Welcome home, fellow Gator.

The Gator Nation's oldest and most active insider community
Join today!

Coronavirus in the United States - news and thoughts

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by GatorNorth, Feb 25, 2020.

  1. NavyGator93

    NavyGator93 GC Hall of Fame

    1,915
    740
    2,663
    Dec 4, 2015
    Georgia
    I heard on the news this morning that we were trending better in GA over the past 7 days. Not great, but better.
    I'll take it for now.
     
    • Fistbump/Thanks! Fistbump/Thanks! x 1
  2. Distant Gator

    Distant Gator GC Hall of Fame

    5,322
    725
    478
    Apr 9, 2007
    Upstate, SC
    Everyone should read this article...Whether you agree w/ 95 politics or not...


    Notre Dame has worked hard to prepare for the fall semester and take reasonable precautions for a safe return to campus. The temporary spike is concerning, but it does not merit the stark remedy of sending everyone home. We think that those who have voiced worries about the positive test results are focusing on the wrong numbers. This is in part because the Notre Dame dashboard focuses on positive cases alone. The more relevant metric is hospitalizations and mortality. By those measures, Notre Dame is doing extremely well and, in all likelihood, will continue to do so. According to the Indiana COVID-19 dashboard, diagnoses of people under 30 make up 29% of Indiana’s cases and 0.4% of its deaths. So far, not a single person under the age of 40 has died of COVID-19 in Saint Joseph County. Of course, not everyone at Notre Dame is low risk, and we certainly support every measure to protect the vulnerable members of our community, both within our walls and without.

    For the most part, the “Here” campaign is working well, especially for students on campus and in graduate and professional schools. We are hopeful that the University’s decision to suspend in-person classes will be temporary and will incentivize students to fully appreciate that their behavior impacts the entire Notre Dame community. In order to offer a fuller view of the effectiveness of our measures to mitigate the risks posed by the virus, we join with The Observer Editorial Board and other writers in encouraging the administration to modify the COVID-19 dashboard to provide more detailed information. Specifically, we strongly encourage the administration to provide information on age (18–24, 25–34, etc.) and status (undergraduate student, graduate student, staff, faculty) and also include hospitalizations and mortality statistics (0% and 0%, respectively) so that we have a more balanced and accurate picture of the effectiveness of our efforts.

    Our argument is not that COVID-19 is just another flu. It is a virus that, as far as the data indicate, is clearly dangerous to a subset of the population — but that subset is highly unlikely to include college or graduate students. Furthermore, according to a Cornell study, students are safer on campus. Closing campus due to a spike in positive cases will not protect our students, faculty and staff from more positive cases, much less hospitalizations and mortality. Sending students home will sentence them to months more of isolation — with psychological and social effects — or simply allow them to go out and about with local friends without the benefit of testing and supervision. Little surprise that one in four people aged 18-24 seriously contemplated suicide this summer, according to the CDC. This, and other less grave effects, remain invisible on COVID-19 testing charts, but are no less real.
     
    • Agree Agree x 2
  3. gator95

    gator95 GC Hall of Fame

    7,249
    772
    2,013
    Apr 3, 2007
  4. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

    30,532
    11,770
    3,693
    Aug 26, 2008
    how do you stop infected college student from giving it to 60 year old cashier at Publix or parent at home when they return home? Have two in college and working in retail and worried about them coming home. A $10 rapid test would sure simplify lots of things, cannot understand why these are not being pushed out
     
    • Winner Winner x 3
    • Agree Agree x 2
  5. gator95

    gator95 GC Hall of Fame

    7,249
    772
    2,013
    Apr 3, 2007
    It's called masks. Enforce mask wearing in stores. Not difficult.
     
    • Disagree Bacon! Disagree Bacon! x 1
    • Optimistic Optimistic x 1
  6. buckeyegator

    buckeyegator Premium Member

    73,145
    1,930
    3,883
    Oct 29, 2007
    gainesville, florida
    if masks are the answer, why do so many places want you not to pay in cash, is it transmitted that way, what about you touching credit cards at places w/o readers?
     
    • Dislike Dislike x 1
  7. buckeyegator

    buckeyegator Premium Member

    73,145
    1,930
    3,883
    Oct 29, 2007
    gainesville, florida
    remember the john travolta movie " the boy in the bubble "? i get the feeling that is how some think we should live, being afraid of our own shadow, you have to live your life smart, but live it.
     
    • Come On Man Come On Man x 3
    • Winner Winner x 1
  8. Distant Gator

    Distant Gator GC Hall of Fame

    5,322
    725
    478
    Apr 9, 2007
    Upstate, SC
    I realize the question was directed at me, but I didn't write that post. It was a quote from the article written by 5 ND professors.
    But completely agree about the rapid test. Seems like common sense to me too.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  9. AzCatFan

    AzCatFan GC Hall of Fame

    11,813
    1,087
    1,618
    Apr 9, 2007
    Both Germany and UK have reopened schools, and neither has seen a large outbreak. And that's a good thing. But what has also happened, in both countries, is a small uptick in new cases and percent positive tests. Correlation does not equal causation, but this is something that needs to be studied further. And has the UK article expert said (and quoted in the Germany article), there really is scant amount of research concerning COVID-19 and schools.

    Preliminary results are positive, but it's only been a few weeks. It will be interesting to monitor cases in each country over the next few weeks to see if the uptick continues, if there is a decrease in cases, or if reopening schools may have caused a second spike because of community spread. Time will tell.
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
  10. buckeyegator

    buckeyegator Premium Member

    73,145
    1,930
    3,883
    Oct 29, 2007
    gainesville, florida
    some really strange and divergent numbers today.according to worldometer there were 1,047,928 tests recorded today with 40,098 new positives for a less than 4% positive rate.what is strange is that covid 19 tracking only had 634,461 new tests today.i know they lag behind worldometer in all categories, but usually only around 50-60,000 less tests, not 410,000. hope the worldometer numbers are right, and we do not find out that several states had their numbers counted twice today, that would be a bummer about the 4% today. usually new cases and deaths show up on tuesday's, don't remember a huge jump in reported tests.
     
  11. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

    31,320
    54,809
    3,753
    Apr 8, 2007
    northern MN
    Tracking the world and U.S. numbers at three day intervals. Here are the three day increases and while the data set on Aug 22nd was horrendous, it's very encouraging for the last set. All #s are down and the U.S. fatalities are at its lowest point since July 20. U.S. cases are lowest for the given period.

    Increases
    Cases........................fatalities........U.S. cases..U.S. fatalities
    June29…..535,253………11,239………...128,855…….1,143
    July2...…..574,195………15,882………...155,378…….2,702
    July5...…..573,206………12,875………...145,739…….1,084
    July8...…..610,409………15,274………...176,004…….2,293
    July11...…674,987………15,599………...196,714…….2,541
    July14...…615,422………13,572………...189,431…….1,740
    July17...…731,765………18,120………...224,935…….2,921
    July20...…665,107………13,872………...191,417…….1,770
    July23...…797,581………23,257………...208,562…….3,499
    July26...…761,205………15,569………...201,848…….2,516
    Aug13……804,615………17,788………….164,220……..4,223
    Aug16……762,882………16,247……..…..150,966……..2,713
    Aug19……736,947………17,045…………..133,256……..3,200
    Aug22……821,076………18,685…………..141,540……..3,846
    Aug25……669,525………14,571…………..114,300……..2,230
     
    Last edited: Aug 25, 2020
  12. buckeyegator

    buckeyegator Premium Member

    73,145
    1,930
    3,883
    Oct 29, 2007
    gainesville, florida
    forgive me, but what do these numbers mean?
     
  13. gatordavisl

    gatordavisl VIP Member

    31,320
    54,809
    3,753
    Apr 8, 2007
    northern MN
    Sorry - I didn't label them since I've been posting them since April. I went back and labeled them. They are world cases, world fatalities, U.S. cases, and U.S. fatalities. All numbers represent the amount of increase during the three-day interval. Tracking raw numbers is one thing. Tracking the extent of increase provides another layer.
     
  14. OklahomaGator

    OklahomaGator Jedi Administrator Moderator VIP Member

    122,036
    162,864
    116,973
    Apr 3, 2007
    Updated stats from world o meter as of 8:15 am EDT. There were 22 states with a decrease in active cases. There were just 2 states with 1-2 deaths but 10 states with 0 deaths.

    0 8-26-1.JPG
    0 8-26-2.JPG
     
  15. OklahomaGator

    OklahomaGator Jedi Administrator Moderator VIP Member

    122,036
    162,864
    116,973
    Apr 3, 2007
    The death rate per reported case remained unchanged.
    0 8-26-3.JPG
     
    • Informative Informative x 1
  16. Crusher

    Crusher GC Hall of Fame

    5,645
    1,288
    2,143
    Apr 19, 2007
    There is a lot of odd numbers going around that make the data suspect....
     
  17. AzCatFan

    AzCatFan GC Hall of Fame

    11,813
    1,087
    1,618
    Apr 9, 2007
    Florida has recorded 9,000 new child cases of COVID-19 in the past two weeks since schools reopened. The links also reports a few hundred have been hospitalized, and 1 more additional child death due to COVID-19.

    What will be interested to see if in a few weeks, there is a trend upward in total cases. While the overwhelming majority of school kids who get the virus won't need hospitalization, it's the community spread that should be the bigger worry. Will these kids spread the virus to their parents/adults who live with them? And will that spread go out into the community and cause another spike in cases?

    Two weeks is too early to tell, especially with a disease that has an incubation period of 10-14 days, and onset of symptoms are often very mild before they become serious. Like the European countries that have seen a small uptick in overall cases since schools have reopened, we'll know more in the upcoming weeks.
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
    • Informative Informative x 1
  18. WESGATORS

    WESGATORS Moderator VIP Member

    22,346
    1,290
    2,008
    Apr 3, 2007
    This link was also posted in the FLORIDA thread, and I'll post my updated response to it here as well...

    This number is dropping. Starting with the July 17th report, the 14-day numbers for <17 are as follows:

    7/17: 11,655
    7/25: 14,353
    8/1: 13,809
    8/8: 8,585
    8/15: 8,181
    8/22: 8,196

    In looking at the 5-14 age group, we can see that the 14-day total peaked on July 26th (6,733 new cases), and that number has steadily dropped to 3,057 as of yesterday's report. For context, there are over 4,500 public schools in the state. I don't think it's a stretch to say that even if you factor in the 15-17 age group that you're still looking at close to 1 child per school. And that's only counting the public schools. Areas that exceed this average can and should be more restrictive, but areas that fall below the average should feel pretty confident about being able to manage the situation.

    Go GATORS!
    ,WESGATORS
     
    • Like Like x 1
    • Agree Agree x 1
    • Informative Informative x 1
  19. Distant Gator

    Distant Gator GC Hall of Fame

    5,322
    725
    478
    Apr 9, 2007
    Upstate, SC
    Looking across the water, Spain had one of most severe lockdowns in the world. However, as they have opened up their country their cases have also started to go up.
    They have not started school yet this fall.

    In contrast, Sweden didn't lock down at all, and they have had zero resurgence (so far.) Perhaps they achieved herd immunity?
     
    • Disagree Bacon! Disagree Bacon! x 3
    • Informative Informative x 1