for Flu or Corona because they are short of both, and baby had no respiratory problems. Sent home with no instructions about staying home, etc. All they would say is she has "a virus". Considering that we are in the new hot spot, this is not reassuring.

That must be so scary for all of you. Adding your granddaughter to my prayers. Please let us know how she's doing,

HD
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Coronavirus: pathogen could have been spreading in humans for years, study says
Stephen Chen in Beijing
Published: 4:30pm, 29 Mar, 2020
Updated: 2:06pm, 30 Mar, 2020
  • Virus may have jumped from animal to humans long before the first detection in Wuhan, according to research by an international team of scientists
  • Findings significantly reduce the possibility of the virus having a laboratory origin, director of the US National Institute of Health says
The coronavirus that causes Covid-19 might have been quietly spreading among humans for years or even decades before the sudden outbreak that sparked a global health crisis, according to an investigation by some of the world’s top virus hunters.

Researchers from the United States, Britain and Australia looked at piles of data released by scientists around the world for clues about the virus’ evolutionary past, and found it might have made the jump from animal to humans long before the first detection in the central China city of Wuhan.

Though there could be other possibilities, the scientists said the coronavirus carried a unique mutation that was not found in suspected animal hosts, but was likely to occur during repeated, small-cluster infections in humans.

The study, conducted by Kristian Andersen from the Scripps Research Institute in California, Andrew Rambaut from the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, Ian Lipkin from Columbia University in New York, Edward Holmes from the University of Sydney, and Robert Garry from Tulane University in New Orleans, was published in the scientific journal Nature Medicine on March 17.

Dr Francis Collins, director of the US National Institute of Health, who was not involved in the research, said the study suggested a possible scenario in which the coronavirus crossed from animals into humans before it became capable of causing disease in people.

“Then, as a result of gradual evolutionary changes over years or perhaps decades, the virus eventually gained the ability to spread from human to human and cause serious, often life-threatening disease,” he said in an article published on the institute’s website on Thursday.

In December, doctors in Wuhan began noticing a surge in the number of people suffering from a mysterious pneumonia. Tests for flu and other pathogens returned negative. An unknown strain was isolated, and a team from the Wuhan Institute of Virology led by Shi Zhengli traced its origin to a bat virus found in a mountain cave close to the China-Myanmar border.

The two viruses shared more than 96 per cent of their genes, but the bat virus could not infect humans. It lacked a spike protein to bind with receptors in human cells.

Coronaviruses with a similar spike protein were later discovered in Malayan pangolins by separate teams from Guangzhou and Hong Kong, which led some researchers to believe that a recombination of genomes had occurred between the bat and pangolin viruses.

But the new strain, or SARS-Cov-2, had a mutation in its genes known as a polybasic cleavage site that was unseen in any coronaviruses found in bats or pangolins, according to Andersen and his colleagues.

This mutation, according to separate studies by researchers from China, France and the US, could produce a unique structure in the virus’ spike protein to interact with furin, a widely distributed enzyme in the human body. That could then trigger a fusion of the viral envelope and human cell membrane when they came into contact with one another.

Some human viruses including HIV and Ebola have the same furin-like cleavage site, which makes them contagious.

It is possible that the mutation happened naturally to the virus on animal hosts. Sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) and Mers (Middle East respiratory syndrome), for instance, were believed to have been direct descendants of species found in masked civets and camels, which had a 99 per cent genetic similarity.

There was, however, no such direct evidence for the novel coronavirus, according to the international team. The gap between human and animal types was too large, they said, so they proposed another alternative.

“It is possible that a progenitor of SARS-CoV-2 jumped into humans, acquiring the genomic features described above through adaptation during undetected human-to-human transmission,” they said in the paper.

“Once acquired, these adaptations would enable the pandemic to take off and produce a sufficiently large cluster of cases to trigger the surveillance system that detected it.”

They said also that the most powerful computer models based on current knowledge about the coronavirus could not generate such a strange but highly efficient spike protein structure to bind with host cells.

The study had significantly reduced, if not ruled out, the possibility of a laboratory origin, Collins said.

“In fact, any bioengineer trying to design a coronavirus that threatened human health probably would never have chosen this particular conformation for a spike protein,” he said.

The findings by Western scientists echoed the mainstream opinion among Chinese researchers.

Zhong Nanshan, who advises Beijing on outbreak containment policies, had said on numerous occasions that there was growing scientific evidence to suggest the origin of the virus might not have been in China.

“The occurrence of Covid-19 in Wuhan does not mean it originated in Wuhan,” he said last week.

A doctor working in a public hospital treating Covid-19 patients in Beijing said numerous cases of mysterious pneumonia outbreaks had been reported by health professionals in several countries last year.

Re-examining the records and samples of these patients could reveal more clues about the history of this worsening pandemic, said the doctor, who asked not to be named due to the political sensitivity of the issue.

“There will be a day when the whole thing comes to light.”

Damned chinee are trying, still, to pass the blame... This time on nature... Assholes couldn't tell the truth if you stuck a gun up thier ass... Never believe ANYTHING they say... They LIE!!!

Yes, I think they do. That's why I highlighted the wiggle language. I thought it was important to post not because I believe it (I've been a proponent of this being a bio-weapon from the beginning) but because it's getting a lot of attention and I thought it newsworthy.

HD
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Coronavirus: American Manufacturers Fear Ventilators Will be Made in China
1,175
ROME, ITALY - MARCH 16: New ventilators are seen at the Columbus Covid2 Hospital on March 16, 2020 in Rome, Italy. Columbus Covid2 Hospital, the center that from March 16 will assist affected patients or suspected cases of Covid19 in order to support the Regional Hub - Spallanzani Hospital in …
Marco Di Lauro/Getty ImagesJOHN BINDER30 Mar 20201,270
2:55
American manufacturers fear they are being passed over for contracts to help make essential medical supplies by multinational corporations like General Motors (GM) in favor of more outsourcing to China in the midst of the Chinese coronavirus crisis.

Act (DPA) to have GM begin the production of ventilators. On Monday, Ford announced its partnership with GE Healthcare to produce 50,000 ventilators in Michigan in 100 days.

Joe Padula, the President of the Tooling, Manufacturing & Technologies Association (TMT), told Breitbart News that the roughly 250 small to medium-sized manufacturers he represents in and around southeast Michigan have yet to secure contracts to help produce supplies necessary to fighting coronavirus.

“We really feel like we’re being left out of here,” Padula said. “They’re still sourcing out of China.”

In a survey, none of the Michigan-based manufacturers — who currently supply tools and components to Ford, GM, and Chrysler — said they have been asked to supply ventilator parts by GE Healthcare, Allied Healthcare, Medtronics, or Philips. Likewise, only a couple have been approached about supplying ventilator parts by Ford or GM.

A majority of the manufacturers who responded to the survey said they have the capability of manufacturing ventilator parts. Padula told Breitbart News his members are also able to help produce masks and circuit boards but he is not aware of any confirmed contracts for them to do so.

One medical device contract manufacturer said they have not been approached by any of the leading ventilator corporations, Ford, or GM to help supply parts for ventilators.

Instead, industry insiders say corporations are still outsourcing to China, as well as India.

“They’re still trying to go out to China to make this stuff,” an industry insider told Breitbart News. “Even now, American manufacturers are a last resort.”

“They’re taking this stuff to China or Turkey or wherever is cheapest and making expensive, time-consuming ventilators,” they said.

The manufacturers point to a design released by MIT researchers that they say is viable, a ventilator for just $100. Padula said his members need contracts and purchase orders from either the federal governmentnor corporations to even begin producing these components to build the ventilators.

“All the components of the MIT design can be made by [American manufacturers],” Padula said. “To see it sourced out of China would be heartbreaking.”
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
Some of you may know that I work as a manager at Macy's. Macy's just furloughed everybody except upper mgmt
I didn't know that. I read about Macy's and Kohls and a few other companies. You have my prayers that this furlough ends soon and that you are back to work and full pay quickly. In the meantime, hopefully the unemployment plus extra added to it by the federal gov't will be enough to at least tide you over.

HD
 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
Trump shares details on machine that disinfects masks
From CNN's Daniella Diaz


Alex Brandon/AP


===

CNN left out this was the direct result of POTUS personally receiving making the calls to expedite to this action to fruition.

===

Look at his eyes... He looks exhausted. The man is trying so hard. I can't even imagine where we would be today if Hillary had won...
 

OldArcher

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Coronavirus: American Manufacturers Fear Ventilators Will be Made in China
1,175
ROME, ITALY - MARCH 16: New ventilators are seen at the Columbus Covid2 Hospital on March 16, 2020 in Rome, Italy. Columbus Covid2 Hospital, the center that from March 16 will assist affected patients or suspected cases of Covid19 in order to support the Regional Hub - Spallanzani Hospital in …
Marco Di Lauro/Getty ImagesJOHN BINDER30 Mar 20201,270
2:55
American manufacturers fear they are being passed over for contracts to help make essential medical supplies by multinational corporations like General Motors (GM) in favor of more outsourcing to China in the midst of the Chinese coronavirus crisis.

Act (DPA) to have GM begin the production of ventilators. On Monday, Ford announced its partnership with GE Healthcare to produce 50,000 ventilators in Michigan in 100 days.

Joe Padula, the President of the Tooling, Manufacturing & Technologies Association (TMT), told Breitbart News that the roughly 250 small to medium-sized manufacturers he represents in and around southeast Michigan have yet to secure contracts to help produce supplies necessary to fighting coronavirus.

“We really feel like we’re being left out of here,” Padula said. “They’re still sourcing out of China.”

In a survey, none of the Michigan-based manufacturers — who currently supply tools and components to Ford, GM, and Chrysler — said they have been asked to supply ventilator parts by GE Healthcare, Allied Healthcare, Medtronics, or Philips. Likewise, only a couple have been approached about supplying ventilator parts by Ford or GM.

A majority of the manufacturers who responded to the survey said they have the capability of manufacturing ventilator parts. Padula told Breitbart News his members are also able to help produce masks and circuit boards but he is not aware of any confirmed contracts for them to do so.

One medical device contract manufacturer said they have not been approached by any of the leading ventilator corporations, Ford, or GM to help supply parts for ventilators.

Instead, industry insiders say corporations are still outsourcing to China, as well as India.

“They’re still trying to go out to China to make this stuff,” an industry insider told Breitbart News. “Even now, American manufacturers are a last resort.”

“They’re taking this stuff to China or Turkey or wherever is cheapest and making expensive, time-consuming ventilators,” they said.

The manufacturers point to a design released by MIT researchers that they say is viable, a ventilator for just $100. Padula said his members need contracts and purchase orders from either the federal governmentnor corporations to even begin producing these components to build the ventilators.

“All the components of the MIT design can be made by [American manufacturers],” Padula said. “To see it sourced out of China would be heartbreaking.”

To see MIT's design manufactured in china, should be treason, as china IS our enemy!!!

OA
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
11 veterans have died at a Soldier's Home in Massachusetts. Five of them tested positive for coronavirus


Eleven veteran residents of the Soldiers’ Home in Holyoke, Massachusetts have died -- and five of them tested positive for coronavirus, Holyoke Mayor Alex Morse confirmed to CNN.

Test results are still pending for five of the remaining veterans.

The status of the last veteran who died is unknown, according to Mike Bloomberg, Morse’s chief of staff.

Soldiers’ Home houses 233 residents and is run by the state of Massachusetts. Eleven additional veterans and five staff members have also tested positive for Covid-19, Morse said.

Bennett Walsh, the facility’s superintendent, has been placed on paid administrative leave, effective immediately, according to a statement from Massachusetts Health and Human Services Deputy Secretary Dan Tsai.

Walsh did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

All of the residents at Soldiers’ Home have been isolated and symptomatic employees have been advised to quarantine.


===

So far in the last few months, I've read every single post here, scanned thousands of news articles, papers, and watched hundreds of videos. It is not easy to keep the wall up sometimes.

This simple story, devoid of emotion, will likely be lost like tears in the rain. I've always been struck by that line from the movie Blade Runner. I've never used that quote in any context, yet at this moment it seems to adequately define value lost.

===
.
On my wordpress blog I called it kiz or killed in zone. We have seen multiple examples where elderly people in group situations tend to die at 20 plus percentage rates. The descriptions, dying alone, in a sealed room, well we will see it go through groups living together just like that.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Tennessee nursing home coronavirus outbreak leaves 2 dead; 101 hospitalized

By Danielle Wallace | Fox News

An outbreak of the coronavirus at one Tennessee nursing home left two dead and more than 100 others hospitalized by Sunday – a week after the state banned most visitors at extended-care facilities.

Dozens of residents were evacuated from at the Gallatin Center for Rehabilitation and Healing, located in Sumner County northeast of Nashville, on Friday after testing positive for COVID-19, Gov. Bill Lee said in a press release. National Guard troops arrived Saturday to begin testing all remaining residents and staff at the Gallatin Center.

Residents who tested positive were transported to one of several hospitals within the High Point Health System using an ambulance strike team of EMS professionals from Sumner, Cheatham, and Dickson counties, First Call, and MedicOne.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (right, at podium) speaks to reporters at Memphis International Airport about the state's response to the new coronavirus on Friday, March 27, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz).

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (right, at podium) speaks to reporters at Memphis International Airport about the state's response to the new coronavirus on Friday, March 27, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz).

By Sunday, a total of 42 people had been admitted and remained in isolation at Sumner Regional Medical Center. Two people had died at the hospital after falling ill with COVID-19, the press release said.

Fifty-nine additional patients were to be transported to Sumner Regional Medical Center for admission between Sunday and Monday after their test results came back positive.

Dozens of other non-critical patients were transported to other facilities for care: 14 to Trousdale Medical Center, 12 to Livingston Regional Hospital, and 8 to Riverview Regional Medical Center.

“Our hearts are with the residents and their families and all of those mourning loved ones during this difficult time,” the Sumner Regional Medical Center in Gallatin said in a Facebook post on Sunday. “Sumner Regional Medical Center has activated our emergency plan, which expands our capacity of available beds. We stand ready and will continue serving our patients and community through this crisis.”

Thirty-three members of the Gallatin Center staff tested positive and were asked to self-isolate at home.

The outbreak comes a week after Lee issued an executive order on March 22 banning most visitors at assisted living facilities and nursing homes to prevent the spread of infection.

Unified Command – a joint operation between the Tennessee Department of Health, Tennessee Department of Military and the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency – also facilitated the deep cleaning and disinfecting of the Gallatin Center. The state also worked to support remaining staff and residents who did not test positive for COVID-19.
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
... and fathers turn against sons, and daughters against mothers, brothers against......


Almighty Creator has decided.

we have been weighed and measured...we have come up short.

I hope I am wrong. but....look around. what do you see?
Desertvet2, with all respect, I see a pandemic. It isn't the first; it isn't the last.

We need all the good people we have here to help those who aren't as strong as we are. That includes you, so how about a more positive attitude towards the day after? I don't know what wars you've fought, or the evil that you've seen, or the battles that you might still be fighting, but we need you to help your country get through this. Get strong. You can do this and you are needed. I'm worried about you.
 

Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I just saw another story of how hydroxychoroquine, the Z-pack and zinc sulfate are turning out to be a miracle combination. People are recovering and getting back to health, and there have been 10 million doses, (sorry no link, saw it on FOX) DONATED by Teva and another big pharmaceutical company. Donated. Not sold. Think about that. A month ago this would not have happened. A modern day miracle.

We don't have to pretend that really bad stuff isn't going on. We do need to be prepared for the hardship both physically and mentally, because its coming, but we can reach out towards the positive news, the news about the goodness of mankind, the goodness of Americans, and reach for the hope, instead of getting mired in the darkness.

It's late. It's harder to see the dawn right now. It's alright to speak of our fears to each other here, to share our concerns and thoughts that might be hard to speak of with our families, if we have someone to share with. We need to have a place to vent, and this is it. It's what we're here for, but let's not feed on each others fears and insecurities.

Let's start planning for the day after. What can we do to help out our families, our nation, our economy? And if you are really struggling, reach out for help.

Good night everyone.
 

bev

Has No Life - Lives on TB
This is from a meat world friend...

I just messaged my girl.. She lost 7 patients in 10 hours last night. ARDS. Bubbling pink foam. It’s not normal. Tell me it’s fake.... I don’t know what’s killing them but these People are someone’s family. And they are dead. She works in Mt. Sinai in Manhattan. ICU.

She hasn’t seen her kids in 6 days.. Sleeps in her car in the hospital parking because she doesn’t want to bring anything home

“Bubbling pink foam” = pulmonary edema. Lungs full of fluid/blood.
 

energy_wave

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Dr. Vladimir Zelenko has now treated 699 coronavirus patients with 100% success using Hydroxychloroquine Sulfate, Zinc and Z-Pak

Doctor-Vladimir-Zelenko.jpg

Last Wednesday, we published the success story from Dr. Vladimir Zelenko, a board-certified family practitioner in New York, after he successfully treated 350 coronavirus patients with 100 percent success using a cocktail of drugs: hydroxychloroquine, in combination with azithromycin (Z-Pak), an antibiotic to treat secondary infections, and zinc sulfate. Dr. Zelenko said he saw the symptom of shortness of breath resolved within four to six hours after treatment.

Now, Dr. Zelenko provides updates on the treatment after he successfully treated 699 COVID-19 patients in New York. In an exclusive interview with former New York Mayor, Rudy Giuliani, Dr. Vladmir Zelenko shares the results of his latest study, which showed that out of his 699 patients treated, zero patients died, zero patients intubated, and four hospitalizations.

Dr. Zelenko said the whole treatment costs only $20 over a period of 5 days with 100% success. He defines success as “Not to die.” Dr. Zelenko first posted his Facebook video message last week calling on President Trump to “advise the country that they should be taking this medication.”

There are many other success stories about hydroxychloroquine across the country. Last week, Dr. William Grace, an oncologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said they’ve not had a single death in their hospital because of hydroxychloroquine. “Thanks to hydroxychloroquine, we have not had a death in our hospital,’ Dr. Grace said.

Also, in a study conducted by the National Institute of Health (NIH) also confirmed some of Dr. Dr. Zelenko’s findings. The study by NIH showed that Zinc supplementation decreases the morbidity of lower respiratory tract infection in pediatric patients in the developing world. A second study also conducted by NIH titled: “In Vitro Antiviral Activity and Projection of Optimized Dosing Design of Hydroxychloroquine for the Treatment of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2),” also showed hydroxychloroquine to be more potent in killing the virus off in vitro (in the test tube and not in the body).


 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news...0-intl-hnk/h_250eb7255ad4ab7e55e07f39884f658f



https://www.cnn.com/world/live-news...0-intl-hnk/h_250eb7255ad4ab7e55e07f39884f658f ( PAGE DOWN TO SECOND STORY AT THIS LINK)

The Department of Homeland Security has moved its National Operations Center after an employee tested positive
From CNN's Geneva Sands
The US Department of Homeland Security's National Operations Center has temporarily moved to an alternate location after an employee tested positive for coronavirus, according to a source familiar with the situation.
Deep cleaning of the office is expected to be completed in the next couple days, the source said.
“We can confirm there is a case within the National Operations Center at St. Elizabeth’s campus," a DHS official confirmed to CNN.
"As a precaution, we have temporarily shifted the watch to an alternate facility in order to clean and sanitize the NOC in accordance with existing medical guidelines. This move will not impact operations."
According to DHS, the Operations Center operates 24 hours a day and serves as the "primary, national-level hub for situational awareness, a common operating picture, information fusion, information sharing and executive communications."
The relocation was first reported by Yahoo News.
 

Snettrecker

Contributing Member

Tennessee nursing home coronavirus outbreak leaves 2 dead; 101 hospitalized

By Danielle Wallace | Fox News

An outbreak of the coronavirus at one Tennessee nursing home left two dead and more than 100 others hospitalized by Sunday – a week after the state banned most visitors at extended-care facilities.

Dozens of residents were evacuated from at the Gallatin Center for Rehabilitation and Healing, located in Sumner County northeast of Nashville, on Friday after testing positive for COVID-19, Gov. Bill Lee said in a press release. National Guard troops arrived Saturday to begin testing all remaining residents and staff at the Gallatin Center.

Residents who tested positive were transported to one of several hospitals within the High Point Health System using an ambulance strike team of EMS professionals from Sumner, Cheatham, and Dickson counties, First Call, and MedicOne.

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (right, at podium) speaks to reporters at Memphis International Airport about the state's response to the new coronavirus on Friday, March 27, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz).'s response to the new coronavirus on Friday, March 27, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz).

Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee (right, at podium) speaks to reporters at Memphis International Airport about the state's response to the new coronavirus on Friday, March 27, 2020, in Memphis, Tenn. (AP Photo/Adrian Sainz).

By Sunday, a total of 42 people had been admitted and remained in isolation at Sumner Regional Medical Center. Two people had died at the hospital after falling ill with COVID-19, the press release said.

Fifty-nine additional patients were to be transported to Sumner Regional Medical Center for admission between Sunday and Monday after their test results came back positive.

Dozens of other non-critical patients were transported to other facilities for care: 14 to Trousdale Medical Center, 12 to Livingston Regional Hospital, and 8 to Riverview Regional Medical Center.

“Our hearts are with the residents and their families and all of those mourning loved ones during this difficult time,” the Sumner Regional Medical Center in Gallatin said in a Facebook post on Sunday. “Sumner Regional Medical Center has activated our emergency plan, which expands our capacity of available beds. We stand ready and will continue serving our patients and community through this crisis.”

Thirty-three members of the Gallatin Center staff tested positive and were asked to self-isolate at home.

The outbreak comes a week after Lee issued an executive order on March 22 banning most visitors at assisted living facilities and nursing homes to prevent the spread of infection.

Unified Command – a joint operation between the Tennessee Department of Health, Tennessee Department of Military and the Tennessee Emergency Management Agency – also facilitated the deep cleaning and disinfecting of the Gallatin Center. The state also worked to support remaining staff and residents who did not test positive for COVID-19.
I don't like this... It hits right at home. Guess I'll find out first hand, when I go to work Wed night, how working with Covid patients really is.
 

DragonBurrow

Contributing Member
This will untie us from the middle east. They are opening the valves at the worst possible time. **** Saudi Arabia. We can fend for ourselves now. Don't buy another drop.
I liked the plan I saw early on to take advantage of their nonsense and double our reserves on the crazy low prices and then shut off buying forever. Thanks for the preps but we got it from here.
 
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