Oldest person we have in ICU right now is mid 60s. Almost everyone on 40s and 50s. Average age around 51ish.
Crazy.
Crazy.
U.S. Army veteran Daniel Wilkinson, of Texas, died of a treatable illness because the Covid crisis left him without an available ICU bed even though he lives 3 houses down from an emergency room and 60 miles away from some of the greatest healthcare facilities in the world. pic.twitter.com/TK6sOO77ul
— David Begnaud (@DavidBegnaud) August 27, 2021
Captain Positivity said:
Oldest person we have in ICU right now is mid 60s. Almost everyone on 40s and 50s. Average age around 51ish.
Crazy.
TheMasterplan said:
Mom and Dad told me their fully vaccinated 40s friend is in the hospital.
More younger people than before or just fewer older?Captain Positivity said:
Oldest person we have in ICU right now is mid 60s. Almost everyone on 40s and 50s. Average age around 51ish.
Crazy.
Here is my raw interview with the doctor. It’s an incredibly gripping and emotional interview. I mainly listened. This man, Dr. Hasan Kakli, is going above and beyond in ways that will make you want to hug the next front line worker you see. Must watch https://t.co/tCuokrtzGP
— David Begnaud (@DavidBegnaud) August 28, 2021
cc_ag92 said:
Served two tours in Afghanistan, then died in Texas because he couldn't get treated
It's truly heartbreaking. How have we come to this?
Ridiculous. We cry about our dead warfighters when they die overseas, but if only 10 or 20% of the people that cared so much about their right to freedom to decline the "experimental vaccine" decided to get it, this guy would probably still be alive. We don't live in a vacuum. Our choices have effects on other people. The deathrate of the virus isn't the only factor to consider - not only can it cause lasting effects on the individual that gets sick, but it can obviously cause hospitals to fill up and be unable to take easily treatable patients.Captain Positivity said:cc_ag92 said:
Served two tours in Afghanistan, then died in Texas because he couldn't get treated
It's truly heartbreaking. How have we come to this?
Social media and government messaging. A bunch of ignorant people posting nonsense about vaccines, and people believing them. If the vaccine acceptance rate among people 20 to 50 was just a few points higher that guy likely lives.
What are we right now, 18 months in to the pandemic in the United States? I can only remember a handful of times any public health official spoke about obesity and the virus. So many young fat people think they are healthy.
Also majorly concerned about the future of healthcare in the hardest hit areas. So many nurses are leaving the profession. A lot of the young nurses especially, they don't have a good background about what normal is. The massive amounts of money being made right now is going to put a strain on the future ability to hire people full time because pay demand is going to be through the roof. And this is at a time where we were already struggling to fill open nursing positions due to a national shortage.
mernaggie12 said:
We are long past this being a disease of fat, old people. I do not understand the mind set of risking your life when there is an effective preventative medication (vaccine) that has minimal side effects and greatly reduces the severity of disease.
mernaggie12 said:
Hard to know what kind of physical specimen a 3 year old will make.