I don't understand what you're trying to say here
Mr.Infectious said:
Which post?
Mr.Infectious said:
Give them time to mourn then ask them to go home. You didn't need to bring a fire truck.
cone said:
but you've been alarmist on this bug from jump
so which is it? deadly catastrophe or nothing burger overreaction that's killing our economy over scant lives lost?
Mr.Infectious said:
Give them time to mourn then ask them to go home. You didn't need to bring a fire truck.
I always knew Dallas was more dense than Houston. Talmbout.IrishTxAggie said:
And I said Texas "cities". Not Texas towns.
https://io9.gizmodo.com/half-of-the-u-s-lives-in-these-146-counties-is-yours-1258718775
Of the fifty most densely populated counties in the US, only one Texas county comes in at 43....and it isn't Harris. It's Dallas.
Again, Texas is nothing like the cities experiencing the outbreaks
Quote:
At a hospital in Chicago, a non-randomized sample found that 30-50% of patients tested for COVID-19 have antibodies in their system, suggesting they already had the virus and have potential immunity.
"A phlebotomist working at Roseland Community Hospital said Thursday that 30% to 50% of patients tested for the coronavirus have antibodies while only around 10% to 20% of those tested have the active virus," Chicago City Wire reported Thursday.
"Sumaya Owaynat, a phlebotomy technician, said she tests between 400 and 600 patients on an average day in the parking lot at Roseland Community Hospital. Drive-thru testing is from 9 a.m. to noon and 1 to 4 p.m. each day. However, the hospital has a limited number of tests they can give per day," the report detailed. "Owaynat said the number of patients coming through the testing center who appear to have already had coronavirus and gotten over it is far greater than those who currently have the disease."
"A lot of people have high antibodies, which means they had the coronavirus but they don't have it anymore, and their bodies built the antibodies," Owaynat told Chicago City Wire.
LINKQuote:
An antibody test study is reportedly underway in California by researchers at Stanford University.
"Researchers at Stanford Medicine are working to find out what proportion of Californians have already had COVID-19. The new study could help policymakers make more informed decisions during the coronavirus pandemic," KSBW 8 News reported. "The team tested 3,200 people at three Bay Area locations on Saturday using an antibody test for COVID-19 and expect to release results in the coming weeks."
Well, she says she's a phlebotomist so I assume she's not there to use only nasal swabs. Further, for her own safety I would expect her to inquire about test results to gauge her own exposure.docaggie said:
That would be good news, but I'm a bit skeptical that the information is coming from the technician collecting blood. In most situations she wouldn't be running the test, just collecting blood, and therefore wouldn't see the results. Plus, how many places are doing serologic testing in conjunction with testing if they have the active virus or not?
I'd love it to be true, just looking at the source of the information.
BS. Skeletons differ in span, thickness and density. Largely affected by how much you eat and what kind of exercise you do while growing up. But then more or less static as you get older.Nuclear Scramjet said:You mean normal for someone who doesn't eat. There is no such thing as ectomorph, endomorph, etc. There are only those who eat a lot and those who eat small amounts.SchizoAg said:It's normal for a 17 year old ectomorph who doesn't work out or play sports.YouBet said:
Catching up. Just wanted to comment that weighing 136lbs at 6 ft is emaciated. That isn't normal. Eat something.
Source: That is almost exactly the physique I was sporting when I graduated high school.
Brings whole new meaning to the term "crop dusting".Texaggie7nine said:
https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/coronavirus-can-spread-through-farts-21852204.amp?__twitter_impression=true
IrishTxAggie said:
SchizoAg said:BS. Skeletons differ in span, thickness and density. Largely affected by how much you eat and what kind of exercise you do while growing up. But then more or less static as you get older.Nuclear Scramjet said:You mean normal for someone who doesn't eat. There is no such thing as ectomorph, endomorph, etc. There are only those who eat a lot and those who eat small amounts.SchizoAg said:It's normal for a 17 year old ectomorph who doesn't work out or play sports.YouBet said:
Catching up. Just wanted to comment that weighing 136lbs at 6 ft is emaciated. That isn't normal. Eat something.
Source: That is almost exactly the physique I was sporting when I graduated high school.
And a 17-year-old also doesn't have much muscle, either.
Quote:
Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 is the causative agent of the 2019 novel coronavirus disease pandemic. Initial estimates of the early dynamics of the outbreak in Wuhan, China, suggested a doubling time of the number of infected persons of 67 days and a basic reproductive number (R0) of 2.22.7. We collected extensive individual case reports across China and estimated key epidemiologic parameters, including the incubation period. We then designed 2 mathematical modeling approaches to infer the outbreak dynamics in Wuhan by using high-resolution domestic travel and infection data. Results show that the doubling time early in the epidemic in Wuhan was 2.33.3 days. Assuming a serial interval of 69 days, we calculated a median R0 value of 5.7 (95% CI 3.88.9). We further show that active surveillance, contact tracing, quarantine, and early strong social distancing efforts are needed to stop transmission of the virus.
IrishTxAggie said: