A little calm, clear, motivating straight talk and an appeal to good ol' USA exceptionalism and teamwork would go a long way.
Aust Ag said:
So I'm not understanding how the guy in Houston that attended the rodeo on the 28th has the virus, and hasn't been out of state or country. They call it "community" or something. What does that mean? I guess he maybe got it at the rodeo? Where's the person that he got it from (who I would presume has had it longer than him)?
yeah, so where is that person I wonder? Maybe they just got sick, got through it, and that was that.k2aggie07 said:
Community spread. Means he got it from someone else in Houston.
claym711 said:
Wait the person attended rodeo cookoff on the 28th, or attended the rodeo when?
The Fall Guy said:
Are we all going to wake up tomorrow morning?
The only game here is you trying to feed people a political campaign p.r. messaging narrative about how awesome he's been in leading us thru Covid-19. Please go start a new F16 thread for that instead of bringing that malarkey in here and cluttering up this thread with it. This thread is for objective discussion and informational updates on Covid-19 developments.BonsaiGreen said:Whatever.MetoliusAg said:Welcome to Texags Forum 16, Stephanie Grisham.BonsaiGreen said:
First of all, the president is having discussions everyday with health officials and the information we're receiving is in alignment with what he's hearing.
Now, are there some details that he may have flubbed? Sure. This is all very fluid and dynamic. A vaccine for COVID-19 may be ready within a year and clinical trials may be conducted within 1 month or 2 (which may have been what the president was referring to). The point is this: Progress is being made and we should NOT panic.
Liberals want panic because it helps to mobilize uneducated voters to the polls to vote against Trump. They also want the markets to crash so they can hurt the country. So they go to twitter, facebook, TexAgs or whatever social media to gin up the mindless.
Meanwhile, leaders like Trump act. Leaders like Trump can see the bigger picture and rise above politics to calm the public, reassuring us that progress is being made.
More and more people are falling into an MSN death spiral that the libs are loving. And it doesn't surprise me that I'm getting snide remarks and troll responses for the resident libs on this forum.
All I'm saying is that Trump is doing the best he can to calm our nation's nerves. This requires a message that is both confident and reassuring. This is exactly what adults do. This is what leaders do.
Libs seem to just want to run around with their hair on fire and scream that Trump needs to be removed.
We've seen this game before. It didn't work last time.
MetoliusAg said:
This thread is for speculative discussion on Covid-19 developments.
Well we are jumping off that cliff with socialized universal freebie healthcare. Right outta the gate, Italy banned the olds from hospital admission...Hospitals only available for young with better survival chance.aggietony2010 said:backintexas2013 said:
Since a few people like shanked are trolling let me throw something out. If this kills off a bunch old unhealthy people won't we come out better on the other side?
Devaluing human life isn't a slippery slope, it's a cliff.
LaQuica said:
They don't t even know if the guy in Montgomery county has it lol
Perhaps he got it from one of the other cases in Houston before they were isolated, or someone not even in Texas anymore.Aust Ag said:yeah, so where is that person I wonder? Maybe they just got sick, got through it, and that was that.k2aggie07 said:
Community spread. Means he got it from someone else in Houston.
law-apt-3g said:Well we are jumping off that cliff with socialized universal freebie healthcare. Right outta the gate, Italy banned the olds from hospital admission...Hospitals only available for young with better survival chance.aggietony2010 said:backintexas2013 said:
Since a few people like shanked are trolling let me throw something out. If this kills off a bunch old unhealthy people won't we come out better on the other side?
Devaluing human life isn't a slippery slope, it's a cliff.
Of course Bernie and the ruling class will be priority admitted.
Does Italy track flu deaths everyday? Interesting to see the numbers.Quote:
Almost 200 people died from the coronavirus in 24 hours, Italy's Civil Protection Agency confirmed Wednesday the highest daily increase in absolute terms registered anywhere in the world since the respiratory illness emerged in China at the end of last year.
In response, the country's prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, told reporters the government would allocate 25 billion euros ($28.3 billion) to help mitigate the impact on the fragile economy. Only a week ago, he estimated it would need just 7.5 billion.
From Tuesday to Wednesday, 196 people died, bringing the total number of deaths to 897, the Civil Protection Agency said in a statement. Confirmed cases across the country rose to 12,462 from a previous 10,149.
After an initial lockdown in the north failed to prevent the spread, the government on Monday banned all nonessential travel and public gatherings throughout Italy until April 3, halted all sports events and extended a shutdown of schools.
monarch said:
Watching Tucker Carlson now. Talking almost exactly what I said about the real origin of the Wuhan Coronavirus.
scottimus said:
Italy reporting almost 200 deaths today....
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/live-blog/coronavirus-updates-live-u-s-cases-top-1-000-spread-n1155241/ncrd1155806#liveBlogHeaderDoes Italy track flu deaths everyday? Interesting to see the numbers.Quote:
Almost 200 people died from the coronavirus in 24 hours, Italy's Civil Protection Agency confirmed Wednesday the highest daily increase in absolute terms registered anywhere in the world since the respiratory illness emerged in China at the end of last year.
In response, the country's prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, told reporters the government would allocate 25 billion euros ($28.3 billion) to help mitigate the impact on the fragile economy. Only a week ago, he estimated it would need just 7.5 billion.
From Tuesday to Wednesday, 196 people died, bringing the total number of deaths to 897, the Civil Protection Agency said in a statement. Confirmed cases across the country rose to 12,462 from a previous 10,149.
After an initial lockdown in the north failed to prevent the spread, the government on Monday banned all nonessential travel and public gatherings throughout Italy until April 3, halted all sports events and extended a shutdown of schools.
Also, what % of flu deaths/cases are extrapolated? ...
Shanked Punt said:monarch said:
Watching Tucker Carlson now. Talking almost exactly what I said about the real origin of the Wuhan Coronavirus.
What difference does it make at this point?
Quote:
The Extraordinary Decisions Facing Italian Doctors
There are now simply too many patients for each one of them to receive adequate care.
Two weeks ago, Italy had 322 confirmed cases of the coronavirus. At that point, doctors in the country's hospitals could lavish significant attention on each stricken patient.
One week ago, Italy had 2,502 cases of the virus, which causes the disease known as COVID-19. At that point, doctors in the country's hospitals could still perform the most lifesaving functions by artificially ventilating patients who experienced acute breathing difficulties.
Today, Italy has 10,149 cases of the coronavirus. There are now simply too many patients for each one of them to receive adequate care. Doctors and nurses are unable to tend to everybody. They lack machines to ventilate all those gasping for air.
Now the Italian College of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (SIAARTI) has published guidelines for the criteria that doctors and nurses should follow in these extraordinary circumstances. The document begins by likening the moral choices facing Italian doctors to the forms of wartime triage that are required in the field of "catastrophe medicine." Instead of providing intensive care to all patients who need it, its authors suggest, it is becoming necessary to follow "the most widely shared criteria regarding distributive justice and the appropriate allocation of limited health resources."
The principle they settle upon is utilitarian. "Informed by the principle of maximizing benefits for the largest number," they suggest that "the allocation criteria need to guarantee that those patients with the highest chance of therapeutic success will retain access to intensive care."
The authors, who are medical doctors, then deduce a set of concrete recommendations for how to manage these impossible choices, including this: "It may become necessary to establish an age limit for access to intensive care."
Those who are too old to have a high likelihood of recovery, or who have too low a number of "life-years" left even if they should survive, will be left to die. This sounds cruel, but the alternative, the document argues, is no better. "In case of a total saturation of resources, maintaining the criterion of 'first come, first served' would amount to a decision to exclude late-arriving patients from access to intensive care."
In addition to age, doctors and nurses are also told to take a patient's overall state of health into account: "The presence of comorbidities needs to be carefully evaluated." This is in part because early studies of the virus seem to suggest that patients with serious preexisting health conditions are significantly more likely to die. But it is also because patients in a worse state of overall health could require a greater share of scarce resources to survive: "What might be a relatively short treatment course in healthier people could be longer and more resource-consuming in the case of older or more fragile patients."
These guidelines apply even to patients who require intensive care for reasons other than the coronavirus, because they too make demands on the same scarce medical resources. As the document clarifies, "These criteria apply to all patients in intensive care, not just those infected with CoVid-19."
My academic training is in political and moral philosophy. I have spent countless hours in fancy seminar rooms discussing abstract moral dilemmas like the so-called trolley problem. If a train is barreling toward five innocent people who are tied to the tracks, and I could divert it by pulling the lever, but at the cost of killing an innocent bystander, should I do it?
Part of the point of all those discussions was, supposedly, to help professionals make difficult moral choices in real-world circumstances. If you are an overworked nurse battling a novel disease under the most desperate circumstances, and you simply cannot treat everyone, however hard you try, whose life should you save?
Despite those years of theory, I must admit that I have no moral judgment to make about the extraordinary document published by those brave Italian doctors. I have not the first clue whether they are recommending the right or the wrong thing.
But if Italy is in an impossible position, the obligation facing the United States is very clear: To arrest the crisis before the impossible becomes necessary.
This means that our political leaders, the heads of business and private associations, and every one of us need to work together to accomplish two things: Radically expand the capacity of the country's intensive-care units. And start engaging in extreme forms of social distancing.
Exsurge Domine said:scottimus said:
Italy reporting almost 200 deaths today....
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/live-blog/coronavirus-updates-live-u-s-cases-top-1-000-spread-n1155241/ncrd1155806#liveBlogHeaderDoes Italy track flu deaths everyday? Interesting to see the numbers.Quote:
Almost 200 people died from the coronavirus in 24 hours, Italy's Civil Protection Agency confirmed Wednesday the highest daily increase in absolute terms registered anywhere in the world since the respiratory illness emerged in China at the end of last year.
In response, the country's prime minister, Giuseppe Conte, told reporters the government would allocate 25 billion euros ($28.3 billion) to help mitigate the impact on the fragile economy. Only a week ago, he estimated it would need just 7.5 billion.
From Tuesday to Wednesday, 196 people died, bringing the total number of deaths to 897, the Civil Protection Agency said in a statement. Confirmed cases across the country rose to 12,462 from a previous 10,149.
After an initial lockdown in the north failed to prevent the spread, the government on Monday banned all nonessential travel and public gatherings throughout Italy until April 3, halted all sports events and extended a shutdown of schools.
Also, what % of flu deaths/cases are extrapolated? ...
That's a lot of deaths. Equal to about 1200 in the US in a day. Will be interesting to see the median age