doublesharp
Member
Last week DID NOT wipe out 3.5yrs of growth!
Just shook out some weak hands is all.
Last week DID NOT wipe out 3.5yrs of growth!
Oh, so when you get busted for talking nonsense you go to "I was just kidding"...gotcha. CNN Bwahahaha.
Okay. Irony is REALLY lost on some people. You should stop digging yourself in deeper.
Talked with my pharmacist, he does not expect supply chain issues for standard meds. The markets went way up today.
6 dead now in Washington state. Like most preventable diseases, it's easy to ignore- until you or some of your family gets it. It spreads exponentially. We don't know how prevalent it is because we haven't had the test for it yet. Our CDC is short staffed and our HHS personal are not trained to handle this. Some of the swamp that got drained contained trained and experience experts that would have been nice to have when this first appeared on the horizon. Maybe we would have been ready when infected people were flown into the country, greeted by untrained and unprotected HHS staff, who then went out into the general population spreading the virus. It is here. Hopefully we don't have too many deaths before we can get control of the disease .
Never happen. It doesn't fit the narrative or agenda. You can't whip up people's emotions presenting information that puts the emotional event into some kind of realistic perspective. That doesn't sell papers or boost ratings.Was commenting to my wife this evening that I think it would reassure people if the local health departments and local news would tell us, in addition to Covid-19 statistics, how many people have died of the common flu this season in our localities. (I'm in Oregon. Two dead hereabouts of Covid-19 so far, I think it was.)
Added: I think Covid-19 should be taken seriously. And I do, personally. Don't think it is ho-hum. But also, I think people being what they are, and the news media being what it is, perspective is important. And I think perspective provides a calming influence.
Unbelievable that there still places in the US where employers are allowed to deny people paid sick leave.I'm waiting for the CDC to really start pushing the "If you feel sick, stay at home" advice. Like that works in the land of no paid sick time.![]()
...and this week a couple of dozen in Washington have died of other forms of the flu. Big yawn from the media. Not nearly as sexy as a new virus PANDEMIC.
As for the swamp - keep draining it I say.
True, for known, detected cases.It's not "just the flu" death rate much higher. flu .1% this virus 3.4
WHO says coronavirus death rate is 3.4% globally, higher than previously thought
By then if you're dead you won't care and if you're alive you won't care either. I mean does anyone really care anymore how many people the Spanish Flu killed way back when??????True, for known, detected cases.
What isn't known is how many have had it and already recovered, or currently have it and just haven't been diagnosed. We know for a fact that there are a lot of people in the second category, and may never know how many have had it and recovered already. It is pretty much only killing the elderly and those with other serious health issues.
If 10x more people have it or have had it than what have been diagnosed then the death rate is 1/10th of that theoretical 3.4% death rate - or only .34%. If 100x more have been infected than what we currently know about the actual mortality rate would be .034%
It was only discovered when people started dying from it. There may be 10's of thousands who have already had it and got over it thinking it was just another flu. I had the flu last week and got over it. Never saw a doctor. How do we know it wasn't Coronavirus? We don't, and there is no way to know how many thousands are in that same boat. After all, I do live only 300 miles from the only place in the US where there have been fatalities from the virus. So I may already be one of the people who got it, was never diagnosed, and DIDN'T die from it.
See how that works to skew the statistics? It is going to take years of accumulating data to determine the actual mortality rate.
To state it ACCURATELY there is CURRENTLY a 3.4% mortality rate for KNOWN cases. But since we don't actually KNOW how many cases there are, that number is definitely inflated. We don't yet know the actual mortality rate.
True, for known, detected cases.
What isn't known is how many have had it and already recovered, or currently have it and just haven't been diagnosed. We know for a fact that there are a lot of people in the second category, and may never know how many have had it and recovered already. It is pretty much only killing the elderly and those with other serious health issues.
If 10x more people have it or have had it than what have been diagnosed then the death rate is 1/10th of that theoretical 3.4% death rate - or only .34%. If 100x more have been infected than what we currently know about the actual mortality rate would be .034%
It was only discovered when people started dying from it. There may be 10's of thousands who have already had it and got over it thinking it was just another flu. I had the flu last week and got over it. Never saw a doctor. How do we know it wasn't Coronavirus? We don't, and there is no way to know how many thousands are in that same boat. After all, I do live only 300 miles from the only place in the US where there have been fatalities from the virus. So I may already be one of the people who got it, was never diagnosed, and DIDN'T die from it.
See how that works to skew the statistics? It is going to take years of accumulating data to determine the actual mortality rate.
To state it ACCURATELY there is CURRENTLY a 3.4% mortality rate for KNOWN cases. But since we don't actually KNOW how many cases there are, that number is definitely inflated. We don't yet know the actual mortality rate.