how is this different from the flu swab test you get at the doctor's office?
Hopefully New York will soon follow, but they've got the biggest mess in the country.PJYoung said:
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In France, they have begun using malaria drugs hydroxychloroquine in a small trial. Results only show 25% of tested patients treated with the drug still showed signs of the virus compared to a whopping 90% who did not use the drug.
PJYoung said:
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Since the initial COVID-19 outbreak, we've ramped up to maximum production levels of N95 respirators and doubled our global output to a rate of more than 1.1 billion per year, or nearly 100 million per month. In the United States we are producing 35 million respirators per month; of these, more than 90% are now designated for healthcare workers, with the remaining deployed to other industries also critical in this pandemic, including energy, food and pharmaceutical companies.
The terms can be interchangeable.Reginald Cousins said:PJYoung said:Quote:
Since the initial COVID-19 outbreak, we've ramped up to maximum production levels of N95 respirators and doubled our global output to a rate of more than 1.1 billion per year, or nearly 100 million per month. In the United States we are producing 35 million respirators per month; of these, more than 90% are now designated for healthcare workers, with the remaining deployed to other industries also critical in this pandemic, including energy, food and pharmaceutical companies.
Not to be a downer, but that reads like masks. Do they call the masks respirators?
Thanks, I was thinking ventilators... for a minute I was blown away.Rapier108 said:The terms can be interchangeable.Reginald Cousins said:PJYoung said:Quote:
Since the initial COVID-19 outbreak, we've ramped up to maximum production levels of N95 respirators and doubled our global output to a rate of more than 1.1 billion per year, or nearly 100 million per month. In the United States we are producing 35 million respirators per month; of these, more than 90% are now designated for healthcare workers, with the remaining deployed to other industries also critical in this pandemic, including energy, food and pharmaceutical companies.
Not to be a downer, but that reads like masks. Do they call the masks respirators?
The N95 type masks are often referred to as disposable respirators.
Reginald Cousins said:
Not to be a downer, but that reads like masks. Do they call the masks respirators?
I was cleaning out the attic and found a roll of toilet paper in some hunting gear.Johnny2Fan said:
Any good news today??
I don't know if this is viable or not...but just goes to show how open communication (as opposed to China's system where bad news is kept hidden)...and ingenuity are what makes America special.2PacShakur said:
Saw this story on the local news. Story is short on design details so no comment there, but emergency ventilators: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/video/4489238-u-of-m-cardiac-anesthesia-fellow-creates-emergency-ventilator/
Sid Farkas said:I don't know if this is viable or not...but just goes to show how open communication (as opposed to China's system where bad news is kept hidden)...and ingenuity are what makes America special.2PacShakur said:
Saw this story on the local news. Story is short on design details so no comment there, but emergency ventilators: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/video/4489238-u-of-m-cardiac-anesthesia-fellow-creates-emergency-ventilator/
This invention along with possible HCL treatment seem to give hope - even if neither pans out, you can be assured there are other smart, motivated individuals trying anything and everything else.
AgsMyDude said:Sid Farkas said:I don't know if this is viable or not...but just goes to show how open communication (as opposed to China's system where bad news is kept hidden)...and ingenuity are what makes America special.2PacShakur said:
Saw this story on the local news. Story is short on design details so no comment there, but emergency ventilators: https://minnesota.cbslocal.com/video/4489238-u-of-m-cardiac-anesthesia-fellow-creates-emergency-ventilator/
This invention along with possible HCL treatment seem to give hope - even if neither pans out, you can be assured there are other smart, motivated individuals trying anything and everything else.
Link isn't working
and the got it, no one knew, and is now fine number.Catag94 said:
This is good news. It frustrates me that our "Recovered" number is still so low.
I wouldn't worry about our recovered numbers. I'm not sure how reliable it is and even what it means to be recovered. Does a person need to be tested again to be considered recovered? If so, we can't even test those that are sick, much less the ones that had it and got better.Catag94 said:
This is good news. It frustrates me that our "Recovered" number is still so low.
I believe the criteria for "recovered" is absence of fever and two consecutive negative tests. But tests are limited so we aren't wasting them on people who previously tested positive because right now all that matters is getting a handle on the true number of people who are actually infected.Bruce Almighty said:I wouldn't worry about our recovered numbers. I'm not sure how reliable it is and even what it means to be recovered. Does a person need to be tested again to be considered recovered? If so, we can't even test those that are sick, much less the ones that had it and got better.Catag94 said:
This is good news. It frustrates me that our "Recovered" number is still so low.
I read that as a timing thing. See WA state. We have 124 (of the national 187) "recovered", but, of course, we were also the first cases. I'm guessing they're saying two weeks after test = recovered or something like that.Catag94 said:
This is good news. It frustrates me that our "Recovered" number is still so low.