I was looking at Texas numbers, they are showing signs of a curve flattening. I think it goes to show that social distancing is a lot more effective for city's that are more spread out.
I was looking at Texas numbers, they are showing signs of a curve flattening. I think it goes to show that social distancing is a lot more effective for city's that are more spread out.
"Per capita, our number of cases now equals where Los Angeles was on Friday."
Mayor David Holt
I don't quite understand the CDC's recommendation - if it lives on hard surfaces for up to 3 days (last I heard, that was the case), all kinds of jars and bottles at the grocery store are hard surfaces, and if someone that had the virus sneezed or coughed on them, then it's got the virus on the surface and it can be there for 3 days. And if you touch it in those 3 days, then touch your nose, mouth, or eyes, you've gotten infected. Isn't that one of the ways it's transmitted? Cardboard and paper are a different matter, heard it can only exist for hours, maybe a day on those.
The virus is detectable on certain surfaces for up to 3 days, but that doesn't mean it is able to infect up to 3 days. AFAIK, scientists don't know how long this virus can live on a surface and still be infectious.
From the CDC's youtube channel, how to handle groceries and food coming in your house. (Combined with the State of Oklahoma's statement from above...mixed messages much?)
With people in my household at high risk, we aren't taking chances on splitting hairs between possibility and likely. It's easy enough to exercise caution on everything coming in. Mostly, we just quarantine it for three days, in the trunk of the car, garage or just inside the door. If it needs to go into the refrigerator we sanitize it using the above method. We haven't bought any prepared food in two or three weeks.
That means everything. And wash your hands!
Since a virus can only reproduce itself inside of a living cell, I don't think it would survive in a state that could be infectious for long outside of the human body. I'm not concerned with groceries or mail or anything. I wonder how long it can survive even on the human skin? Say you do shake someone's hand, how long could you go without washing your hands before it stops replicating itself?
A choir decided to go ahead with rehearsal. Now dozens of members have COVID-19 and two are dead
MOUNT VERNON, Wash. —
With the coronavirus quickly spreading in Washington state in early March, leaders of the Skagit Valley Chorale debated whether to go ahead with weekly rehearsal.
The virus was already killing people in the Seattle area, about an hour’s drive to the south.
But Skagit County hadn’t reported any cases, schools and businesses remained open, and prohibitions on large gatherings had yet to be announced.
On March 6, Adam Burdick, the choir’s conductor, informed the 121 members in an email that amid the “stress and strain of concerns about the virus,” practice would proceed as scheduled at Mount Vernon Presbyterian Church.
“I’m planning on being there this Tuesday March 10, and hoping many of you will be, too,” he wrote.
Sixty singers showed up. A greeter offered hand sanitizer at the door, and members refrained from the usual hugs and handshakes.
“It seemed like a normal rehearsal, except that choirs are huggy places,” Burdick recalled. “We were making music and trying to keep a certain distance between each other.”
After 2½ hours, the singers parted ways at 9 p.m.
Nearly three weeks later, 45 have been diagnosed with COVID-19 or ill with the symptoms, at least three have been hospitalized, and two are dead.
The outbreak has stunned county health officials, who have concluded that the virus was almost certainly transmitted through the air from one or more people without symptoms.
“That’s all we can think of right now,” said Polly Dubbel, a county communicable disease and environmental health manager.
In interviews with the Los Angeles Times, eight people who were at the rehearsal said that nobody there was coughing or sneezing or appeared ill.
Everybody came with their own sheet music and avoided direct physical contact. Some members helped set up or remove folding chairs. A few helped themselves to mandarins that had been put out on a table in back.
Experts said the choir outbreak is consistent with a growing body of evidence that the virus can be transmitted through aerosols — particles smaller than 5 micrometers that can float in the air for minutes or longer.
The World Health Organization has downplayed the possibility of transmission in aerosols, stressing that the virus is spread through much larger “respiratory droplets,” which are emitted when an infected person coughs or sneezes and quickly fall to a surface.
But a study published March 17 in the New England Journal of Medicine found that when the virus was suspended in a mist under laboratory conditions it remained “viable and infectious” for three hours — though researchers have said that time period would probably be no more than a half-hour in real-world conditions.
One of the authors of that study, Jamie Lloyd-Smith, a UCLA infectious disease researcher, said it’s possible that the forceful breathing action of singing dispersed viral particles in the church room that were widely inhaled.
“One could imagine that really trying to project your voice would also project more droplets and aerosols,” he said.
With three-quarters of the choir members testing positive for the virus or showing symptoms of infection, the outbreak would be considered a “super-spreading event,” he said.
Linsey Marr, an environmental engineer at Virginia Tech and an expert on airborne transmission of viruses, said some people happen to be especially good at exhaling fine material, producing 1,000 times more than others.
Marr said that the choir outbreak should be seen as a powerful warning to the public.
“This may help people realize that, hey, we really need to be careful,” she said. <You think?
https://www.latimes.com/world-nation...choir-outbreak
Unacceptable: Oklahoma City families tear down caution tape around closed playgrounds.
https://kfor.com/news/local/oklahoma...ource=facebook
I have some problems with this video. First, if you are seriously disinfecting something from a grocery store (or anywhere else), you set up an *external* "contaminated* zone, a sterilization area, then a " clean" area. No items from the contaminated area go to the clean area without being sterilized. The *right* process is to remove each item from the bag in the external area, clean it (sudsy soap and water with a rough towel or rag), THEN place it in the "clean" zone for someone else to move into the house. Bags *never* come into the house and are discarded. The most at-risk surfaces would be any hard, non-porous containers like glass jars or bottles, and secondarily smooth cardboard containers. Paper containers, like sugar and flour, are least risk, but can also be handled by simply sitting in the sunlight for a time. You then decontaminate the car with wipes and lysol, and even deposit clothes worn to the contaimated area directly to the washer to be laundered. Finish by spraying shoes with Lysol.
Yes, my mom's cleaning instincts finally kicked in. You could do heart surgery on her kitchen countertop.
If you are taking groceries to an elderly or immunocompromised person, I'd darned sure err on the side of safety.
The online accounts I've seen of people jamming Lowe's locations, Home Depot, and other big-box retailers have me petrified. Add to that Governor Stittiot's county-by-county approach to containment, which, as dumb as it is, is further undermined by his robust exemptions to the federally determined "non-essential" list: he is exempting virtually every retail establishment in the state. This is a waking nightmare. Stitt has Oklahoma following the Italy model, albeit with a much dumber population. The next two to three weeks will be telling.
The jury is still out on how dangerous this actually is - that's a fact. For all the talk of high transmission rates, the mortality rate seems to be pretty low since those catching the virus outside the high risk groups are not being tested now, it is very likely the vast majority of people have caught the virus but not had symptoms necessitating medical care. The point of flattening the curve is to reduce the strain on medical services while still developing heard immunity, which is the real key to ending alleviating the situation, unless you want to hide in your closet until a vaccine arrives. The fact that certain portions of the media are whipping up a panic does not change the fact that for tested populations, those displaying symptom bad enough to need medical attention, the mortality rate is running at less than 1%.
Yeah, this whole thing is pretty political, like people's views on COVID 19 seem to be tied to their political affiliation, which is kind of strange right? I didn't think I pointed out anything other than common sense but here are some BBC graphs on the mortality rate - the entire article is linked below and discusses the difficulty in determining the actual mortality rate, spoiler: most people have none to mild symptoms and don't go to the doctor. One of the reason Germany's quoted mortality rate is so low is their high testing capacity- they are actually testing people with mild symptoms as opposed to the US where testing hasn't ramped up to their level. At any rate, it's worth a look.
https://www.bbc.com/news/health-51674743
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