CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8lzFDgedVBg
5:27 min
WILL SPORTS COME BACK SOON? How professional leagues can continue to play amid coronavirus pandemic
•May 31, 2020
Glenn Beck

Is it time for sports to make a comeback despite the continuing coronavirus pandemic? Because the NBA and MLS have given Americans some reason to hope -- both leagues are reportedly in discussion with Disney to continue seasons at the ESPN sports complex, where teams can play with little interaction with the outside public. But, there are still a lot of questions that would need to be answered first. Like, what WOULD happen if LeBron James suddenly became ill during the NBA Finals?
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXtY_3A0WN8
9:11 min
Coronavirus Pandemic Update 77: Remdesivir Update; COVID-19 in Mexico
Premiered 53 minutes ago


MedCram - Medical Lectures Explained CLEARLY

COVID-19 Update 77 with Roger Seheult, MD. All coronavirus updates available free at our website https://www.medcram.com/courses/coron... (This video was recorded on May 31, 2020)

------------------------- Links referenced in this video: Johns Hopkins Tracker - https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html Worldometer https://www.worldometers.info/coronav... Medical News Today - https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/arti... CNN - https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/27/busine... NEJM - https://www.nejm.org/doi/pdf/10.1056/... NBC - https://nbcpalmsprings.com/2020/05/28... Mexico News Daily - https://mexiconewsdaily.com/news/coro... ---------------------------------------

 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

COVID-19 Data for Pennsylvania*
* Map, tables, case counts and deaths last updated at 12:00 p.m. on 5/31/2020
Source: Pennsylvania National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (PA-NEDSS) as of 12:00 a.m. on 5/31/2020
Page last updated: 12:00 p.m. on 5/31/2020


View the beta version of the Pennsylvania COVID-19 Dashboard.



Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives
Total Cases*DeathsNegative**Recovered***
71,9265,555383,11167%


* Total case counts include confirmed and probable cases.
** Negative case data only includes negative PCR tests. Negative case data does not include negative antibody tests.
*** Individuals who have recovered is determined using a calculation, similar to what is being done by several other states. If a case has not been reported as a death, and it is more than 30 days past the date of their first positive test (or onset of symptoms) then an individual is considered recovered.


Confirmed CasesProbable Case by Definition and High-Risk ExposureProbable Case by Serology Test and Either Symptoms or High-Risk Exposure
69,9162,010620


Hospital Data
Trajectory Animations


Positive Cases by Age Range to Date
Age RangePercent of Cases*
0-4< 1%
5-12< 1%
13-182%
19-246%
25-4937%
50-6425%
65+28%
* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding


Hospitalization Rates by Age Range to Date


Age RangePercent of Cases*
0-4< 1%
5-12< 1%
13-18< 1%
19-241%
25-4916%
50-6426%
65+56%


* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding


Death Data



County Case Counts to Date
CountyTotal CasesNegatives
Adams2513098
Allegheny191130488
Armstrong621250
Beaver5903791
Bedford 39769
Berks406112272
Blair502805
Bradford461569
Bucks508220119
Butler2303742
Cambria573872
Cameron2128
Carbon2352387
Centre1532135
Chester272913092
Clarion27679
Clearfield391117
Clinton56602
Columbia3481364
Crawford291087
Cumberland6295639
Dauphin127710168
Delaware646121311
Elk6329
Erie2795068
Fayette953362
Forest786
Franklin7745212
Fulton15228
Greene27795
Huntingdon230872
Indiana911434
Jefferson9526
Juniata95345
Lackawanna15476284
Lancaster316116043
Lawrence801355
Lebanon9694589
Lehigh376514395
Luzerne273611150
Lycoming1642293
McKean12617
Mercer1071631
Mifflin591248
Monroe13195991
Montgomery706135108
Montour523259
Northampton308313567
Northumberland1921441
Perry59776
Philadelphia1842659136
Pike4762030
Potter4149
Schuylkill6315053
Snyder45410
Somerset381855
Sullivan397
Susquehanna109810
Tioga17571
Union591174
Venango9559
Warren3391
Washington1394503
Wayne1191046
Westmoreland4499499
Wyoming34497
York100713843


Incidence by County


Incidence%20by%20County.png

Incidence is calculated by dividing the current number of confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases reported to the Department by the 2018 county population data available from the Bureau of Health Statistics. The counties are divided into 6 relatively equally-sized groups based on their incidence rate (i.e. sestiles). Cases are determined using a national COVID-19 case definition. There currently is no way to estimate the true number of infected persons. Incidence rates are based on the number of known cases, not the number of true infected persons.


Case Counts by Sex to Date



SexPositive Cases Percent of Cases*
Female39,43255%
Male31,78544%
Neither30%
Not reported7061%
* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding

Case Counts by Race to Date*



RacePositive CasesPercent of Cases**
African American/Black877712%
Asian10351%
White19,84728%
Other4371%
Not reported41,83058%
* 58% of race is not reported. Little data is available on ethnicity.
** Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding



Case Counts by Region to Date



RegionPositiveNegativeInconclusive
Northcentral 10631506417
Northeast1311458157165
Northwest5161357320
Southcentral52644959281
Southeast46502182134965
Southwest34576459146

EpiCurve by Region


EpiCurve%20by%20Region.png

Case counts are displayed by the date that the cases were first reported to the PA-NEDSS surveillance system. Case counts by date of report can vary significantly from day to day for a variety of reasons. In addition to changes due to actual changes in disease incidence, trends are strongly influenced by testing patterns (who gets tested and why), testing availability, lab analysis backlogs, lab reporting delays, new labs joining our electronic laboratory reporting system, mass screenings, etc. Trends need to be sustained for at least 2-3 weeks before any conclusions can be made regarding the progress of the pandemic.

COVID-19 Cases Associated with Nursing Homes and Personal Care Homes to Date
This data represents long-term care facilities in Pennsylvania, including Department of Health and Department of Human Services regulated facilities.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kkqm-Y_EFKU
8:30 min
Gottlieb warns of uptick in coronavirus infections after widespread protests
•May 31, 2020

Face the Nation
Former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb cautioned against the potential spread of coronavirus as thousands of people take to the streets to demonstrate.

_____________________________
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=roITySdH55A
2:47 min
100,000: Honoring the sobering milestone of COVID's impact
•May 31, 2020



Face the Nation

"Face the Nation" moderator Margaret Brennan on the stunning death toll COVID-19 has created across the world.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRA1LTsyZqA
2:08 min
Attendee At Packed Memorial Day Gathering Tests Positive For Coronavirus | NBC Nightly News
•May 30, 2020

NBC News

Hundreds were possibly exposed to coronavirus after someone at a crowded pool party at Missouri’s Lake of the Ozarks tested positive for COVID-19. States continue to reopen, with some areas seeing a surge in cases and others preparing for a possible second spike.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qsp6PikjDOw
2:56 min
Exclusive: Chinese scientists '99% confident' their coronavirus vaccine will work
•May 29, 2020

Sky News [UK]

Chinese scientists working on a COVID-19 vaccine have told Sky News they are "99%" sure it will be effective. Sinovac, a Beijing-based biotech company, currently has its coronavirus vaccine in stage 2 trials, with more than 1,000 volunteers participating. Our China Correspondent Tom Cheshire has visited the labs in Beijing and has this report.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LN488rmfmnA
2:40 min
New York City Preparing To Reopen After Coronavirus Lockdown | TODAY
•May 30, 2020

TODAY

New York City could be days away from reopening as Mayor Bill de Blasio announced resources to help with the transition. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said, “We’re on track to open on June 8. Phase one should bring back about 400,000 employees back to work.” NBC’s Kathy Park reports for Weekend TODAY.

__________________________

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4M1H4htGkRk
33:30 min
Gov. Andrew Cuomo Updates on NY Coronavirus Response | NBC New York
•Streamed live 4 hours ago


NBC New York

NY Gov. Andrew Cuomo updates on the state's response to the coronavirus pandemic.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=57mR3bFE2tE
4:39 min
Coronavirus: Game reserve in South Africa threatened by poachers as tourism disappears
•May 31, 2020

Sky News
A collapse in tourism due to coronavirus lockdown measures is threatening the existence of the Dinokeng Game Reserve, a conservation project like no other.

____________________________

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkyZpxLzStA
13:24 min
Africa and the coronavirus challenge: The impact of Covid-19 on the continent
•May 28, 2020

FRANCE 24 English

As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to spread in Africa, our correspondents filed a series of reports and interviews from across the continent. From Cameroon to South Africa, from Kenya to Tunisia and Madagascar, they investigate how the pandemic is evolving. Is Africa more resistant to the virus? How are lockdowns ending? And is social distancing possible?
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jilQJZvKkkE
27:46 min
CA Economic Recovery, Navajo Nation and COVID-19, Future of Cities
•May 30, 2020


KQED News

California’s Long Road to Economic Recovery This week, Gov. Gavin Newsom eased restrictions on additional businesses. Pending approval from county health departments, retailers can now reopen for in-person shopping but with limits on occupancy and face mask requirements for staff and customers. Barbershops and nail salons can also now reopen pending similar approval and protocols in place.

Many businesses, however, remain shuttered, especially in regions hard hit by the pandemic, such as in the Bay Area and Los Angeles. California lawmakers must now grapple with a $54 billion state deficit, with millions of residents out of work, tax revenues plummeting and uncertainty mounting about California’s economic future. Guest: Tom Steyer, co-chair, Governor’s Task Force on Business and Jobs Recovery

UCSF Doctors and Nurses Help Navajo Nation Fight COVID-19 Straddling Arizona, New Mexico and Utah, the Navajo Nation now has the highest rate of coronavirus infection per capita in the country. With a population of roughly 175,000 tribal members living in an area the size of West Virginia, it’s the second-largest federally recognized tribe in the U.S. It’s also an area rife with poverty, where 30% of residents lack access to running water and depend on federally provided health care services. In response to the pandemic, authorities have imposed 57-hour weekend lockdowns and ordered residents to wear face coverings in public. Since late April, teams of volunteer doctors and nurses from UCSF have been traveling to the Navajo Nation to treat COVID-19 patients in this vulnerable community.

Guest: Dr. Sriram Shamasunder, associate professor of medicine, UCSF Future of Cities Working from home has become the new norm for many in the age of coronavirus. Some tech companies, like Twitter and Square, are now allowing their employees to work from home indefinitely. Last week, Facebook said up to half of its 48,000 employees could be working remotely in the next five to 10 years. And as the ability to work away from the office becomes more robust, many will have different choices about where to live. But will cities continue to thrive in this new reality, or will they empty out, driven in part by fears of another pandemic outbreak? Guest: Molly Turner, co-host, Technopolis podcast and lecturer, UC Berkeley Haas School of Business
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....

United States

Coronavirus Cases----------------1,837,170

Deaths-------------------------------106,195

Recovered---------------------------599,867


And the totals continue to increase.

How many days to get to 2,000,000 tested cases and a 120,000 plus dead?

Texican....
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
Since we went to all-riot-all-the-time, I may have missed this if it was posted already. If so, apologies for the dup.
=====================


Map of the Day: US counties divided by one-third of COVID deaths

Carpe Diem

Mark J. Perry
Mark J. Perry
@Mark_J_Perry

May 25, 2020



The map above (click to enlarge) shows three geographical regions of the US by counties that each account for one-third of the COVID-19 deaths as of about May 8:
  • The red region shows the area of the US that represents one-third of COVID deaths in counties that account for only 4% of the US population.
  • The yellow region shows the area that represents one-third of COVID deaths in counties that account for only 11% of the US population.
  • The green area shows the area that represents one-third of COVID deaths in counties that account for 85% of the US population.
As I reported on CD a few days ago on COVID deaths by US states:
  • More than 40% of the 96,596 COVID-19 deaths as of May 22 have occurred in two states: New York (28,900) and New Jersey (11,081).
  • Nearly half (48%) of COVID-19 deaths have occurred in three states: New York (29.9%), New Jersey (11.5%), Massachusetts (6.4%).
MP: The map above of COVID deaths by US county shows a much higher level of granularity than my recent map of deaths by state and illustrates graphically the disproportionate concentration of COVID deaths in selected counties in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Illinois (Chicago area) and Michigan (Detroit area). Interestingly, two-thirds of COVID deaths in the US have occurred in counties that represent only 15% of the US population.
==========

Expandable version-

 

Richard

TB Fanatic
I am not sure whether this is the right thread to use but a few weeks ago I was hit by various symptoms which I could not identify, I posted on this thread accordingly.
Severe continuous headache
Jaw ache
Flu symptoms
Fatigue
Lack of appetite etc
Later swollen temporal arteries, pain on top of head and neck, stiff muscles in legs etc

Turns out it was temporal arteritis which I self diagnosed to a Dr eventually at a suggestion of a friend.

I am now taking steroids etc and supplements, high dose for two weeks then another assessment. I had to admit myself to Accident and Emergency and was initially mis-prescribed ibuprofen by one particular hospital and a very sceptical Dr who wasn't listening to me. I admitted myself a few days later to another NHS hospital where I received proper treatment. I have had CT scans which are clear and an ophthalmic examination.
Anyhow the lesson is that NHS hospitals, Drs and nurses are of very inconsistent quality, some good, bad or indifferent. I will not be re-admitting myself to the hospital in question and I'm thinking of making a complaint. Anyhow more analysis later, this post will be edited.
 
Last edited:

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
I am not sure whether this is the right thread to use but a few weeks ago I was hit by various symptoms which I could not identify, I posted on this thread accordingly.
Severe continuous headache
Jaw ache
Flu symptoms
Fatigue
Lack of appetite etc
Later swollen temporal arteries, pain on top of head and neck, stiff muscles in legs etc

Turns out it was temporal arteritis which I self diagnosed to a Dr eventually at a suggestion of a friend.

I am now taking steroids etc and supplements, high dose for two weeks then another assessment. I had to admit myself to Accident and Emergency and was initially mis-prescribed ibuprofen by one particular hospital and a very sceptical Dr who wasn't listening to me. I admitted myself a few days later to another NHS hospital where I received proper treatment. I have had CT scans which are clear and an ophthalmic examination.
Anyhow the lesson is that NHS hospitals, Drs and nurses are of very inconsistent quality, some good, bad or indifferent. I will not be re-admitting myself to the hospital in question an I'm thinking of making a complaint. Anyhow more analysis later.

I'm sorry you are still suffering, but glad you figured it out and are taking what you need to take to correct the situation. It's very frustrating to have doctors not listen to you or dismiss your complaint. I'm glad you finally found a good one. Prayers added for your recovery.

HD
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Don’t use ‘deaths of despair’ as rationale for reopening the country too soon
By Megan L. Ranney and Jessica Gold
May 31, 2020

Following congressional testimony last week about frontline workers’ experiences during the Covid-19 epidemic, members of the U.S. House of Representatives raised the specter of a rise in “deaths of despair” due to Covid-19 shutdowns. They implied that the country had a moral obligation to reopen quickly, if only to avoid current and future deaths from suicide, homicide, opioids, and alcohol.

A comment by a trauma physician in California that his hospital had seen “a year’s worth of suicide attempts in four weeks” went viral this week, picked up by Fox News and presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway to support the argument to reopen the country, even though the remark was incorrect and there’s been no rise in suicide deaths in his county this year.

I spoke to the California doctor who claimed his hospital had seen “a years worth of suicide attempts” in four weeks—a talking point that’s been re-reported unquestioningly in conservative media in the past 5 days.
He says it wasn’t accurate
— Salvador Hernandez (@SalHernandez) May 28, 2020

As an emergency physician and a psychiatrist, we have very real concerns about the well-being of our communities and our neighbors. We are the ones who are first to see the rise in anxiety and stress and changes in physical and mental health in our communities.

We also know that tying deaths of despair directly to measures being used to reduce the spread of Covid-19 is, simply, wrong.

Deaths of despair are tragic and preventable. But they are not new. The label was first used in 2017 by two economists to describe the increase in U.S. deaths from suicide, overdose, and alcohol in the 2010s. Anne Case and Angus Deaton wrote that these deaths reflected rising hopelessness and inequity among American society. A series of investigations since have corroborated their findings. All three types of death have been on the increase among all Americans for the past decade, in parallel with a decadelong rise in hopelessness, inequity, and easy availability of lethal means. Where was the alarm from these politicians then?

We do not actually know that these deaths are increasing during the Covid-19 pandemic. Police and crisis hotlines may — or may not — be receiving extra calls for domestic violence and child abuse. Firearm homicide rates are staying steady. Suicides are certainly occurring, but there is no evidence to date that their rate is on the rise (and we may not know the impact of the pandemic on suicide for years to come). Despite ample evidence that anxiety is increasing during the pandemic, anxiety alone is rarely a driver for suicide. It is not even a risk factor for it.

Right now it is all too easy to blame every tragedy on Covid-19. Science warns us, however, not to make this fundamental error of attribution.

Projections about future increases are also misleading. Earlier this month, a report by the Well Being Trust projected that these categories of deaths would likely skyrocket during the Covid-19 pandemic due to unemployment, isolation, and uncertainty. We know that the economy is deeply tied to physical and mental health. Yet these projections are based on data from the Great Recession, meaning the models weren’t able to factor in the unique aspects of what is happening today, such as how new technologies make possible increased virtual social connection and support.

And as the authors of the Well Being Trust report acknowledge, even if the models are correct, they are mutable. An increase in suicide, homicide, and deaths from alcohol and opioids is not a foregone conclusion. A complex constellation of risk factors, only a few of which are directly tied to Covid-19, are known to drive these tragic deaths. We have evidence-based interventions that can reduce the rates of many of the risk factors for all of these deaths whether or not the country is practicing social distancing, hand-washing, and mask wearing.

It is also wrong to imply that reopening the country will, in and of itself, stop deaths of despair. Jobs may or may not rebound when social distancing rules are relaxed. Much of the decline in travel and eating in restaurants predated formal rules about social distancing. Whether unemployment leads to desperation depends on whether we as a society feed and clothe those without incomes. Newly purchased firearms will still be in people’s houses and all too easy to use in a moment of despair even when we are not social distancing.

If politicians really care so much about vulnerable citizens, where were they a year ago, or five years ago, when those in the public health community began to raise the alarm about the rising tide of these deaths? And where are they now, in addressing the underlying social issues that drive despair and that won’t be fixed by reopening?

We would love nothing more than to see these politicians advocating for community cohesion; helping provide personal protective equipment for frontline health care workers; creating new tools to help reduce hunger; helping women have economic independence so they can leave abusive partners; and funding novel solutions to isolation and loneliness. But, ironically, those who are quickest to cite deaths of despair as a reason to reopen the country are too often the last to vote to fund research and services that could prevent them.

Whether these kinds of deaths increase or decrease is up to us. But reopening won’t solve what put us in this situation. As individual citizens, we can look out for our neighbors. We can learn the warning signs for mental health disorders and ask for help. But to truly create change, the government needs to fund the research to help us all do better — and fund the essential social supports and treatment that we know make a difference.

We have been through mass casualties before. And we have seen great ideas fall victim to inertia, thoughts, and prayers. To avert deaths of despair, evidence-driven actions speak louder than words.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
Referred to above:

(fair use applies)

This Doctor Said His Hospital Had Seen "A Year's Worth Of Suicide Attempts" In Four Weeks Because Of The Coronavirus Lockdowns. That Wasn't True.

"If you contextualize in concrete numbers fashion, it's not accurate."


Posted on May 27, 2020, at 7:48 p.m. ET

It was a local news report focusing on mental health during the pandemic, but the comments from a hospital's head of trauma quickly caught the attention of conservative media and commentators arguing for the economy to be reopened and stay-at-home orders to be lifted.

"I mean, we've seen a year's worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks," Dr. Mike deBoisblanc, head of trauma at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, California, told ABC7 on Thursday. "We've never seen numbers like this in such a short period of time."

It seemed to be the kind of data that backed up President Donald Trump's ominous prediction from March: that shutting down the US economy to prevent the spread of the coronavirus would result in "suicide by the thousands."

The doctor's comments quickly spread online during the holiday weekend, with outlets like the New York Post, Fox News, the Washington Examiner, and the Blaze unquestioningly citing the local TV report. It was retweeted by presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway and Fox News host Laura Ingraham, whose followers also shared it. By Tuesday evening, it was cited repeatedly on air on Fox News.

The false claim that a CA hospital had seen "a year's worth of suicide attempts" in 4 weeks was repeated unquestioningly at least 3 times on Fox News yesterday, first by Brian Kilmeade who wrongly called it a "study" and also claimed it was ALL of California on Fox and Friends
But in an interview with BuzzFeed News, deBoisblanc said his comment about the hospital seeing "a year's worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks" was inaccurate. He added that at the time he didn't know what the true numbers were. Many of his other comments, which compared the number of deaths from COVID-19 to suicides, "were taken a bit out of context," he said.

Numbers provided by the hospital and the coroner's office also show that the "sharp rise" in suicides initially claimed by deBoisblanc, which alarmed political pundits criticizing quarantine orders, were either overblown or outright false.

According to the hospital, it has seen five suicide deaths during the county's shelter-in-place order, compared to two suicide deaths during the same period last year. In general, Contra Costa County sees about 100 suicide deaths per year, and officials said that that's remained stable so far in 2020.

"If you look at it from a contextual standpoint, I think it's accurate," deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News when asked whether the number of suicide attempts treated at the hospital was actually unprecedented. "If you contextualize in concrete numbers fashion, it's not accurate."

The original news story about a "spike" in suicides did not cite any data nor point to any numbers indicating an alarming trend.

"Unfortunately, we have the data to prove it," deBoisblanc told ABC7, talking about the impact stay-at-home orders have had on mental health. When he later spoke to BuzzFeed News, he admitted that there was no data directly linking the suicide attempts seen at the hospital to the lockdowns.

According to a statement released by the hospital, staff did see a slight increase in self-inflicted injuries between March 1 and May 8, with 13 incidents reported this year (compared to eight during the same time period last year).

The hospital has also seen one more suicide case than deaths from COVID-19, but deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News the difference didn't point to a trend, nor did it illustrate the toll the pandemic has taken on the community's mental health.

John Muir Medical Center is Contra Costa's trauma center, meaning emergency injuries and trauma, such as many suicide attempts, from all over the county with 1.1 million residents are most likely directed there. COVID-19 cases, on the other hand, have been more evenly distributed across all of the county's hospitals, a move medical officials took at the beginning of the pandemic to prevent overwhelming a single facility.

"We're the county's trauma center, so [our numbers] are skewed," deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News.

In fact, according to the Contra Costa County Coroner's Office, the number of suicides recorded in the Northern California county has remained relatively stable.

Since March, when quarantine began, the county has seen 26 deaths that were determined to be suicides. Last year, the county saw 30 suicides between March and May.

As of the day the ABC7 report was published, Contra Costa County had seen 36 deaths that were attributed to COVID-19.
DeBoisblanc also said despite the comparison in the original article, it was not his intention to compare suicides to COVID-19 deaths. Instead, he said, it was to highlight the need to address mental health issues during the pandemic.

"We're not in a competition in what disease is worse. That was never the intent," he told BuzzFeed News. "Just because we didn't get hit hard here [with COVID-19 cases] doesn't mean it's not a serious disease. That was not the intention."

But once the story was published, it was quickly picked up by outlets like the Washington Examiner, RT, the Blaze, and Fox News.

Like deBoisblanc during his initial interview, commentators called for the lifting of restrictions on businesses, which health officials have said have been key to reducing the infection rate of the novel coronavirus.

SWELL, LET'S STICK WITH THIS PLAN - Doctors: Suicides Outpace Coronavirus Deaths at Northern California Hospital During Lockdown Doctors: Suicides Outpace Coronavirus Deaths at Northern California Hospital During Lockdown via @BreitbartNews
05:31 PM - 23 May 2020

California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns
California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns

On Tuesday morning, Fox News host Brian Kilmeade cited the ABC7 report, while mistakenly calling it a "study."

"You see this study out in California from this doctor that said more people have died from suicide in California than have actually died from the coronavirus," Kilmeade wrongly said on Fox & Friends.

(Even in his original comments, deBoisblanc did not refer to suicides in the entire state of California, just those at the one hospital.)

Later the same day, Sen. John Barrasso cited the report on Fox News' Bill Hemmer Reports, saying he had brought the issue up with President Trump.

"In California, in the Bay Area, one hospital reports four times as many suicide attempts in the last four weeks than they had all last year," he said erroneously.

That incorrect piece of data continued to flow into the evening portion of the network's shows, repeated by Victor Davis Hanson, a fellow at the conservative think tank Hoover Institution, on The Ingraham Angle with Laura Ingraham.
Ingraham herself shared the story over the weekend, which was retweeted thousands of times.

"We know in Northern California suicides are now more than deaths to the virus," Hanson said incorrectly. "The data is coming in of the medical cost of being on lockdown in addition to the economic cost — and that's not faith-based; that's actual data."
Laura Ingraham RTed the story last week, then one of her guests Tuesday wrongly said "Northern California suicides are now more than deaths to the virus," unquestioningly. That was false

But the point that was repeated on social media and Fox News was not based on actual data. DeBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News he had not received information from the county coroner, nor did he look at the hospital's own numbers until after he had conducted his interview with ABC7.

Instead, he said, part of his comments were coming from his impression on the front lines of the hospital's trauma center, which included a recent "hard week" where he and other doctors and nurses saw a rash of intentional injuries, including suicide attempts.

"When you see a young person take their life, it's a big deal," he said. "The goal of this was to bring awareness to people and say there's resources available."

DeBoisblanc said he still supports lifting the restrictions in Contra Costa County. Although there is no direct evidence linking suicides to the lockdown orders or the pandemic, he believes they are connected.

"I think there is some association," he said. "We know during times of recession and unemployment there's more mental illness, there's more suicide. We follow these trends."

In a statement, the John Muir Health system would not draw such a direct line of causation between the two issues.
"We know that there are a number of reasons for what we are experiencing at Walnut Creek Medical Center and that it is a complex issue that can't be explained by any one factor," the statement read.

The hospital also noted it was continuing to follow the county's shelter-in-place order.

"We realize there are a number of opinions on the topic of Shelter-in-Place, including our medical staff," the statement said. "John Muir Health encourage our physicians and staff to participate constructively in these important discussions."

DeBoisblanc added that he hopes his message — that people who need help for their mental health should seek out resources — is not lost.

"I'm not looking for any fame, and I do want the message out there that this is a tough time for many people, and people are making permanent decisions based on a temporary thing," he said. "These actions of county health departments, they do have impacts on populations, and you need to take that into consideration."

The increase in self-inflicted injuries at the hospital (from 8 last year to 13 this year) is still alarming, he said.
But would it be considered "unprecedented"?

"When you put the numbers down, it's probably not," he said.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

NHL plans to test players for COVID-19 daily if games resume
Published 7 hours ago

Nick Foligno watches Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine’s coronavirus briefings and appreciates the value of the information.

It is part of the reason the Columbus captain supports NHL players undergoing daily testing if the season resumes.

“Testing is a must because it’s the only way you’re going to know and feel confident every time you step on the ice that everyone is in the same boat as you and you can play the game to the best of your ability,” Foligno said.

The first major North American professional sports league to announce a format for its potential return to competition also has a comprehensive COVID-19 testing strategy. There are screening protocols in place for voluntary workouts and training camp in the hands of individual teams. Deputy Commissioner Bill Daly also said the NHL plans to test all players every day when games start happening.

“We will have a rigorous daily testing protocol where players are tested every evening and those results are obtained before they would leave their hotel rooms the next morning, so we’ll know if we have a positive test and whether the player has to self-quarantine himself as a result of that positive test,” Daly said. “It’s expensive, but we think it’s really a foundational element of what we’re trying to accomplish.”

Each test costs approximately $125, the league says, and Commissioner Gary Bettman estimated 25,000-35,000 will be needed to get through the playoffs — a price tag, he concedes, of “millions of dollars.” But athletes have plenty of concerns about risking their health to get back to work, and regular testing is something players insisted on.

“You need testing at a level sufficient to be confident that you’re going to be on top of anything which might happen,” NHL Players’ Association executive director Don Fehr said. “If that turns out to be daily, and that’s available, that’s OK. That would be good. If it turns out that that’s not quite what we need and we can get by with a little less, that’s OK.”

Infectious disease expert Dr. Amesh Adalja of the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security isn’t quite sure how often athletes should be tested to ensure they are virus-free. He said testing in German soccer will help other leagues determine the right frequency, which also depends on the type of quarantine and exposure risks players will have.

“We do know that people that have increased contact with each other are going to have more opportunity to spread the virus, and hockey is one of the sports where individuals do have a lot of contact with each other,” Adalja said. “I would say that they’re going to have to be more aggressive than other leagues in terms of testing.”

While players vary on their general concern about contracting the virus by resuming the season, many seem to be on board with frequent testing.

“Having it each and every day begins to limit the potential of getting the virus,” Edmonton player representative Darnell Nurse said. “If that’s what it takes, that’s what the professionals who are in this field and tackle these challenges each and every day, if that’s what they believe is the best option, then that’s the way you have to go.”

Teammate Connor McDavid and Toronto captain John Tavares, who are members of the NHL/NHLPA Return to Play committee, deferred to experts on how often players should be tested. McDavid added, “I think you have to get tested in a time like this, and you want to get tested as frequently as you can to catch it right away.”

Daly said one person testing positive for the coronavirus would not necessarily mean another pause for the NHL. Leaguewide testing done daily would allow the isolation of an infected player, coach or staff member before the start of an outbreak.

“If one guy tests positive, I see it as unlikely that other guys don’t test positive, but in assessing everybody I have to believe that they’ll probably find it,” Montreal player rep Paul Byron said. “What would happen if half your team or four or five or six guys test positive at one time?”

League and team officials have stressed they would only use thousands of tests if that number does not endanger the supply for the general public, a concern Adalja broached for all sports. Bettman said medical experts told the NHL that by the time games could resume this summer, 25,000-30,000 would be “a relatively insignificant number."

Adalja said a league partnering with a national chain for testing could keep it from interfering with the public supply, though it is difficult to predict what availability will be like in late summer. He also said the cost and availability depends on whether the NHL would use more expensive but more reliable PCR tests — the nose swabs — or rapid antigen tests that can have less sensitivity.

Protocols for voluntary workouts and training camps require PCR testing where available, and Daly said the NHL continues to study the potential use of antigen testing.

Part of the decision on which cities host games is the amount of COVID-19 present in the community. Bettman hopes the combination of going to a place with less of it, testing frequently, and putting players in a quarantine “bubble” of sorts means it’s less likely for anyone to contract it.

The players putting faith in the league to keep them healthy hope that turns out to be correct.

“Staying on top of everyone is going to be a good challenge for our training staff, and the onus on the players in making sure everyone’s safe,” Carolina captain Jordan Staal said. “It’s going to be different. It’s going to be some interesting hurdles but hopefully, if we get back on the ice, I’m sure the guys will find a way to jump through them.”
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Big-city Dems who had imposed strict coronavirus lockdowns now let George Floyd rioters flout rules
By Gregg Re | Fox News
Published 13 hours ago | Last Update 9 hours ago

The coronavirus lockdown is seemingly down and out, as many Democrats in charge of big cities -- including several who once insisted on strict quarantine measures -- line up to champion the nationwide mass demonstrations over the in-custody death of George Floyd, sans social distancing.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo lashed out at protesters calling to reopen the state earlier this month, saying at a news conference, "you have no right to jeopardize my health ... and my children's health and your children's health." Cuomo's directives have been enforced throughout the state: A New York City tanning salon owner told Fox News he was fined $1,000 for reopening briefly last week, calling the situation "insane" and saying he already was "broke."

On Friday, though, Cuomo said he "stands" with those defying stay-at-home orders: "Nobody is sanctioning the arson, and the thuggery and the burglaries, but the protesters and the anger and the fear and the frustration? Yes. Yes, and the demand is for justice."

In April, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio told the Jewish community that "the time for warnings has passed" after he said a funeral gathering had violated social distancing guidelines. On Sunday, the mayor asserted, "We have always honored non-violent protests."

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, meanwhile, had warned that in-person worship services would be a "public-health disaster," disregarding constituents' concerns that he was violating their First Amendment rights. Now, his administration has been distributing masks to rioters, even though public gatherings of 10 or more are still ostensibly banned. Frey also allowed a police station to burn, saying it was necessary to protect police and rioters.

"The city encourages everyone to exercise caution to stay safe while participating in demonstrations, including wearing masks and physical distancing as much as possible to prevent the spread of COVID-19," a news release read. "The city has made hundreds of masks available to protesters this week."

The mayor of Washington D.C., Muriel Bowser, vowed $5,000 fines or 90 days in jail for anyone violating stay-at-home orders. This weekend, though, Bowser defended the protests: "We are grieving hundreds of years of institutional racism. ... People are tired, sad, angry and desperate for change." An angry mob of rioters in the city turned its rage on a Fox News crew early Saturday, chasing and pummeling the journalists outside the White House in a harrowing scene captured on video.

And, Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti threatened in March to cut power and water for businesses that reopened, saying he wanted to punish "irresponsible and selfish" behavior. In recent days, he has encouraged mass gatherings, even as he condemned violence. "I will always protect Angelenos' right to make their voices heard — and we can lead the movement against racism without fear of violence or vandalism," he said.

These officials were just some of the most prominent politicans to have adopted strikingly different rhetoric on mass gatherings over Floyd's death, including several protests that have triggered property damage, injuries, beatings, and several deaths. The mayor of Atlanta, Keisha Lance Bottoms, has been one of the few politicians to keep up her coronavirus admonitions. "If you were out protesting last night, you probably need to go get a COVID test this week," she told CNN on Sunday. "There is still a pandemic in America that’s killing black and brown people at higher numbers."

Although some Democrats, including Garcetti, have since welcomed the support of the National Guard to quell the demonstrations, they explicitly noted they were doing so to combat "destruction" and "vandalism" -- not widespread defiance of stay-at-home orders.

Four officers have been fired in the Floyd case, and one has been arrested and charged. A video showed the arrested officer kneeling on Floyd for several minutes as he screamed that he could not breathe, although an initial medical examiner's report found "no physical findings that support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation" -- and cited Floyd's "underlying health conditions including coronary artery disease and hypertensive heart disease," as well as the "potential intoxicants" in his system.

"Democratic elected officials have now all-but destroyed any remaining political deference in terms of policies needed to enforce social distancing, limit crowd size and the like," journalist Michael Tracey said.

He also suggested the protests obfuscated key data, pointing to statistics from The Washington Post showing that a total of 41 unarmed people were shot and killed by U.S. police in 2019 -- 19 of them white, nine black and nine Hispanic. Others noted that the "Grim Reaper" who patrolled Florida's beaches to shame swimmers and sunbathers amid the pandemic was nowhere to be seen at the protests.

"WE LITERALLY STAYED IN OUR HOUSES FOR A MONTH BECAUSE OF FEAR OF A VIRUS WITH A 99.74% SURVIVAL RATE AND NOW ARE SUPPOSED TO IGNORE NATIONAL COP-KILLING RIOTS?!!" Kentucky State political science professor Wilfred Reilly tweeted. "SERIOUS question, as re these riots - where are all these Governors that gave daily three hour press conferences about whether you could walk down the beach or visit your dying relatives? Is the COVID-19 crisis over?"

There have been other indicators that officials' concerns about the coronavirus were overblown. Warnings from Democrats that the recent Wisconsin election would lead to a spike in coronavirus cases, for example, proved unfounded. ("I don’t think that the in-person election led to a major effect, to my surprise. I expected it,” infectious diseases expert Oguzhan Alagoz said.)

Reilly added: "The way you create a narrative is to isolate and publicize every incident of the phenomenon you're focused on. Black: white/inter-racial violent crime is 5% of crime (600K cases/12M crimes), and 80% of THAT is Black on white. Wouldn't think that from the papers, wouldja?"

Scattered efforts by the Democrats to condemn some of the protesters have relied on inaccurate information and unfounded assertions that contradict available data and video evidence. For instance, former Obama National Security Advisor Susan Rice appeared to blame the Russians for the protests on Sunday, saying the violence was right out of their "playbook" and that they're "probably" involved.

Rice also falsely claimed that Trump had called white supremacists "very fine people," which has been repeatedly debunked. Like Rice, Trump specifically made a distinction between peaceful political protesters and white supremacists, whom Trump said he condemned "totally." ("Very fine people" were protesting the censorship and removal of a Civil War statue, Trump said.)

And, Frey said Saturday that officials thought "white supremacists" and "out-of-state instigators" could be behind the protests in the wake of Floyd's death, and Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz also claimed most of the protesters arrested were from outside Minneapolis and sought to take advantage of the chaos.

"We are now confronting white supremacists, members of organized crime, out of state instigators, and possibly even foreign actors to destroy and destabilize our city and our region," Frey had tweeted Saturday.

However, a report by KARE 11 showed "about 86 percent" of the 36 arrests listed their address in Minnesota, and that they live in Minneapolis or the metro area, according to data the outlet analyzed from the Hennepin County Jail's roster. Five out-of-state cases came from Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Michigan and Missouri.

St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter later admitted he was wrong when he falsely claimed that "every person" arrested in Minneapolis protests was from out of state. Frey has not issued a similar retraction, and multiple calls by Fox News to his office seeking comment were met with a busy signal. An emailed message was not immediately returned.

On Sunday, White House National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien disputed reports that far-right and white supremacist groups were involved in stoking the violence.

"I haven't seen reports of far-right groups," O'Brien said in an interview Sunday morning on CNN's "State of the Union." "This is being driven by Antifa." Later Sunday, Trump announced he would designate Antifa a terrorist organization.

"The United States of America will be designating ANTIFA as a Terrorist Organization," Trump tweeted Sunday afternoon.

"It’s ANTIFA and the Radical Left. Don’t lay the blame on others!" Trump had tweeted Saturday.

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was less decisive in stating who was behind the looting, arson, and violence that has taken place. While he called rioters "Antifa-like" during an appearance on Fox News' "Sunday Morning Futures," he said, "I think it still remains to be seen exactly how" the situation devolved from peaceful protests to something entirely different.
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Coronavirus: The mystery of 'silent spreaders'
By David Shukman
31 May 2020

As the crisis has unfolded, scientists have discovered more evidence about a strange and worrying feature of the coronavirus. While many people who become infected develop a cough, fever and loss of taste and smell, others have no symptoms at all and never realise they're carrying Covid-19.

Researchers say it's vital to understand how many are affected this way and whether "silent spreaders" are fuelling the pandemic.

When people gathered at a church in Singapore on 19 January, no-one could have realised that the event would have global implications for the spread of coronavirus. It was a Sunday and, as usual, one of the services was being conducted in Mandarin. Among the congregation at The Life Church and Missions, on the ground floor of an office building, was a couple, both aged 56, who'd arrived that morning from China.

As they took their seats, they seemed perfectly healthy so there was no reason to think they might be carrying the virus. At that time, a persistent cough was understood to be the most distinctive feature of Covid-19 and it was seen as the most likely way to transmit it. Having no symptoms of the disease should have meant having no chance of spreading it.

The couple left as soon as the service was over. But shortly afterwards, things took a turn for the worse, and in a wholly confusing way. The wife started to become ill on January 22, followed by her husband two days later. Because they had flown in from Wuhan, the epicentre of the outbreak, that was no big surprise.

But over the following week, three local people also came down with the disease for no obvious reason, leading to one of Singapore's first and most baffling coronavirus cases. Working out what had happened would lead to a new and disturbing insight into how the virus was so successfully finding new victims.

Mobilising 'disease detectives'

"We were extremely perplexed," says Dr Vernon Lee, head of communicable diseases at Singapore's Ministry of Health. "People who didn't know one another somehow infected each other," while showing no sign of illness. This new batch of cases simply did not make sense, according to what was known about Covid-19 back then.

So Dr Lee and his fellow scientists, along with police officers and specialist disease trackers, launched an investigation, generating detailed maps showing who was where and when. This involved the very best of the process known as contact tracing - a version of which is getting under way now in the UK. It's seen as a vital system for tracking down everyone involved in an outbreak and helping to stamp it out, and Singapore is renowned for the skill and speed with which this is carried out.

Amazingly, within a few days, investigators had spoken to no fewer than 191 members of the church and had found out that 142 of them had been there that Sunday. They quickly established that two of the Singaporeans who became infected had been at the same service as the Chinese couple.

"They could have spoken to each other, greeted each other, during the usual activities of a church service," says Dr Lee.

That was a useful start and would explain in theory how the infection could have been passed on, apart from one key factor. It did not answer the crucial question of how the virus could have been transmitted by the two Chinese people when at that stage they had shown no indication of having the disease.

And on top of that was an even greater puzzle. It was confirmed that the third Singaporean to become infected, a 52-year-old woman, had not been at the same service as the others. Instead she had attended another event in the same church later that day, so how could she have picked up the virus?

Evidence no-one expected

Investigators resorted to going through the CCTV recordings made at the church that Sunday to search for clues. And they stumbled across something completely unexpected - the woman who'd attended the later service, after the Chinese couple had left, had sat in the seats they had used several hours earlier.

Somehow, despite having no symptoms and not feeling ill, the Chinese husband and wife had managed to spread the virus. Maybe they'd had it on their hands and touched the seats, maybe their breath carried the infection and it landed on a surface, it's not clear, but the implications were huge.


1.png

For Dr Lee, piecing everything together, there was only one possible explanation - that the virus was being passed by people who had it without even realising. This was a revelation that would be relevant the world over because the central message of all public health advice on coronavirus has always been to look out for symptoms in yourself and others.

But if the virus was also being spread by people without symptoms, silently and invisibly, how could the disease be stopped? He remembers the moment, while working in his office, when the reality dawned on him. "Every time you make a scientific discovery, it is like a 'eureka' moment when you realise that this is something important that you've uncovered, through the hard work of many individuals and teams."

Spread before symptoms show

What was revealed was what's known as "pre-symptomatic transmission" where someone is unaware of being infected because the cough, fever and other classic symptoms have yet to begin.

Along with many others, this study highlighted a critical period of 24-to-48 hours before the visible onset of the disease in which people can be highly infectious, perhaps even their most infectious.

Being aware of that is potentially invaluable, because as soon as you realise you're ill then everyone you've been in close contact with can be warned to stay at home.

That would mean that they would be isolating during the key phase of infection before their own symptoms start. But exactly how the disease can be transmitted without a cough to project droplets containing the virus is still open to debate.

One option is that simply breathing or talking to someone can do the job.
If the virus is reproducing in the upper respiratory tract at that time then it's possible that some of it will emerge with each exhalation. Anyone close enough, especially indoors, could easily pick it up.

And another potential form of transmission is by touch - the virus gets onto someone's hands and they touch another person or a door handle - or a seat in a church.
Whatever the route, the virus is clearly exploiting the fact that people are bound to be less vigilant if they're not aware that they might be infected.

Some people never show symptoms

This is an even more mysterious scenario, and one that scientists simply have no definitive answer to. It's one thing to know that people can be infectious before their symptoms show, quite another when they become infected but never have any sign of it.

This is what's known as being "asymptomatic" because you are a carrier of the disease but do not suffer in any way yourself. The most famous case is that of an Irish woman who was working as a cook in New York at the beginning of the last century.

Wherever Mary Mallon was employed, in house after house, people became ill with typhoid and at least three, maybe many more, died of it, but she was completely unaffected. Eventually a connection was established and it was confirmed that she was the unwitting spreader of the disease.

Reporters dubbed her "Typhoid Mary", a label she always resented, but the authorities took no chances and kept her in confinement for 23 years until her death in 1938.

Assumptions undermined

Staff nurse Amelia Powell was shocked when she found out that she is asymptomatic. She was at work on her hospital ward at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge in April when a doctor rang to give her the result of a swab test.

She had been feeling normal and safe behind the personal protective equipment she had to wear while caring for patients with Covid-19. But suddenly all those assumptions were undermined because, to her horror, she had tested positive.

"It was a bit like hearing that someone in the family had passed, it was surreal. "I thought, 'This can't be right, not me, I'm absolutely fine,'" says 23-year-old Amelia.

She had to leave her post straightaway to go into isolation at home.

"I was worried because I've seen the other side, with patients deteriorating very quickly with it, so I did wonder if this would happen to me." But, to her surprise, at no point did she feel unwell. "I had nothing, literally - I was exercising indoors, eating normally, sleeping normally."

At the moment it's impossible to know how many cases of infection exist but remain hidden from view.

The discovery that Amelia was infected was only revealed because she was part of a study of all the staff at her hospital. It produced the surprising result that as many as 3% of more than 1,000 people were positive while showing no symptoms at the time of the test.

An even greater proportion of asymptomatic cases was found on the Diamond Princess cruise ship which had been sailing off the coast of Japan earlier this year. Later branded "a petri dish for infection", it had around 700 cases.

Researchers found that three quarters of the people who had tested positive had no symptoms.

And at a care home in Washington state more than half the residents were positive but had no sign of the illness.

[my comment: how many of these 'positives' were false positive due to unreliable testing?]

'No single reliable study'

Different studies suggest a huge range of possibilities for how many cases are asymptomatic stretching from 5% to 80% of cases. That was the conclusion of an analysis by Prof Carl Heneghan of the University of Oxford and colleagues who looked at 21 research projects.

The upshot, they said, was that "there is not a single reliable study to determine the number of asymptomatics". And they said that if the screening for Covid-19 is only carried out on people with symptoms - which has been the main focus of UK testing policy - then cases will be missed, "perhaps a lot of cases".

The risk of 'silent spreaders'

The biggest concern of Amelia, the nurse, was that she might have unwittingly transmitted the virus either to those she works with or to the patients who depend on her help.

"I don't think I passed it on because all the colleagues I work with tested negative but it was worrying to think how long I'd been positive for," she says. "But we still don't know if people who are asymptomatic are contagious or not - it's very bizarre and the information about it at the moment is minimal."

One study in China which found that the number of asymptomatic cases was actually greater than those with symptoms had a warning for the authorities. "As 'silent spreaders'," the scientists wrote, "asymptomatic carriers warrant attention as part of disease prevention and control."

The team that studied that Diamond Princess reckoned that asymptomatic cases were likely to be less infectious than people with symptoms but even so they're estimated to have caused a significant number of cases.

The 'dark matter' of asymptomatic infection

To try to get an answer, scientists in Norwich are pushing for the population of the entire city to be tested.

"Asymptomatic cases may be the 'dark matter' of the epidemic," according to Prof Neil Hall, head of the Earlham Institute, a life science research centre, who's leading the initiative. Dark matter is the invisible substance believed to make up most of the matter in the universe, and it's yet to be identified.

Prof Hall worries that asymptomatic cases may actually be driving the pandemic, keeping it going despite public health measures. "If you have people who don't know they're ill while using public transport and health care facilities, inevitably that's going to increase transmission," he says.

"Any intervention that's only based on people coming to primary health care when they have symptoms will only deal with half the problem."

A team of scientists in California believes that not knowing who's carrying the virus without symptoms is the "Achilles Heel" of the fight against the pandemic.

In their view, the only way to stop the disease from spreading is to find out who's infected regardless of whether they think they are or not. That was also the recommendation of MPs on the Commons Science and Technology Committee in a letter to the Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

They wrote that the risk of asymptomatic transmission has "a profound consequence for the management of the pandemic". And they said that anyone looking after vulnerable people - such as health workers or care workers - should be given regular testing.

A similar approach is being adopted on a far larger scale in the Chinese city of Wuhan, where the pandemic is thought to have begun.

As many as 6.5 million people there were tested in as little as nine days in a mass screening programme designed to detect the disease - including in those showing no symptoms.

Easing of lockdown

As lockdown measures are eased and more people start to use public transport, return to work or go shopping, getting to grips with the invisible risk matters more than ever. At the moment, there is no way of telling who among the growing crowds may be carrying the virus without knowing.

That's why governments the world over say it's essential that everyone cooperates with efforts to trace the contacts of anyone infected and then quickly self-isolates. They also advise that the best defence remains social distancing - to keep apart wherever you can. But where that isn't possible, the recommendation is to cover your face, even with a mask that's homemade.

When the US government announced this policy, it highlighted the discoveries made in the church in Singapore back in January. The logic is that this is not about protecting yourself, it's about protecting others from you, in case you're infected but don't know it.

Many health professionals worry that masks might distract people from hand washing or social distancing, or increase the risk of contamination if they're clumsily handled. But more and more governments, most recently that of the UK, have become convinced of the benefits.

Not that face coverings will halt the pandemic on their own. But because there's still so little we know about asymptomatic transmission, almost anything is worth a try.
 
Last edited:

Shadow

Swift, Silent,...Sleepy
But exactly how the disease can be transmitted without a cough to project droplets containing the virus is still open to debate.
It is airborne. This was established by the Chinese in their analysis of the bus incident where the virus traveled 13 feet. It also infected a rider who boarded after the infected individual had left the bus.

What is this fetish with droplets?

Shadow
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPlhAxpqTZw
19:58 min
Ep 83 - Former CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding on the US’s COVID-19 Response and the Looming...
•Jun 1, 2020

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
Dr. Julie Gerberding was director of the CDC during the 2003 SARS outbreak and lessons learned from that response are now informing her work overseeing some 65,000 employees around the world as executive vice president of Merck. Gerberding talks with Dr. Josh Sharfstein about the US’s response, how Merck is keeping things moving, why emerging infectious diseases may be a new normal, and how the pandemic is contributing to the threat of antimicrobial resistance.
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Referred to above:

(fair use applies)

This Doctor Said His Hospital Had Seen "A Year's Worth Of Suicide Attempts" In Four Weeks Because Of The Coronavirus Lockdowns. That Wasn't True.

"If you contextualize in concrete numbers fashion, it's not accurate."


Posted on May 27, 2020, at 7:48 p.m. ET

It was a local news report focusing on mental health during the pandemic, but the comments from a hospital's head of trauma quickly caught the attention of conservative media and commentators arguing for the economy to be reopened and stay-at-home orders to be lifted.

"I mean, we've seen a year's worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks," Dr. Mike deBoisblanc, head of trauma at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, California, told ABC7 on Thursday. "We've never seen numbers like this in such a short period of time."

It seemed to be the kind of data that backed up President Donald Trump's ominous prediction from March: that shutting down the US economy to prevent the spread of the coronavirus would result in "suicide by the thousands."

The doctor's comments quickly spread online during the holiday weekend, with outlets like the New York Post, Fox News, the Washington Examiner, and the Blaze unquestioningly citing the local TV report. It was retweeted by presidential adviser Kellyanne Conway and Fox News host Laura Ingraham, whose followers also shared it. By Tuesday evening, it was cited repeatedly on air on Fox News.

The false claim that a CA hospital had seen "a year's worth of suicide attempts" in 4 weeks was repeated unquestioningly at least 3 times on Fox News yesterday, first by Brian Kilmeade who wrongly called it a "study" and also claimed it was ALL of California on Fox and Friends
But in an interview with BuzzFeed News, deBoisblanc said his comment about the hospital seeing "a year's worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks" was inaccurate. He added that at the time he didn't know what the true numbers were. Many of his other comments, which compared the number of deaths from COVID-19 to suicides, "were taken a bit out of context," he said.

Numbers provided by the hospital and the coroner's office also show that the "sharp rise" in suicides initially claimed by deBoisblanc, which alarmed political pundits criticizing quarantine orders, were either overblown or outright false.

According to the hospital, it has seen five suicide deaths during the county's shelter-in-place order, compared to two suicide deaths during the same period last year. In general, Contra Costa County sees about 100 suicide deaths per year, and officials said that that's remained stable so far in 2020.

"If you look at it from a contextual standpoint, I think it's accurate," deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News when asked whether the number of suicide attempts treated at the hospital was actually unprecedented. "If you contextualize in concrete numbers fashion, it's not accurate."

The original news story about a "spike" in suicides did not cite any data nor point to any numbers indicating an alarming trend.

"Unfortunately, we have the data to prove it," deBoisblanc told ABC7, talking about the impact stay-at-home orders have had on mental health. When he later spoke to BuzzFeed News, he admitted that there was no data directly linking the suicide attempts seen at the hospital to the lockdowns.

According to a statement released by the hospital, staff did see a slight increase in self-inflicted injuries between March 1 and May 8, with 13 incidents reported this year (compared to eight during the same time period last year).

The hospital has also seen one more suicide case than deaths from COVID-19, but deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News the difference didn't point to a trend, nor did it illustrate the toll the pandemic has taken on the community's mental health.

John Muir Medical Center is Contra Costa's trauma center, meaning emergency injuries and trauma, such as many suicide attempts, from all over the county with 1.1 million residents are most likely directed there. COVID-19 cases, on the other hand, have been more evenly distributed across all of the county's hospitals, a move medical officials took at the beginning of the pandemic to prevent overwhelming a single facility.

"We're the county's trauma center, so [our numbers] are skewed," deBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News.

In fact, according to the Contra Costa County Coroner's Office, the number of suicides recorded in the Northern California county has remained relatively stable.

Since March, when quarantine began, the county has seen 26 deaths that were determined to be suicides. Last year, the county saw 30 suicides between March and May.

As of the day the ABC7 report was published, Contra Costa County had seen 36 deaths that were attributed to COVID-19.
DeBoisblanc also said despite the comparison in the original article, it was not his intention to compare suicides to COVID-19 deaths. Instead, he said, it was to highlight the need to address mental health issues during the pandemic.

"We're not in a competition in what disease is worse. That was never the intent," he told BuzzFeed News. "Just because we didn't get hit hard here [with COVID-19 cases] doesn't mean it's not a serious disease. That was not the intention."

But once the story was published, it was quickly picked up by outlets like the Washington Examiner, RT, the Blaze, and Fox News.

Like deBoisblanc during his initial interview, commentators called for the lifting of restrictions on businesses, which health officials have said have been key to reducing the infection rate of the novel coronavirus.

SWELL, LET'S STICK WITH THIS PLAN - Doctors: Suicides Outpace Coronavirus Deaths at Northern California Hospital During Lockdown Doctors: Suicides Outpace Coronavirus Deaths at Northern California Hospital During Lockdown via @BreitbartNews
05:31 PM - 23 May 2020

California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns
California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns California doctors say they've seen more deaths from suicide than coronavirus since lockdowns

On Tuesday morning, Fox News host Brian Kilmeade cited the ABC7 report, while mistakenly calling it a "study."

"You see this study out in California from this doctor that said more people have died from suicide in California than have actually died from the coronavirus," Kilmeade wrongly said on Fox & Friends.

(Even in his original comments, deBoisblanc did not refer to suicides in the entire state of California, just those at the one hospital.)

Later the same day, Sen. John Barrasso cited the report on Fox News' Bill Hemmer Reports, saying he had brought the issue up with President Trump.

"In California, in the Bay Area, one hospital reports four times as many suicide attempts in the last four weeks than they had all last year," he said erroneously.

That incorrect piece of data continued to flow into the evening portion of the network's shows, repeated by Victor Davis Hanson, a fellow at the conservative think tank Hoover Institution, on The Ingraham Angle with Laura Ingraham.
Ingraham herself shared the story over the weekend, which was retweeted thousands of times.

"We know in Northern California suicides are now more than deaths to the virus," Hanson said incorrectly. "The data is coming in of the medical cost of being on lockdown in addition to the economic cost — and that's not faith-based; that's actual data."
Laura Ingraham RTed the story last week, then one of her guests Tuesday wrongly said "Northern California suicides are now more than deaths to the virus," unquestioningly. That was false

But the point that was repeated on social media and Fox News was not based on actual data. DeBoisblanc told BuzzFeed News he had not received information from the county coroner, nor did he look at the hospital's own numbers until after he had conducted his interview with ABC7.

Instead, he said, part of his comments were coming from his impression on the front lines of the hospital's trauma center, which included a recent "hard week" where he and other doctors and nurses saw a rash of intentional injuries, including suicide attempts.

"When you see a young person take their life, it's a big deal," he said. "The goal of this was to bring awareness to people and say there's resources available."

DeBoisblanc said he still supports lifting the restrictions in Contra Costa County. Although there is no direct evidence linking suicides to the lockdown orders or the pandemic, he believes they are connected.

"I think there is some association," he said. "We know during times of recession and unemployment there's more mental illness, there's more suicide. We follow these trends."

In a statement, the John Muir Health system would not draw such a direct line of causation between the two issues.
"We know that there are a number of reasons for what we are experiencing at Walnut Creek Medical Center and that it is a complex issue that can't be explained by any one factor," the statement read.

The hospital also noted it was continuing to follow the county's shelter-in-place order.

"We realize there are a number of opinions on the topic of Shelter-in-Place, including our medical staff," the statement said. "John Muir Health encourage our physicians and staff to participate constructively in these important discussions."

DeBoisblanc added that he hopes his message — that people who need help for their mental health should seek out resources — is not lost.

"I'm not looking for any fame, and I do want the message out there that this is a tough time for many people, and people are making permanent decisions based on a temporary thing," he said. "These actions of county health departments, they do have impacts on populations, and you need to take that into consideration."

The increase in self-inflicted injuries at the hospital (from 8 last year to 13 this year) is still alarming, he said.
But would it be considered "unprecedented"?

"When you put the numbers down, it's probably not," he said.


In other words, he exaggerated, bigly.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k3lgDQQR6MU
58:46 min
War Room Pandemic Ep 206 - The Capital Burns (w/ Jack Posobiec)
•Streamed live 5 hours ago
1591040379366.pngBannon WarRoom - Citizens of the American Republic
Steve Bannon, Jack Maxey, and Raheem Kassam discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as the George Floyd protests have escalated into global riots and looting, making their way to the White House as well. Joining the crew in studio is Jack Posobiec.

________________________-

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rUJHujj0g1I
58:04 min
War Room Pandemic Ep 207 - Trans-National and Trans-Historical
•Streamed live 4 hours ago


Bannon WarRoom - Citizens of the American Republic


Steve Bannon, Jack Maxey, and Raheem Kassam discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as the Chinese Communist Party escalates its information and economic war with those it feels are a threat to the CCP's legitimacy. To highlight more on the CCP's wars, calling in is Gordon Chang and General Robert Spalding. Jack Posobiec joins the crew in-studio.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
There have been violent protests in Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and Harrisburg PA this weekend. It will be interesting to see if we an uptick in the rise of cases in about two weeks.


COVID-19 Data for Pennsylvania*
* Map, tables, case counts and deaths last updated at 12:00 p.m. on 6/1/2020
Source: Pennsylvania National Electronic Disease Surveillance System (PA-NEDSS) as of 12:00 a.m. on 6/1/2020
Page last updated: 12:00 p.m. on 6/1/2020


View the beta version of the Pennsylvania COVID-19 Dashboard.



Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives
Total Cases*DeathsNegative**Recovered***
72,2825,567389,43167%


* Total case counts include confirmed and probable cases.
** Negative case data only includes negative PCR tests. Negative case data does not include negative antibody tests.
*** Individuals who have recovered is determined using a calculation, similar to what is being done by several other states. If a case has not been reported as a death, and it is more than 30 days past the date of their first positive test (or onset of symptoms) then an individual is considered recovered.


Confirmed CasesProbable Case by Definition and High-Risk ExposureProbable Case by Serology Test and Either Symptoms or High-Risk Exposure
70,2782,004616


Hospital Data
Trajectory Animations


Positive Cases by Age Range to Date
Age RangePercent of Cases*
0-4< 1%
5-12< 1%
13-182%
19-246%
25-4937%
50-6425%
65+28%
* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding


Hospitalization Rates by Age Range to Date


Age RangePercent of Cases*
0-4< 1%
5-12< 1%
13-18< 1%
19-241%
25-4916%
50-6426%
65+56%


* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding


Death Data



County Case Counts to Date
CountyTotal CasesNegatives
Adams2503116
Allegheny191930871
Armstrong621264
Beaver5903838
Bedford 40786
Berks407412467
Blair502891
Bradford461572
Bucks510020385
Butler2303771
Cambria583931
Cameron2130
Carbon2372432
Centre1542192
Chester278413449
Clarion27680
Clearfield401138
Clinton57644
Columbia3481391
Crawford291098
Cumberland6355772
Dauphin130310336
Delaware648121789
Elk6331
Erie2955392
Fayette953435
Forest786
Franklin7775259
Fulton15231
Greene27806
Huntingdon231890
Indiana911446
Jefferson9531
Juniata95355
Lackawanna15516364
Lancaster318916492
Lawrence801377
Lebanon9724638
Lehigh377014630
Luzerne273911272
Lycoming1642345
McKean12639
Mercer1071656
Mifflin591276
Monroe13206091
Montgomery709335580
Montour533286
Northampton308213793
Northumberland1941464
Perry61786
Philadelphia1851759919
Pike4772046
Potter4153
Schuylkill6315146
Snyder45416
Somerset381881
Sullivan397
Susquehanna110822
Tioga17576
Union621199
Venango9565
Warren3400
Washington1404563
Wayne1201078
Westmoreland4499723
Wyoming34512
York101313941




Incidence by County


Incidence%20by%20County.png

Incidence is calculated by dividing the current number of confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases reported to the Department by the 2018 county population data available from the Bureau of Health Statistics. The counties are divided into 6 relatively equally-sized groups based on their incidence rate (i.e. sestiles). Cases are determined using a national COVID-19 case definition. There currently is no way to estimate the true number of infected persons. Incidence rates are based on the number of known cases, not the number of true infected persons.


Case Counts by Sex to Date



SexPositive Cases Percent of Cases*
Female39,62455%
Male31,94644%
Neither30%
Not reported7091%
* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding

Case Counts by Race to Date*




RacePositive CasesPercent of Cases**
African American/Black883512%
Asian10411%
White19,98628%
Other4411%
Not reported41,97958%
* 58% of race is not reported. Little data is available on ethnicity.
** Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding



Case Counts by Region to Date








RegionPositiveNegativeInconclusive
Northcentral 10701533517
Northeast1313159040166
Northwest5341402320
Southcentral53095027782
Southeast46766185227977
Southwest34686552945

EpiCurve by Region


EpiCurve%20by%20Region.png

Case counts are displayed by the date that the cases were first reported to the PA-NEDSS surveillance system. Case counts by date of report can vary significantly from day to day for a variety of reasons. In addition to changes due to actual changes in disease incidence, trends are strongly influenced by testing patterns (who gets tested and why), testing availability, lab analysis backlogs, lab reporting delays, new labs joining our electronic laboratory reporting system, mass screenings, etc. Trends need to be sustained for at least 2-3 weeks before any conclusions can be made regarding the progress of the pandemic.

COVID-19 Cases Associated with Nursing Homes and Personal Care Homes to Date
This data represents long-term care facilities in Pennsylvania, including Department of Health and Department of Human Services regulated facilities.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Idn-DTjBznc
30:50 min
Monday Update
•Jun 1, 2020

Dr. John Campbell

COVID -19, Update, Monday 1st June Global Cases, 6,193,548 Deaths, 372,479

US Cases, 1,790,191 Deaths, 104,383 Riots, 6 nights LA, state of emergency Seattle, Miami, Chicago, Minneapolis Outdoors Close physical contact Contact over time Shouting, chanting, slogans LA, testing centres closed Mayor of Chicago, rioters need to self-isolate and avoid vulnerable Mayor of Atlanta, Keisha Lance Bottoms If you were out protesting last night you need to get a COVID test this week There is still a pandemic in America that is killing black and brown people at higher numbers

Brazil Cases, 514,849 Deaths, 29,314

UK Cases, 276,156 Deaths, 38,571 R = 0.7 – 0.9 11,300 new cases per day 9,900 in England per day People prepared to risk their lives to protest in Trafalgar Square 6 people now allowed to meet Schools Shops 6 people 200,000 tests per day

White Helmets World Health Organization failing to help Syria’s most vulnerable Potential catastrophe. Cases, 122 Deaths, 5 https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-he... Turkey Cases, 16,3942 Deaths, 4,540 Re-opens restaurants, cafes and parks today Lifts inter-city travel curbs Japan Cases, 16,770 Deaths, 900 Considering re-opening its borders to travellers from selected countries Italy Regional Governors concerned about lifting domestic travel restrictions Philippine Cases, 19,838 Deaths, 960 Manila returning to work Limited public transport reopened leading to queues and stranded workers Below 21, over 60s, pregnant, still locked down at home No schools until vaccination

Masks https://preventepidemics.org

___________________________

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9AdGxaADGDM
46:32 min
Report from Tokyo
•Jun 1, 2020


Dr. John Campbell
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Does anyone have the link to the infographic which showed the US cases in a 3d-bar chart, county-by-county?

Lost that tab and can't seem to google it up.

TIA.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HHZBVWqRAU
9:47 min

YouTube Deletes Comments That Insult China
•Jun 1, 2020

China Uncensored

YouTube has been automatically deleting comments critical of the Chinese Communist Party. YouTube has said it was totally an accident that their algorithm deleted comments with "Communist Bandit" or "wumao." And even though YouTube's parent company Google is working closely with the Chinese regime, including doing artificial intelligence research in China, partnering with Chinese companies in a way that just happens to indirectly benefit China’s military, doesn't mean anything fishy is going on. It comes as President Donald Trump is looking to impose new restrictions on social media.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_IrYyhufDwI&pbjreload=101
8:20 min
Coronavirus Pandemic Update 78: Mask Controversy; Vaccine Update for COVID-19
•Jun 1, 2020

MedCram - Medical Lectures Explained CLEARLY

COVID-19 Update 78 with Roger Seheult, MD of https://www.medcram.com The CDC and WHO have conflicting recommendations on some aspects of the use of face coverings and masks, and Dr. Seheult reviews a NEJM article showing respiratory droplet spread with and without a mask. There are many COVID-19 vaccine trials in the works and "RAPS" appears to be a nice website to track vaccine progress. (This video was recorded on Jun 1, 2020) ------------------------

-------------------Links referenced in this video: Johns Hopkins Tracker - https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html Worldometer https://www.worldometers.info/coronav... CDC - https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-... WHO - https://www.who.int/emergencies/disea... NEJM - https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056... RAPS - https://www.raps.org/news-and-article... Clinical Trial Phases Definitions: https://aidsinfo.nih.gov/

------------------------- Speaker: Roger Seheult, MD Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary Disease, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine. MedCram provides videos to a variety of medical schools, education programs, and institutions https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MPNDTYvV0vE
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=va7rl5seIXQ
LIVE
Coronavirus: Gov. Newsom, community leaders address California's response to COVID-19, protests
•Started streaming 30 minutes ago

KTLA 5

Watch live: California Gov. Gavin Newsom and other leaders are providing updates on the state’s response to COVID-19 and demonstrations in the wake of George Floyd's death.

[COMMENT: I listened and it appeared almost entirely about "hearing" the protesters' pain and "hearing" the message of rioters as well. Typical leftist touchy feely stuff.]

________________________
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YJ4jNaMYw0
LIVE
Coronavirus: L.A. County officials address region's COVID-19 response, protests
•Started streaming 9 minutes ago


KTLA 5

Watch live: L.A. County officials are providing updates on COVID-19 and protests in the region.
 
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