CORONA Main Coronavirus thread

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wgLWSoC2teo
10:23 min
Why We're Not Achieving Coronavirus Herd Immunity & How it Impacts a 2nd Wave - TLDR News
•Jun 7, 2020


TLDR News

The only way that life can return to normal with Coronavius still present is if we reach a sufficient level of herd immunity. This could be achieved by the virus naturally spreading through the population or via a vaccine. The problem is that despite countries unlocking we currently have neither. There is no COVID vaccine yet and according to a whole lot of data we're not even close to naturally achieving adequate herd immunity.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tj8_3c0ch9k
2:43 min
Bolsonaro threatens WHO exit as Brazil's coronavirus toll soars
•Jun 6, 2020


Al Jazeera English

Opponents and supporters of Brazil's president are expected to rally across the country on Sunday, as it grapples with the worsening coronavirus pandemic. Jair Bolsonaro, who has been widely criticised for his response to the crisis, has threatened to deploy special forces against demonstrators. Bolsonaro has also threatened to pull his country out of the World Health Organization after the United Nations agency warned governments about the risk of lifting lockdowns before slowing the spread of the new coronavirus. Al Jazeera's Alessandro Rampietti reports. -
 

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
(fair use applies)


Dr. Marc Siegel on faulty hydroxychloroquine data: 'This is a political hit job'
Victor Garcia
2 hours ago

A retracted study on hydroxychloroquine and news that the coronavirus may be mutating drew reactions Friday night from Fox News medical contributor Dr. Marc Siegel.

"So Lancet, with egg on its face, a renowned journal, is suddenly withdrawing this study," Siegel noted during an appearance on "Tucker Carlson Tonight"

Surgisphere Corp. was called into question.

A database by Surgisphere Corp. of Chicago was used in an observational study of nearly 100,000 patients that appeared May 22 in The Lancet, an influential medical journal. The study tied the malaria drugs hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine to a higher risk of death in hospitalized patients with the virus.

The validity of the data, however, has been called into question. The Guardian reports that Surgisphere “has so far failed to adequately explain its data or methodology” and says the company’s “handful of employees appear to include a science fiction writer and an adult-content model.”

Siegel now says the only question is whether the malaria drugs work.

"Does hydroxychloroquine actually work early in the game to help decrease the symptoms of COVID-19? It's been studied in the lab as an antiviral," Siegel said. "Medical, we don't know yet. Political, we know this is a political hit job."

Siegel also addressed that doctors at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) said Thursday that the coronavirus appears to be declining both in virulence and in its infection rate.

"The virus appears to be getting milder. People who are being admitted have milder symptoms. We heard the same thing out of northern Italy," Siegel said. "And guess what? I have been hearing the same thing from many doctors here in New York City over the past week or two."

Siegel told Carlson his theory on why the virus may be mellowing.

"Viruses, like anything else, want to survive. Now, I'm not sure yet that this is the case, but as viruses mutate over time, they want to get more used to the human host. They want to be able to spread more easily," Siegel said. "And if they kill the host, they can't spread. So they tend to mutate in the direction of becoming milder. It looks like this may be happening here."


Gee golly willikers! A Political Hit Job?

Surprise! Surprise! Surprise!
 

poppy

Veteran Member
It does seem something is different about this virus. The US is still showing around 20,000 new cases a day but reports across the country say the number of hospitalizations and deaths are declining. Today we only had a bit over 300 deaths reported so far, the lowest since early March. Perhaps the virus itself is getting milder or maybe with summer here more people are getting out and getting more sunshine which makes vitamin D.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

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


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



Case Counts, Deaths, and Negatives
Total Cases*DeathsNegative**Recovered***
75,5925,943444,17371%


* 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
73,4792,113620


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
Adams2733644
Allegheny200335278
Armstrong651418
Beaver6034325
Bedford 44912
Berks420113914
Blair533286
Bradford461892
Bucks526123274
Butler2474199
Cambria594585
Cameron2148
Carbon2492830
Centre1562459
Chester305316359
Clarion27737
Clearfield441293
Clinton60748
Columbia3641615
Crawford301259
Cumberland6696879
Dauphin148111897
Delaware668824706
Elk6376
Erie3676548
Fayette953717
Forest796
Franklin7955690
Fulton16273
Greene27901
Huntingdon236995
Indiana921561
Jefferson16593
Juniata97417
Lackawanna15837347
Lancaster346118680
Lawrence851630
Lebanon10625381
Lehigh385816365
Luzerne279313033
Lycoming1672674
McKean13755
Mercer1111964
Mifflin591418
Monroe13387028
Montgomery758239938
Montour533474
Northampton315115788
Northumberland2091791
Perry68946
Philadelphia1921367962
Pike4822243
Potter11170
Schuylkill6565710
Snyder55491
Somerset392261
Sullivan3109
Susquehanna148995
Tioga19675
Union731372
Venango15673
Warren5474
Washington1475166
Wayne1261252
Westmoreland45911370
Wyoming34616
York108215598


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*
Female41,49255%
Male33,37644%
Neither30%
Not reported7211%
* Percentages may not total 100% due to rounding

Case Counts by Race to Date*



RacePositive CasesPercent of Cases**
African American/Black939912%
Asian11231%
White21,37528%
Other4861%
Not reported43,20957%
* 57% 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 11241747017
Northeast1344467497172
Northwest6161654620
Southcentral57315733686
Southeast489672105431012
Southwest35977478146

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.


Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) in Pennsylvania

Potential CasesConfirmed CasesDetermined Not a CaseUnder Investigation
4020515

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.
 

Texican

Live Free & Die Free.... God Freedom Country....
A win against the demonrats illegal voting endeavor.
Texican.....
------------------------------------------


Federal Appeals Court Blocks Texas Democrats’ Vote-by-Mail Mandate
Democrats’ plans to force universal mail-ballot voting based on fear of the coronavirus are put on hold again.

By Erin Anderson|June 4, 2020

Democrats lost another fight today in their attempt to use the courts and fear of the Chinese coronavirus to undermine state voting laws.

On Thursday, a federal appellate court blocked a lower court’s order siding with the Texas Democrat Party that would have forced the state to allow anyone to vote by mail, a process more vulnerable to fraud and abuse than in-person voting.

The U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals granted the state’s request for a stay pending appeal of federal District Judge Fred Biery’s ruling, issued May 19, which said any Texas voter who fears contracting the coronavirus while voting in person could claim a “disability” and vote by mail ballot.

The liberal judge’s order is now on hold while the state appeals the case to the 5th Circuit.
In the three-judge panel’s unanimous opinion, Judge Jerry Smith leveled Biery’s ruling:
“In an order that will be remembered more for audacity than legal reasoning, the district judge intervenes just weeks before an election, entering a sweeping preliminary injunction that requires state officials, inter alia, to distribute mail-in ballots to any eligible voter who wants one.

“But because the spread of the Virus has not given ‘unelected federal jud[ges]’ a roving commission to rewrite state election codes, we stay the preliminary injunction pending appeal.”
Judge James Ho concurred:
“The district court demonstrably erred here, and in more ways than one—as the majority opinion extensively documents. Most notably, the district court ignored virtually the entire body of governing Supreme Court precedent relevant to this case. … So the state is likely to prevail in this appeal.”

“I applaud the 5th Circuit for staying the federal court’s erroneous decision and preventing widespread mail-in balloting while the case proceeds,” Texas Attorney General Paxton said in a statement following today’s ruling. “Allowing universal mail-in ballots, which are particularly vulnerable to fraud, would only lead to greater election fraud and disenfranchise lawful voters.”

Today’s decision extends a temporary stay granted last month.

The Texas Democrat Party has filed two separate lawsuits seeking to override state limits on who is eligible to vote by mail—one in federal court, one in state. The state case is also on hold as Paxton’s team appeals.
Last week, the Texas Supreme Court delivered another blow to the Democrats, siding with the state in ruling that “a lack of immunity to COVID-19 is not itself a ‘physical condition’ that renders a voter eligible to vote by mail.”
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i0S_hRZSqwc
57:55 min
Live COVID-19 Question / Answer with Dr. Seheult - June 7, 2020
•Streamed live 3 hours ago

MedCram - Medical Lectures Explained CLEARLy

We're gathering your COVID-19 questions from the week to ask Dr. Seheult, and we will respond to new questions during the live-stream. Join us at https://www.medcram.com for the full video library and CME / CEUs for clinicians. Speakers: Roger Seheult, MD Co-Founder and Lead Instructor at https://www.medcram.com Board Certified in Internal Medicine, Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine Associate Clinical Professor at the University of California, Riverside School of Medicine Kyle Allred, PA Co-Founder and Producer at https://www.medcram.com Conference Director https://wilderness-medicine.com
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrFftV9Y3qY
2:19 min
Health Care Workers On Coronavirus Front Lines Join Protests Against Injustice | NBC Nightly News
•Jun 7, 2020

NBC News
Many health care workers are joining the nationwide protests over the death of George Floyd, even those who are fighting on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. They say the demonstrations are essential for saving lives in the future
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie / FJB!
I'm not going back through this monster thread to find it, but I thought I read that the virus starts declining at 90 days or so, whether there were lockdowns or not.

And then a second wave begins, but I don't remember how long after the first one. Six weeks?
 

vestige

Deceased
I'm not going back through this monster thread to find it, but I thought I read that the virus starts declining at 90 days or so, whether there were lockdowns or not.

And then a second wave begins, but I don't remember how long after the first one. Six weeks?
Fall

I remember the same comments by numerous epidemiologists.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
well, it doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out that like I have said on multiple times, when you mass, you get exposed, and when you get exposed, you get infected, and then you expose other people, and you infect them, and the cycle goes on.

I take no particular joy in announcing the next death wave here in Portland, Oregon, but it was a no brainer really. I mean what did they expect was going to happen when they have TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE RUNNING AROUND DOWNTOWN PORTLAND? no masks, no spacing, no freaking nothing. and so here gang it is: KABOOM!!!!!

The link is below, but you get the drift TODAY WAS THE SINGLE LARGEST INCREASE IN OREGON FOR EVER.


Oregon sees highest single-day coronavirus case increase since pandemic began
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020

PORTLAND, Ore. – Oregon had its largest single-day increase in identified coronavirus cases since state health officials have started keeping track of patients.

According to the Oregon Health Authority, there were 146 new confirmed and presumptive coronavirus cases identified as of 12:01 a.m. Sunday, bringing the statewide total to 4,808.

Lincoln County leads the state in new identified cases with 61, followed by Multnomah with 22, Clackamas with 18, and Marion with 11.
The state also had its first confirmed coronavirus death in Malheur County; a 71-year-old man who tested positive on June 1.
RELATED | 26 Oregon counties approved for phase 2 reopening
Most other COVID-19 victims in Oregon had underlying health conditions, however, results for the latest coronavirus death are still pending.
The previous highest single-day increase was on April 4, with 100 new cases.
The news comes a day after Washington state had its highest one-day jump in coronavirus cases in two months.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
The next one says that Portland Police are being bombed by explosive devices. the link is here.


Explosive thrown at police during Portland protest on Saturday
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020
PORTLAND, Ore. – Someone threw an explosive firework at law enforcement during a protest on Saturday night, Portland Fire & Rescue said, leaving two deputies with concussion injuries.

Investigators said they think it was an improvised explosive device similar to a M1000 firework – nicknamed a “quarter stick.”
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
Next, we got some more pleading that the homeless, who are likely to make up a large chunk of the people bombing the police need more, well of everything, since the usual liberals are broke, and the $1 billion boondogle bond for the homeless will take a while to kick in, assuming all the rich people actually are able to deal with the tax increase.

Homeless populations still in need during coronavirus pandemic
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020

The Blanchet House in Northwest Portland says they're giving out twice as many free meals to those in need, compared to before the pandemic.

Scott Kerman, the executive director of the Blanchet House, says the pandemic has hit the homeless population especially hard.
“So their need for clothing, shoes, toiletries, hygiene items, sleeping bags, blankets, tarps, it’s pretty significant,” said Kerman.

Blanchet house has been serving an average of 10,000 meals a week, since the pandemic began.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment

Dr. Anthony Fauci
AP Photo/Alex Brandon
JOHN NOLTE7 Jun 202023816

Mea culpa: I spent a lot of time on these here digital pages defending Dr. Anthony Fauci. Brother, was I wrong. Fauci is a stone-cold liar. And if he’s not a stone-cold liar, his only defense is that he is a fraud. Either way, shame on him … and me.

For months Fauci has been everywhere, all over TV, urging Americans to lock themselves down, to abandon their jobs, their sick and dying family members, the small businesses they spent their lives getting off the ground; he urged us to drive our economy into the dirt, pull children who desperately need structure out of school, forgo once-in-a-lifetime graduations and graduation parties, cancel weddings and vacations…

Fauci’s message was clear, militant, terrifying, and relentless: If you don’t do these things, if you don’t sacrifice these things, if you don’t give up your liberty and prosperity, you are no better than a serial killer. The coronavirus is a unique and deadly killer, a particularly infectious and fatal disease unlike anything we’ve seen in more than a century.

And because Fauci became America’s trusted scientific (and moral) authority, because he assured us he spoke only as a scientist and infectious disease expert, because he assured us he would always tell us like it is, and do so at any cost because public health was his only priority, look at what happened…

A woman was arrested for reopening the business that fed her family. Christians were persecuted for attending church in the safety of automobiles. Teens were held up to national ridicule for behaving like teens in Florida and the Ozarks.

Countless Americans suffered untold anguish after hospital visits were forbidden and funerals canceled. Everyday Americans were relentlessly demonized for daring to speak out or even question the Holy Writ of Fauci…

And God help those who came out to protest the lockdowns, because bitter, power-hungry tyrants such as Gov. Gretchen Whitmer (D-MI) and the hate-filled media that empower her, waved the Holy Writ of Fauci to justify smearing these Americans as racists and punishing them with lockdown extensions.

Heh, heh, heh… Take that, Deplorables!

All this was allowed, all the inhumanity, all the flagrant violations of our Constitutional rights, all these Kafka-esque rules that protected Big Businesses like Walmart and further empowered massive corporations like Amazon, while small business withered and died. Democrat New York Mayor Bill de Blasio was finally allowed to openly practice his antisemitism… All this was excused and even made virtuous by the Holy Writ of Fauci and the Cult of Personality he allowed to build up around his heroic fidelity to facts, science, and public health.
Well, we now know Fauci is either a fraud or liar.

We know this because for ten whole days Fauci said nothing as the Perfect Infection Storm hit America, as massive violations of social distancing and lockdowns took place all across the country (including the Ground Zero of new York City). There it was, everywhere… Fauci’s nightmare scenario come to vivid life: crowd after massive gathering after mob after parade… Protesters and rioters shouting, shoulder to shoulder — and Fauci said nothing… And when he did finally speak out, it was to squeak on some local radio station.

Worse still, Fauci said nothing as the very same sanctimonious health care workers and “experts” who used the emotional blackmail of “We’re at work for you, stay home for us” came out in full-throated support of leaving home and gathering in massive crowds.

So, which is it…

Is Fauci a fraud or liar?

Was all his talk about concern for public health, his duty to tell it like it is no matter the personal or political fallout, just a big lie? Is he a fraud who still believes these mass gatherings are a nightmare scenario, but is unwilling to use his massive public platform to say so out loud because shaming protesters who hold the “approved” views among America’s hideous elite would risk Fauci feeling the disapproval of those elites?

Or is he a liar, does he in fact know the coronavirus is nowhere near as deadly as he played it up to be? Is he a liar who mislead us into agreeing to destroy our amazing economy in order to undermine the Bad Orange Man’s re-election?

Either way, Fauci’s a sociopath. Either he’s a sociopath who furthered his political ambitions and abused his authority and public trust to talk hundreds of millions of Americans into shattering their own lives and mental wellbeing when there was no real danger, or he’s a sociopath who chooses the good opinion of elites over raising the alarm to save the lives of thousands and thousands of protesters, and the countless millions those thousands will infect.

What kind of man raises the alarm about the fact the black population is disproportionately killed by this virus and then remains silent as the black population gathers en masse, and remains silent as his fellow healthcare workers openly encourage the mass gathering of black America?

I’m almost as disgusted with myself for trusting Fauci as I am with him.

Never again will I trust the “experts.”

**** them.

**** them all forever.
 

Doomer Doug

TB Fanatic
And finally, we get the health guy whining that the ravening hordes of nouev Vikings burning and looting downtown, may all die off since not only are a large number of them minorities, who die off at a higher rate, and not to clean young people etc etc I mean I was stunned to read this moron in charge. Literally more upset the rioters aren't staying six feet apart than the fact they are hosing police officers with semi dynamite sticks.

Public health professor worried about protesters not wearing masks, physical distancing
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020

PORTLAND, Ore. – Local public health experts are warning protesters about large gatherings.

Doctor Carlos Crespo with Portland State University's School of Public Health, said he is worried about the amount of protesters not adhering to social distance or wearing masks.

Dr. Crespo says the virus had a disproportionate impact on minority communities before protests even began, killing more people of color than white people.


Crespo said black and Hispanic Oregonians are more likely to suffer from dangerous pre-existing conditions like diabetes and heart disease.
“These are the same people who are literally fighting for their lives in this protest. It’s something that might be a calculated risk. But they know that both things, racism and the virus, are killing them disproportionately,” said Dr. Crespo.

CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS FOOL THIS SO CALLED DOCTOR AND HEALTH CARE EXPERT IS SPEWING DRIVEL LIKE THIS?

Nuff for tonight kiddies, Doomer Doug is overdosed, overwhelmed, and over, whatever at this kind and level of F%^&&&& STUPIDITY. It is like radiation exposure, you can only take so much of Dr. Crespo before you have a seizure. :kaid:
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
well, it doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out that like I have said on multiple times, when you mass, you get exposed, and when you get exposed, you get infected, and then you expose other people, and you infect them, and the cycle goes on.

I take no particular joy in announcing the next death wave here in Portland, Oregon, but it was a no brainer really. I mean what did they expect was going to happen when they have TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE RUNNING AROUND DOWNTOWN PORTLAND? no masks, no spacing, no freaking nothing. and so here gang it is: KABOOM!!!!!

The link is below, but you get the drift TODAY WAS THE SINGLE LARGEST INCREASE IN OREGON FOR EVER.


Oregon sees highest single-day coronavirus case increase since pandemic began
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020

PORTLAND, Ore. – Oregon had its largest single-day increase in identified coronavirus cases since state health officials have started keeping track of patients.

According to the Oregon Health Authority, there were 146 new confirmed and presumptive coronavirus cases identified as of 12:01 a.m. Sunday, bringing the statewide total to 4,808.

Lincoln County leads the state in new identified cases with 61, followed by Multnomah with 22, Clackamas with 18, and Marion with 11.
The state also had its first confirmed coronavirus death in Malheur County; a 71-year-old man who tested positive on June 1.
RELATED | 26 Oregon counties approved for phase 2 reopening
Most other COVID-19 victims in Oregon had underlying health conditions, however, results for the latest coronavirus death are still pending.
The previous highest single-day increase was on April 4, with 100 new cases.
The news comes a day after Washington state had its highest one-day jump in coronavirus cases in two months.


DD,

I don't think these numbers are from the rioting and protests, we won't see those numbers until maybe next week or the week after. Those are the numbers from easing the lockdown. Look what's happening in Florida since they eased the lockdown. The most consecutive days of over 1000 cases a day.florida.JPGfl2.JPGfl3.JPG
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)


Covid 19 coronavirus: Zero! Bring on level 1 - NZ now Covid-free
8 Jun, 2020 2:16pm

There are no active cases of Covid-19 in New Zealand.

The final case, an Auckland woman in her 50s associated with the St Margaret's rest home in Auckland, has now recovered from the virus.

Today's news of no active Covid-19 cases will have a major influence over Cabinet's decision on whether the country moves to level 1.

Director general of health Dr Ashley Bloomfield said the woman's recovery was "really good news" for her and something "the rest of New Zealand can take heart in".

"Having no active cases for the first time since February 28 is certainly a significant mark in our journey but as we've previously said, ongoing vigilance against Covid-19 will continue to be essential."

A media statement was released at 1pm with the latest Covid update.

There are no new confirmed or probable cases.

Cabinet is currently meeting to assess whether to move the country to the laxest of alert levels, which would see life mostly return to normal, except for strict border restrictions.

Director General of Health Ashley Bloomfield will join Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern at the post-Cabinet conference at 3pm, where the decision of alert level 1 will be announced.

It is now 17 days since the last new case was reported in New Zealand. Our total number of confirmed cases remains at 1154, which is the number the country reports to the World Health Organisation.

The combined total of confirmed and probable cases remains at 1504.

There have been no additional deaths to report and no one is in hospital.

Yesterday 800 tests were processed, bringing the total number of tests completed to date to 294,848. The Ministry said lower testing volumes were regularly observed over weekends.

And 5000 more people have downloaded the NZ Covid Tracer app, bringing the total number of 522,000 registrations. Meanwhile, 37,504 businesses have created posters with QR codes and people have scanned into businesses 734,415 times.

"We are keeping our testing approach under constant review," the ministry said.

"New Zealanders can be assured that our capacity remains high and that testing at the border and in our communities will continue to be an essential part of our Covid-19 elimination strategy.

"We want to encourage and remind everyone that if they have any respiratory symptoms, they should seek advice from Healthline, their GP or after-hours clinic about getting tested. Testing is free," the Ministry said.

Eight significant clusters are closed. This is unchanged from yesterday.

A cluster is considered to be closed when there have been no new cases for two incubation periods (ie 28 days) from the date when all cases have completed isolation.

Professor Michael Baker said having no active cases was "an important milestone on the way to Covid-19 elimination".

"These active cases are not themselves a major concern as we know about them and can ensure they are safely isolated. The worry has always been about the undetected cases that can cause outbreaks if we come out of lock down too swiftly," he said.

"As long as we are still at Level 2, we need to continue to follow physical distancing and other rules designed to minimise our risk of spreading Covid-19 and having another outbreak."

Baker said it was a real achievement that New Zealand may soon move to alert level 1.

"This event, when it happens, is a statement that we have achieved the goal of eliminating the Covid-19 virus from this country.

"This is, however, only the first battle in what will be a long-term war against this virus. The threat from Covid-19 obviously remains while this pandemic continues across the globe. This risk will rise again in New Zealand as we gradually increase the numbers of incoming travellers. It will also rise during the coming winter when coronaviruses are more transmissible."
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Department of Public Health senior research fellow Dr Amanda Kvalsvig said having no active cases "isn't really a meaningful landmark for pandemic control".

The numbers of 'active' and 'recovered' cases don't tell us how many people are still infectious, and don't answer the really important question which is whether there is still virus circulating in the population. If we continue to find no new cases despite ongoing testing, that's much more informative and so far the results are encouraging."

The Ministry's latest update and advice from Bloomfield will be among the evidence Cabinet will weigh up to make its decision on alert level 1.

Alert level 1 means all restrictions on businesses and gatherings are lifted and physical distancing is "encouraged" instead of being mandatory.

The golden rules of alert level 1 were:

• If you are sick, stay home

• If you have cold or flu-like symptoms get tested

• Wash your hands, Wash your hands, Wash your hands

• Sneeze and cough into your elbow and regularly disinfect shared surfaces

• If you are told by health authorities to self isolate you must do so immediately

• If concerned about your wellbeing or you have underlying health conditions, consult with your GP

• Keep track of where you've been and who you've seen so we can use that for contact tracing if needed

• Businesses should help with rule seven by displaying a QR code

• Stay vigilant
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

'It feels endless': four women struggling to recover from Covid-19
Many people suffer effects of coronavirus for months while reporting a wider range of symptoms than NHS guidelines state

Luke Harding
Sun 7 Jun 2020 10.14 EDT | Last modified on Sun 7 Jun 2020 13.20 EDT

Last month, the Guardian published an interview with Paul Garner, a professor of infectious diseases, about his experience of Covid-19. The piece was shared widely and viewed nearly 1m times. Readers got in touch to say they too were suffering from lingering and often strange Covid-19 symptoms.

There is evidence that the official NHS description of the virus’s symptoms – cough, fever, loss of taste/smell – is too narrow. Those who do not need acute hospital treatment and who are isolating at home report a far broader range of problems. Often these go on for longer than 14 days. An online survey of 151 medical professionals who fell ill in March found 68 are still unable to work. A further 26 went back, only to stop again when symptoms returned.

It appears coronavirus may be a chronic condition. How long it persists for is unknown. The symptoms can be serious and wide-ranging, affecting the lungs, heart, brain, kidneys, stomach and nervous system. Headaches, shortness of breath, sore throat and feeling exhausted are common. So is recovery followed by frequent relapses. Here are the stories of four women who are struggling to return to

Iulia Hammond, 39, junior doctor in Manchester

“I went down with Covid on 19 March. I had a fever, chills and a very mild dry cough. I took to bed, feeling like I couldn’t do much of anything. After three or four days I had really severe respiratory symptoms. It felt as if there were shards of glass in my lungs. It was the most horrendous thing I have ever experienced. I was absolutely terrified.

“For the past 10 weeks I have been sleeping sitting upright in bed. It’s the only way I’m able to breathe. I developed pharyngitis and at one point I thought they were going to have to intubate me. I made two trips to A&E and had tests. I chatted to my GP who says patients look OK and yet feel the worse they have ever felt. It’s such a horrible virus. It seems quite different in each person. There’s not a standard progression.

“I’ve had a slew of symptoms. I got the worst headache I have ever had, like an electric cord over my temples and the back of my head. I get an odd crawling sensation on the left side of the face, including when I brush my hair. I’ve had abdominal issues and stomach pain and sensory things like pins and needles in my arms and legs. The illness comes around in two-week cycles. This has happened four times.

“Every day I am still short of breath. In week six I got a left-sided stabbing chest pain. I now have an abnormal heart rate. This is something you can get with viruses and I’m hoping it will go. You wonder why is this happening? As a physician I have been reading articles. We are learning about coronavirus in real time. The virus is completely novel, akin to HIV/Aids in the 1980s.

“I’m now on day 74 and not at work. Essentially I go bed, kitchen, sofa. There are weeks when I feel I have ridden the wave, and others where I’m back in the wave. I would like to get back to normal life sooner rather than later. It feels very endless.”

Dr Tracy Briggs, 42, clinical academic and geneticist at the University of Manchester

“I got symptoms on 13 March. We had been in London on holiday for half-term and rode the tube and went to museums. I felt short of breath. My chest was tight and my heart was racing. I have very mild asthma and I thought maybe it was an attack. It was strange. The inhaler didn’t work and after a few hours I went to A&E. I was told to go home and isolate.

“I wasn’t able to get out of bed or eat. I felt absolutely rough, sweaty, with a horrible sore throat and struggling to breathe. After 10 days I started to do a little bit more. I went for a walk with the family and pottered around the house. Then I seemed to step back and struggle again. Climbing one flight of stairs would send my heart racing. I would cough and be short of breath.

“It has been such a rollercoaster. You start to question yourself and your own sanity. You wonder what tomorrow is going to be. It’s quite tough. My 12-year-old son had no appetite for three weeks, a sore throat and vomiting. My husband had a sore throat for a week and a mild chicken pox-like rash. My stepson had Covid symptoms and was coughing, but not as badly as me.”

“My tongue and the back of the throat are red, white and inflamed. I’ve lost quite a lot of weight. I find myself choking on food and short of breath when I eat. I’ve been taking Gaviscon and today started on a course of proton pump inhibitors. I’ve had a feeling of burning in my sternum and my throat.

“I felt hot and sweaty but didn’t have a documented high temperature. I think there is a need to recognise that the clinical symptoms are much wider than cough and fever. This isn’t necessarily something which lasts seven or 14 days. Absolutely acute patients are the priority. But we need to be aware that for a number of people, even those who don’t need to go to hospital, it’s going on for a long period. We need support.”

Jo Platt, 46, former Labour MP for Leigh

“I lost my seat in the December election. I wasn’t going to work or down to London. The only thing I can think of is I picked up the virus while shopping. The first symptoms began on 24 March. It was like flicking a light switch. I was at my computer and felt I was going to faint. I had nausea, dizziness and a burning temperature. Then the fatigue set in. I couldn’t move and went to bed for two days.

“I recovered and thought I had something really mild. For two more days I was shaky. The next day I really went down with it. I had shortness of breath, an unproductive cough. It felt like something was in my chest. I had a horrific headache. I could not get out of bed for a full week. By the Easter weekend I thought I was out of it. But that Monday the symptoms returned. I called my GP. They were very nice, but said you haven’t got the usual symptoms and should rest.

“The gastro thing is really worrying me. I lost a stone in weight and could not eat. My blood tests were normal apart from a vitamin D deficiency. I couldn’t get a test. It’s been a bit of a rollercoaster. The government says if you haven’t got a cough or temperature or loss of taste it’s not Covid. That’s not true. My GP now says they’ve had numerous cases similar to mine.

“This is week 10. I get back pain, like an inflammation. It’s not as severe as it’s been. I have a really strange sensation in my legs, as if I’ve been hill walking. I wake up with sore joints in my fingers. I’ve had gastrointestinal issues and acid reflux. Seeing food on TV makes me feel nauseous. This is manageable. For me the scary thing is the shortness of breath. We still don’t know how long this goes on for and that’s the frightening bit.

“We need a bottom-up approach. There are a lot of voices out there and we are not being listened to. More and more people are joining [‘long haul’ covid] Facebook support groups. We have got a lot to say and want to get the message out to GPs and public health directors.”

Ginevra Read, 42, psychiatrist, Bristol

“It started on 16 March. I had a slight cough and a terrible headache. The next morning my temperature was 38.3C. A week later, I was feeling worse and developed shortness of breath but it passed after a day or so. After another week I felt completely well. I went out for a short jog and felt fine. Normally I run 25km a week, swim and do yoga. But then later that week, after another short run, I was hit by extreme fatigue lasting four days. This happened another three to four times, after much less exertion.


“Around week seven there was a big deterioration. It was my son’s birthday and I was busy, making him a cake, and we went on a short family bike ride too. A few days later, it all came back but much worse. I had lots of symptoms, including tingling on the right side of my body, and a sensation of heat on my left foot, as well as shortness of breath, chest pain and fevers. People talk about internal shaking. I had that and a feeling like my stomach was vibrating, deeply unpleasant and as if I was being poisoned.

“It was very frightening to feel so unwell. Going into week nine I was exhausted. Staying in bed really helped with fatigue but in week 11, I still have low grade fevers, chills, malaise and odd neurological symptoms. I am resting a lot but my improvements have plateaued.

“We don’t know what is causing prolonged Covid. Is it the ongoing initial illness, or is it an inflammatory reaction or is it a post-viral syndrome? We don’t know what the prognosis is or what the long-term consequences are. I wonder how many people are having prolonged illness and what the impact is on the workforce, for example. It’s scary to have an illness for which there isn’t any treatment and that doesn’t seem to be going away.”
 

Heliobas Disciple

TB Fanatic
(fair use applies)

Want To Fly? You’ll Need This Blockchain-Backed Health Passport
Carlton Reid
Jun 5, 2020,07:29am EDT

To travel internationally shortly you won’t just need a paper passport; you’ll need a digital one. This will be a smartphone app—secured by blockchain protocols—that certifies you’re not infected with COVID-19.

This is one of the takeaways from a webinar held on June 5 with Cristina Del Río Fresen of the Canary Islands. The leader of the Ministry of Tourism’s Global Tourism Safety Lab told travel industry executives and journalists on the Zoom call that a July flight from Madrid to the Canary Islands will be a world first: it will test a digital health passport app that will use data from health authorities to certify that travelers are free of COVID-19.

The privately-developed Health iCard App—or Hi+ Card—has received the backing of the UN World Tourism Organization (UNWTO). The organization’s Digital Innovation and Transformation department has been working on internet-based tools to reduce the pandemic’s impact on the world’s tourism industry.

The app—compliant with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulations (GDPR) on data security—was created by Madrid-based Tourism Data Driven Solutions, or TDDS, in association with the Spanish-government-backed Air Institute, which specializes in computer science and artificial intelligence.

Blockchain protocols will “avoid the possibility of false profiles being created or medical records being manipulated,” said Antonio López de Ávila, CEO of TDDS. His company was working on the Hi+ Card before the pandemic, and accelerated its development as lockdowns started to be imposed in Europe.

The Canary Islands are a Spanish archipelago located 62 miles west of Morocco, Africa. Also known as the Canaries, the islands are heavily dependent on tourists, who are responsible for generating 35% of the region’s GDP and 40% of the island’s jobs. In a normal year—this is not a normal year—13 million tourists travel to the Canaries from outside Spain, including five million from the U.K.

Spain reopens to international tourism in July. Compulsory quarantine measures for arrivals in the Canaries finish on June 7.

(Ironically, travelers from the U.K. might be excluded from travel within the EU when general travel is allowed again. Ironic because Brexit Brits wanted to “take control of borders” but the Brexiter government left borders open during the pandemic enabling international travelers to arrive without going into quarantine as was made compulsory in many other countries. Experts say this led to the U.K. becoming a global hot-spot for COVID-19—those wishing to leave the British Isles soon may find it becomes a whole lot more difficult, with or without a “Brexit blue” passport.)

While contactless biometric boarding is likely to become a norm with all airlines when flights take off in earnest again—and passengers had better get used to four-hour check-in queues, temperature screening, disinfection tunnels and in-flight sanitation sprays (“only those ‘fit to fly’ will be allowed to enter,” predicted the airline strategy firm SimpliFlying, in its “Rise of Sanitised Travel” report)—it’s the ability to digitally certify being free of COVID-19 that could prove the key to future cross-border travel.

Fresen said on the Zoom call that she was in charge of a “global laboratory for safe tourism,” and that the world would be watching the July flight. It will trial the digital health passport app.

“We want to make everything safe from a health perspective,” she said. This is especially important for the Canaries because the islands have remained relatively unscathed by the virus, with “only” 155 lives lost among the 2 million residents.

Fresen does not think the roll-out of the digital health app will lead to a stampede on flights to the islands, or anywhere else for that matter.

“[Tourism] will recover only gradually,” she said.

The July flight, backed by UNWTO and billed as a “validation” exercise, will test the Hi+ Card app and monitor how people feel about international air travel before a vaccine has been developed against COVID-19.

Want to book space on this flight? You can’t, it’s only for the national and international press, travel agencies, heads of tourism companies, and UNWTO staff. However, if all goes well, it could be a fillip to flights in general.

UNWTO’s Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili said that “in these exceptional times, in which the COVID-19 pandemic has shaken the world economy and threatened our tourism sector, innovation becomes the cornerstone of the recuperation.”

He added: “Trips will no longer be as they were before. Rather, they will become safer and more sustainable, to continue providing benefits to nations and communities.”

Health has to come first, insisted Fresen. It is “vital to help humanity to fight against the virus,” she said.
 

john70

Veteran Member
well, it doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out that like I have said on multiple times, when you mass, you get exposed, and when you get exposed, you get infected, and then you expose other people, and you infect them, and the cycle goes on.

I take no particular joy in announcing the next death wave here in Portland, Oregon, but it was a no brainer really. I mean what did they expect was going to happen when they have TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE RUNNING AROUND DOWNTOWN PORTLAND? no masks, no spacing, no freaking nothing. and so here gang it is: KABOOM!!!!!

The link is below, but you get the drift TODAY WAS THE SINGLE LARGEST INCREASE IN OREGON FOR EVER.


Oregon sees highest single-day coronavirus case increase since pandemic began
by KATU Staff
Sunday, June 7th 2020

PORTLAND, Ore. – Oregon had its largest single-day increase in identified coronavirus cases since state health officials have started keeping track of patients.

According to the Oregon Health Authority, there were 146 new confirmed and presumptive coronavirus cases identified as of 12:01 a.m. Sunday, bringing the statewide total to 4,808.

Lincoln County leads the state in new identified cases with 61, followed by Multnomah with 22, Clackamas with 18, and Marion with 11.
The state also had its first confirmed coronavirus death in Malheur County; a 71-year-old man who tested positive on June 1.
RELATED | 26 Oregon counties approved for phase 2 reopening
Most other COVID-19 victims in Oregon had underlying health conditions, however, results for the latest coronavirus death are still pending.
The previous highest single-day increase was on April 4, with 100 new cases.
The news comes a day after Washington state had its highest one-day jump in coronavirus cases in two months.

FLORIDA...............WE NOW HAVE FREE test for anyone...........so the fearful are getting tested

OUT OF THE FEARFUL COLLECTION...............a little over 5% are positive

TAKEAWAY..........................do we have more cases.....................OR MORE TESTING

IN FLORIDA...........................I think a lot more testing
 

john70

Veteran Member


COVID-19 testing in Florida

Testing in Florida has seen steady growth since the COVID-19 crisis began and has started to see a steady decline in the percentage of people testing positive, a key indicator experts rely on to determine whether the pandemic is improving or worsening.


Testing, like hospitalizations, helps officials determine the virus’ progress and plays a role in deciding whether it is safe to lift stay-at-home orders and loosen restrictions.


The recommended numbers of daily tests needed vary by experts, but the dean of the University of South Florida’s College of Medicine told the governor Florida needs to test about 33,000 people every day. The state has hit or surpassed the recommended mark a few times but is typically several thousand under.


Florida’s Department of Health reported 41,999 new tests in Sunday’s daily COVID-19 update. In total, the state has done 1,217,105 tests. Of the total tested, 63,938 or about 5.25 percent have tested positive for the disease. The state says there are 1,161 pending tests.


Health experts have previously told the Miami Herald that they were concerned the number of pending COVID-19 tests listed by the state is an undercount because Florida reports only the number of Floridians waiting to get test results from state labs, not private ones — and private labs are completing more than 90% of state tests.


Previously, it has taken as long as two weeks for the results of pending tests from private labs to be added into the state’s official count, making it difficult for officials to project the size and scale of the pandemic in the state. It’s unclear how quickly results are currently being sent to the state from private labs.


Read more here: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/coronavirus/article243346466.html#storylink=cpy
 

john70

Veteran Member
FLORIDA, 2020.....8 JUNE,2020

In weeks 21-22, the percent of emergency department and urgent care center visits with a discharge diagnosis of influenza statewide decreased and was below the previous three-season average for this time
In weeks 21 and 22, the percent of emergency department and urgent care center visits with a discharge diagnosis of influenza statewide decreased and was below the previous three-season average for this time.

The figure above shows the percent of visits with discharge diagnoses that include influenza (with certain exceptions) for facilities participating in ESSENCE-FL (n=375) statewide for the current year (week 40, 2019 to week 22, 2020) and the previous three season average (2018-19, 2017-18, and 2016-17). Of note, influenza may not be laboratory-confirmed for all the visits included in this query. For more information on the use of ESSENCE-FL for influenza and ILI surveillance.
View the weekly report
*Note: This page contains materials in the Portable Document Format (PDF). The free Acrobat Reader may be required to view these files.
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I joined some Covid groups on Facebook when my symptoms matched 4 weeks ago. The posts.are getting more desperate and depressing.
Here is one that popped in my feed this morning.

Day 88. I know this group wants only positive stories, so I'm bowing out for now. I'd love to have positive thoughts to share. But the truth isn't positive for me. The truth is, I'm getting worse. Not better. I'd love to be otherwise. But at this point it has become clear to me this is an incredibly serious, dangerous situation. The vast majority of us here are not improving. And it sucks. No one in my city, state or nation is doing anything about people like me. And I know in my bones that I'm losing this battle. The only thing left for me to do is accept it. And let go. There will be no recovery. I have permanent damage. I cannot function. And I'm just too tired to fight anymore. It lives in me. And it's never leaving. I hope someday those in power figure this out. Too late for me, sadly. I don't want to live in this pain anymore. But there's no choice. My life is over.
 
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Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I joined some Covid groups on Facebook when my symptoms matched 4 weeks ago. The posts.are getting more desperate and depressing.
Here is one that popped in my feed this morning.

Day 88. I know this group wants only positive stories, so I'm bowing out for now. I'd love to have positive thoughts to share. But the truth isn't positive for me. The truth is, I'm getting worse. Not better. I'd love to be otherwise. But at this point it has become clear to me this is an incredibly serious, dangerous situation. The vast majority of us here are not improving. And it sucks. No one in my city, state or nation is doing anything about people like me. And I know in my bones that I'm losing this battle. The only thing left for me to do is accept it. And let go. There will be no recovery. I have permanent damage. I cannot function. And I'm just too tired to fight anymore. It lives in me. And it's never leaving. I hope someday those in power figure this out. Too late for me, sadly. I don't want to live in this pain anymore. But there's no choice. My life is over.
How are you doing? Do you feel like you are making any progress? Hope you are doing better. Keep hope.
 

naturallysweet

Has No Life - Lives on TB
How are you doing? Do you feel like you are making any progress? Hope you are doing better. Keep hope.
as long as I do absolutely nothing I'm generally fine. Sure I'll still have some stabbing pain and a little breathlessness. But I'm fine just sitting here doing nothing.

Problem comes when I try to do anything. Literally anything. And the colder weather we are having in the pnw doesn't appear to be helping.

This thing is an alien.
 

Mixin

Veteran Member
as long as I do absolutely nothing I'm generally fine. Sure I'll still have some stabbing pain and a little breathlessness. But I'm fine just sitting here doing nothing.

Problem comes when I try to do anything. Literally anything. And the colder weather we are having in the pnw doesn't appear to be helping.

This thing is an alien.
Can you do deep breathing exercises?
 

Zagdid

Veteran Member

Coronavirus: 24 children in Vermont test positive after new outbreak
Health officials in Vermont have identified a recent outbreak of coronavirus impacting 62 people, including 24 children.

The cases — impacting people from one year old to 64 — were identified on Sunday. The median age among new patients is 21 years old. One in five infected people reported symptoms, though a majority didn't know they were affected.

Health officials did not report any hospitalisations or deaths but expect the number of cases to continue to rise in coming days.

Though the state is experiencing an uptick in new cases, the rate of positive cases remains relatively low, according to Vermont health commissioner Mark Levine. At least 895 people have recovered, and 55 people have died. The state's death toll has remained stagnant for several weeks.

A cluster of new cases in Winooski was first identified two weeks ago, but health officials believe it spread to nearby Burlington and surrounding areas.

The spike in cases arrives as the state begins to reopen to some activity, including organised recreational sports, which are scheduled to resume on 15 June.

On Monday, Vermont restaurants and bars were allowed to resume inside seating with 25 per cent of their capacity and with physical distancing in place between tables, and interstate travel is reopening to other parts of the region.

Nearly 2 million Covid-19 cases have been identified in the US since the onset of its outbreak. At least 110,724 people have died, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVRc7kfeG28
13:36 min
089 - How to Reopen Safely: A COVID-19 Toolkit for Businesses
•Jun 8, 2020

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
As restrictions lift and businesses think about reopening, many aren’t sure what they should consider in order to protect their employees and customers. Lucia Mullen and Dr. Crystal Watson co-authored a toolkit for businesses that includes checklists to follow and suggested modifications to put in place before reopening. They talk with Stephanie Desmon about how businesses can assess risk and create solutions that fit their budgets and resources.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7b0_iGWLGYM
30:32 min
Monday Global Update
•Jun 8, 2020


Dr. John Campbell

COVID -19, Update, Monday 8th June
New Zealand Cases, 1,504 Deaths, 22 (1.46) https://www.msn.com/en-nz/news/nation... Alert level 1 No known active cases of COVID-19 Social distancing no longer required No more limits on gatherings Border will remain closed to non-New Zealanders. Hoping to control any potential future outbreaks with contact tracing.

1. If you are sick stay home 2. If you have cold or flu-like symptoms, get a COVID-19 test 3. Regularly wash your hands 4. Sneeze and cough into your elbow 5. If you're told by health authorities to self-isolate, do it 6. Work with your GP if you heave underlying health issues and are at higher risk 7. Keep track of where you have been to help contact tracers 8. Businesses should help Kiwis with contact tracing by displaying QR codes 9. Be prepared for a move up alert levels if we need to 10. Be kind to others

3 Officers effected by bleach https://www.philstar.com/nation/2020/...

Cameroon Deaths, 7,908 Cases, 212 Illegal to intentionally infect others Brazil Deaths, 691,758 Cases, 36,455 Live data only to be published Chile Cases, 134,150 Deaths + 653 = 2,290 US Cases, 1,942,363 Deaths, 110,514 Protests, LA, SF, Chicago, Washington Cases Clusters Community spread Incubation Symptomatic Complications Deaths

Andrew Cuomo "Get a test. Get a test," People who have been participating in rallies Plans to open 15 testing sites dedicated to protesters "I would act as if you were exposed, and I would tell people you are interacting with, assume I am positive for the virus,"

Afghanistan Kabul Cases, 20,917 Deaths, 369 1 m infected Saudi Arabia Largely spread through low income migrant workers in challenging conditions Cases, + 3,045 = 101,914 Deaths + 712 = 712 Russia Cases, 476,043 Deaths, 5,963 Lockdown easing India https://www.telegraph.co.uk/global-he... Record spike in coronavirus cases Cases + 9,971 = 246,628 Deaths, 6,929 New Delhi Mumbai Ahmedabad. Delhi Reserved hospital beds for residents Sick flocked in from the provinces.

UK New cases, 9,400 Deaths, + 77 = 40,625 Arrivals to self-quarantine for 14 days Devon tourists and closed toilets SAGE, 100 members Oxford AZ vaccine announcement in August Central London crowds 27 officers injured so far Ken March, (Police federation) they should not be there, protests should not be allowed

Disparities in the risk and outcomes of COVID-19 https://assets.publishing.service.gov... Over 80s, seventy times more likely to die than under 40s More males than female More in Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic (BAME) These analyses take into account age, sex, deprivation, region and ethnicity, but they do not take into account the existence of comorbidities Managed not to mention vitamin D or air pollution

Netherlands 4 million mink Mink being culled after infections confirmed Mink farms could be a reservoir Spread to farmer family Denmark Spain Detection dogs as a help in the detection of COVID-19 Can the dog alert on COVID-19 positive persons by sniffing axillary sweat samples ? Proof-of-concept study https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.11... We conclude that there is a very high evidence that the armpits sweat odour of COVID-19+ persons is different, and that dogs can detect a person infected by the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=supMmAAGtEY
58:46 min
War Room Pandemic Ep 218 - Struggle Sessions
•Streamed live 5 hours ago


Bannon WarRoom - Citizens of the American Republi

Raheem Kassam, Jack Maxey, and Greg Manz are joined by Steve Bannon to discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as the riots continue globally and the rioters begin to deface iconic memorials. Also, a small farewell to Jason Miller, who has recently been hired as the Chief Strategist to the Trump 2020 re-election campaign.

________________________________-

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqtXLnwWwTc
58:27 min
War Room Pandemic Ep 219 - The 100 Year Marathon (w/ Dr. Michael Pillsbury)
•Streamed live 4 hours ago


Bannon WarRoom - Citizens of the American Republic


Raheem Kassam, Jack Maxey, and Greg Manz discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as the world is now working on a consensus on how to deal with the Chinese Communist Party for attempting to cover up its involvement in the global outbreak. Calling in is Dr. Michael Pillsbury to provide his insights on the China's "strategy" to deal with the world. Keep on top of developments:
 
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