schriznoeder
New member
There are hundreds of studies out there (some reliable and some not), but this one is definitely intriguing...
I read that and it seems VERY speculative. Not much evidence to back up their hypothesis, just tweaking numbers in the math models.There are hundreds of studies out there (some reliable and some not), but this one is definitely intriguing...
Trump’s latest message about the US being “open” for Easter is another pandering to his “Christian-constituents”. He wants to be able to say “I wanted you all to get together, but the doctors and the local governments wouldn’t allow it”.
Hopefully individual church leaders are smart enough to not have in-person services for the foreseeable future. There are other ways to worship during Lent/Easter.
I would too. As someone who works in manufacturing and production lines, I can't imagine what it takes to do that quickly.I would watch a "How It's Made" on the retooling of those production lines. That can't be just plug-and-play changes. Some decent engineering problems probably have to be solved.
I saw a New Orleans pastor is leading services with over 1,000 people. He says they are following social distancing, but that is such a terrible idea, especially given that New Orleans has one of the highest rates of the illness per 1 million people.Several pastors in the South continue to lead full church services. If you've already bought into "God's Will" you don't need to explain yourself or defend your actions.
Meanwhile, an analysis of saliva samples yesterday in The Lancet Infectious Diseases shows that, unlike with SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome), viral load in patients with COVID-19 was highest at the beginning of their illness, which could account for the fast-spreading nature of the pandemic.
Probably a few weeks for designs and buyoffs, then a couple more to get tools and dies to actually manufactur the parts with (this is actually the longest lead item, could be a month or two in some cases). Then a couple more for tryouts and approval. It definitely wouldn't be plug and play.I would watch a "How It's Made" on the retooling of those production lines. That can't be just plug-and-play changes. Some decent engineering problems probably have to be solved.
I read that and it seems VERY speculative. Not much evidence to back up their hypothesis, just tweaking numbers in the math models.
Yeah I think their point is, until we get antibody testing, we have no clue. This could be everywhere, or it could just be where we’re looking. Lockout is good for now, but in order to get to the next phase, we will need mass testing and antibody testing.Oh, for sure - VERY speculative. It'll be really interesting to see the true numbers of past infections once the blood tests for antibodies are up and running.
Did...did you think I was trying to make some D vs R point by referencing a kid licking piss and s#!t?The people who drank pool cleaner had a vote too. Just saying.
Yup we had a patient yesterday who had all symptoms plus O2 level of 93% and a history of asthma. We called health dept to see if he could get tested and they told us he isnt in the high risk category so send him home and self quarantine. Its such BS. O2 under 95% is not good.Maggie Haberman with a rare fact-check on the Cheeto.
also agreed. which is why it might have been good for her to include them in that tweet :dunno
I see it first hand every day, people are NOT being tested. UNMC only tests 10 people per day according to the health dept.So who is accurate, Trump or Reporter thst works for CNN?