Agreed. The last I looked the typical hospitalization period was 18 days for folks that die. Combine that with a 5 day incubation period and pre-hospitalization period and you get one scary scenario.
Sorry I don't share your disdain, state and local hospitals should work to get the needed equipment and not do nothing expecting the Feds to supply their needs. It doesn't have to be an all or nothing the Feds and locals can work the problem at the same time.
I cant wait for some weeks from now to say I told you so to the hypemasters on this nonsense that think the country should come to a halt over this.
The US response is an extreme overreaction. Twump should have allowed this to play out instead of resorting to the extreme measures taken which could result in an economic catastrophe.
Well played. There are certainly some people on this board who I no longer bother reading but generally some really good insight. There are many on this board who def hold different views than I do but I still read their posts as I don't want to get trapped into just having my views massaged. I participate in spurts, been interesting lately and I have been on these boards since early 2000's (if I remember correctly).
I hope to hear you saying I told you so some weeks from now. That would mean things went better than expected for our country.
Sorry I'll not take as fact from a 3rd party unverified source. No different from my wife's friend who told her Publix was out of meat, only to find it full to the brim. For what its worth (not much) I did text a fellow PA who works at Shands ER in Jax, they are testing people there for it, but mainly the sicker patients who have some respiratory distress. Certainly an old person admitted with Pneumonia would likely fit that criteria.
We will never know whether or not this is an over reaction. We do know that Trump views this as such and wanted this to just play out - which according to every expert in the field would have been a bad idea.
Italy had the attitude of just letting it play out. To date, over 2,100 dead in a country of 60 million, and climbing daily. The US does have less cases per million, but has also tested just 20,000 people, versus a country like S. Korea, that has 1/6th the population, and has tested over 200,000 people. S. Korea has about 12X the amount of cases per million, but if you look at the prior link from the Johns Hopkins Professor, there are likely 25X the cases in the US, or more. But we just don't know, because we haven't tested nearly enough people. If you look at Italy, where again, their response was this was just another flu that will blow over quickly, they have the highest total of cases per million. Fortunately, it's likely we won't hit those numbers because of all the things that have been cancelled and everyone who is taking this seriously practicing social distancing.
I don't see where the State and local hospitals are doing nothing. But State and local hospitals need help. This is exactly where Feds should step up, and should have six weeks ago. Now you understand the difference with Obama's response to immediately provide aid to States before the H1N1 hit, rather than after like Trump.
lol Nothing hardly was done for that until many deaths. The US is actually prepared some medical wise unlike Italy and that is why they have the crazy death count - even worse than China who had crap capacity when that stuff started.
I don't really care if you believe it. This isn't a fairy in which disbelief will make it go away. The poster is as republican as it gets and is a Trump fan btw. When it happens to a family member and you hear it from a doctor with your own ears it kind of takes the partisanship out of the equation.
Well if you are listening to and believing the lefty media points they will be wrong as usual but then again these are the same idiots that told us Trump was wrong for stopping travel and that Europe should keep its borders open before.
I've stated about a thousand times that I don't get much of anything from mainstream media I listen to actual numbers and the testimony from scientists in the field of diseases and immunology.