Excessive employee absence or quarantines hardly seem normal to me.
If we had a WALL it would.JJMt said:
Epidemiologist warns lawmakers: US can't keep coronavirus 'out of our border'
https://www.cnbc.com/2020/02/05/epidemiologist-warns-lawmakers-us-cant-keep-coronavirus-out-of-our-border.htmlQuote:
U.S. travel restrictions implemented in recent days to keep a fast-moving virus that has crippled much of China from spreading across America won't work, a top epidemiologist told U.S. lawmakers Wednesday.
"I have never seen instances where that has worked when we are talking about a virus at this scale," epidemiologist Jennifer Nuzzo, a senior scholar at Johns Hopkins University's Center for Health Security, testified before the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee. Respiratory viruses, like the one that's sickened more than 24,300 across the globe and killed at least 490 in China, "they just move quickly.Quote:
In China, physicians are looking for sick people, while other countries are looking for people from China. Somewhere in between, infected people are going to be missed, she said.
"For that, and other reasons, I do not believe we're going to be able to keep the virus out of our border," she said, adding that a bigger concern is how the travel restrictions and mandatory quarantines are diverting resources away from fighting the virus. One public health department has 31 health-care workers monitoring two quarantined patients 24 hours a day, she said. "As this epidemic grows, that's not likely to scale," she said.
Great 10 minute video. Well worth the time. Thanks for posting that.KorbinDallas said:
Here is the coronavirus update with information on Possible drugs to cure. Says we won't have true studies till April.
Rudimentary google search shows that on average about 241 people per day would be dying in a city of that size setting the virus aside.k2aggie07 said:
Right, but he mentioned they've been working 24/7 since Jan 28. That's probably not normal.
Also....GE said:Rudimentary google search shows that on average about 241 people per day would be dying in a city of that size setting the virus aside.k2aggie07 said:
Right, but he mentioned they've been working 24/7 since Jan 28. That's probably not normal.
fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
You might actually read the article before posting your own made-up assumptions.OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
Remember only Ethnic minorities and some rural areas allow for burial. All urban dwellers must be cremated.OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
A quick search shows the mortality rate in China for 2018 was 7.13 per 1000 people. If you extrapolate that rate to a city of 11 million people then you have an average of approximately 78k out of that 11 million who would die every year. If you divide 78k/365 days, you get an average of around 214 deaths a day. If there are 7 crematoriums in the city they would each handle around 30 bodies a day. Now there might be more outside the city as that seems like a small number for a city that size. Do I'll say 10 crematoriums and round down each normally would handle 21 a day.Tx-Ag2010 said:OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
A quick Google shows that there are 7 in Wuhan. Definitely above average deaths but possibly not the 5000 a day above normal run of the mill deaths
The article said that these 3 are the ones designated for suspected and confirmed coronavirus victims, so they are funneling everybody they think has it to only these 3, right? So that changes the math to 240 more than a normal day, not 800. I imagine its actually 300 or so, since I doubt these 3 crematoria would still be open for just the normal business at all.Zemira said:A quick search shows the mortality rate in China for 2018 was 7.13 per 1000 people. If you extrapolate that rate to a city of 11 million people then you have an average of approximately 78k out of that 11 million who would die every year. If you divide 78k/365 days, you get an average of around 214 deaths a day. If there are 7 crematoriums in the city they would each handle around 30 bodies a day. Now there might be more outside the city as that seems like a small number for a city that size. Do I'll say 10 crematoriums and round down each normally would handle 21 a day.Tx-Ag2010 said:OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
A quick Google shows that there are 7 in Wuhan. Definitely above average deaths but possibly not the 5000 a day above normal run of the mill deaths
So if you go with 10 and each is handling 100 bodies a day that's 1000 deaths a day and nearly 800 more than normal a day.
IT happens a lot in China randomly, mostly male, 18-30. Hell, I have to worry about it and I live in the US.daggertx said:
http://www.chinanews.com/sh/2020/02-04/9078187.shtml
he 28-year-old deputy team leader of the Pharmacy Group of the Maji Health Center in Donghu Town,
In the fight against the pneumonia epidemic of the new coronavirus infection, he died suddenly in the dormitory of the hospital on February 3 due to continuous overload work and overwork.
Sudden cardiac death caused by overwork and death due to work. At present, related follow-up work is in progress.
Yeah missed it was only those 3. So 240 a day is still much higher than the government provided numbers coming out of China, but not the plague is upon us and we are all gonna die crowd numbers.JJxvi said:The article said that these 3 are the ones designated for suspected and confirmed coronavirus victims, so they are funneling everybody they think has it to only these 3, right? So that changes the math to 240 more than a normal day, not 800.Zemira said:A quick search shows the mortality rate in China for 2018 was 7.13 per 1000 people. If you extrapolate that rate to a city of 11 million people then you have an average of approximately 78k out of that 11 million who would die every year. If you divide 78k/365 days, you get an average of around 214 deaths a day. If there are 7 crematoriums in the city they would each handle around 30 bodies a day. Now there might be more outside the city as that seems like a small number for a city that size. Do I'll say 10 crematoriums and round down each normally would handle 21 a day.Tx-Ag2010 said:OldAg89er said:fightingfarmer09 said:
How many people in a city of 11 million die every day? They are not sorting out the cause of death first. Now that everyone must immediately be cremated how does that impact the capacity?
Not saying it's nothing, but let's make sure we are thinking critically.
That was "a worker" at "a crematorium" in Wuhan needs 100 body bags a day. How many crematoriums in a city of 11 million?
Perhaps there are 50, and the one he works at is average.
So, a linear approximation of 50 x 100 = 5,000 body bags a day.
A quick Google shows that there are 7 in Wuhan. Definitely above average deaths but possibly not the 5000 a day above normal run of the mill deaths
So if you go with 10 and each is handling 100 bodies a day that's 1000 deaths a day and nearly 800 more than normal a day.
It is anti-communist in nature like a good fightin' Texas Aggie! It is not "far right!"Shanked Punt said:
The Epoch Times is a far right wing newspaper. I wouldn't believe anything they print until some other reputable source can corroborate it. So, this whole deal of crematoriums running non stop could simply be made up.
erudite said:It is anti-communist in nature like a good fightin' Texas Aggie! It is not "far right!"Shanked Punt said:
The Epoch Times is a far right wing newspaper. I wouldn't believe anything they print until some other reputable source can corroborate it. So, this whole deal of crematoriums running non stop could simply be made up.
Hope your family stays well during this ordeal. They aren't in a quarantined area correct?erudite said:
True. We do not know the true death numbers of this. I am watching the news for any firings/resignations of local party leaders... That would indicate the party response is being hampered by infighting and a large degree of political maneuvering.
Likely it will turn into another 6/4 incident and the number will be sealed into the CCP archives for only the next paramount leader.
Edit: As far as I know CAAC (Think Chinese FAA) grounded most flights in/out of China silently a few days ago. Mother is stuck there and father is staying there since he is responsible for 40 odd people and their jobs.
Personal Opinion: No.KorbinDallas said:
New testing facility capable of 10,000 tests per day to open in Wuhan. Wonder how the "official" numbers will change, or will they stay at 3,000 or so per day?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bloomberg.com/amp/news/articles/2020-02-04/china-will-soon-find-out-if-mass-quarantine-worked-virus-update