kansas45
New member
Thank you. That is very kind of you. But what antonym were you thinking of?Yeah. You're like a poet. If a poet meant the opposite of its actual definition.
Thank you. That is very kind of you. But what antonym were you thinking of?Yeah. You're like a poet. If a poet meant the opposite of its actual definition.
Thanks doctor, pandemic solved. Close the threadThey play football during the flu season and the flu causes more fatalities than we appreciated. Both viruses pose a risk to a player's life that is so low. The underlying health conditions listed above, the ones that would put a youth into the vulnerable category, sound like conditions that would already exclude him from college football. Furthermore the schools know their medical history and can exclude any vulnerable players.
Simply put, the fear that more players will die from covid if there is a football season is not supported by logic and evidence. The chance of serious physical injury from the virus is negligible compared to the dangerous game of football.
Thanks doctor, pandemic solved. Close the thread
That's a really good question, and you happened to ask an expert! I served as a 68D20 (Operating Room Sergeant) in the US Army for 12 years. A good portion of that was as part of a CSH (Combat Support Hospital) in the reserves, a unit that would be called upon to create a field hospital in the event of an emergency.
It takes 3 days to build a CSH. The ER has 24 hours to open, the OR/ICU/LAB/PHARM need to be open within 48 with the rest of the hospital fully online within 72 hours. This includes stringing out the layout of the hospital, emptying containers, construction of the hospital using ISO containers and temper tents, setting up power and water, etc.
This takes roughly 200-300 highly trained soldiers to accomplish, after months of training and preparation. These hospitals come full staffed, a staff that has years of experience working with each other.
What does this have to do with staffing an existing hospital? Absolutely nothing.
Right now, this closed hospital has no staff. No chief of medicine. No head nurses. No doctors. No IT staff. No janitors.
Are we even sure that there are enough medical professionals to staff the hospital if it was opened?
Honest question I don't know the answer to, and also realize is far from a perfect analogy...
Should Baker Mayfield not have been allowed to play in the Rose Bowl when he had the flu?
Dang, that is fast!That's a really good question, and you happened to ask an expert! I served as a 68D20 (Operating Room Sergeant) in the US Army for 12 years. A good portion of that was as part of a CSH (Combat Support Hospital) in the reserves, a unit that would be called upon to create a field hospital in the event of an emergency.
It takes 3 days to build a CSH. The ER has 24 hours to open, the OR/ICU/LAB/PHARM need to be open within 48 with the rest of the hospital fully online within 72 hours. This includes stringing out the layout of the hospital, emptying containers, construction of the hospital using ISO containers and temper tents, setting up power and water, etc.
This takes roughly 200-300 highly trained soldiers to accomplish, after months of training and preparation. These hospitals come full staffed, a staff that has years of experience working with each other.
What does this have to do with staffing an existing hospital? Absolutely nothing.
Right now, this closed hospital has no staff. No chief of medicine. No head nurses. No doctors. No IT staff. No janitors.
Are we even sure that there are enough medical professionals to staff the hospital if it was opened?
If it was actually the real influenza, then no. He shouldn’t have played IMO. Both for his health and others. But in the magnitude of the event, one case is easily going to get glossed over.Honest question I don't know the answer to, and also realize is far from a perfect analogy...
Should Baker Mayfield not have been allowed to play in the Rose Bowl when he had the flu?
Not HS kids that are working out/conditioning, I can tell you that for sure. I see 100-200 every single day. No mask, no distancing, nothing. Inside in the gyms, weight room, halls and outside.Just curious as we get closer to the season if any of the former mask holdouts are now wearing masks. Anyone have a change of heart?
I can honestly say that in my day to day life I haven't seen someone wear a mask in 2 weeks. Again, this is rural Nebraska but close to some hot spots. My son said he is seeing more people wearing them in Lincoln as opposed to a few weeks ago.Just curious as we get closer to the season if any of the former mask holdouts are now wearing masks. Anyone have a change of heart?
I can honestly say that in my day to day life I haven't seen someone wear a mask in 2 weeks. Again, this is rural Nebraska but close to some hot spots. My son said he is seeing more people wearing them in Lincoln as opposed to a few weeks ago.
Daily deaths continuing to rise.Last two days we've had 1100+ Covid deaths each day. First time since end of May/beginning of June we've seen numbers like that on back to back days. Definitely need to see those numbers shrink as we get closer to football season.