Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › virus news … (+ some dark humor)
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August 21, 2020 at 11:10 am #119740Billy_TParticipant
This shit pissing me off to no end:
https://www.businessinsider.com/delta-anti-mask-navy-seal-bin-laden-2020-8
Robert O’Neill, the former Navy SEAL famous for his role in the raid that killed Osama bin Laden, was banned by Delta Air Lines on Thursday for refusing to wear a mask on a flight the day before.
O’Neill tweeted a maskless selfie on Wednesday captioned, “I am not a p—-.” He deleted the tweet five hours later.
On Thursday, he tweeted that the airline had banned him.
Good on Delta. A thousand bravos!!
It’s not about you being a “p___”, you selfish fuck! Wearing the mask all but stops the transmission of the virus to others, you selfish piece of shit!
August 21, 2020 at 9:55 pm #119787znModeratorCovid-19 Is Creating a Wave of Heart Disease
Emerging data show that some of the coronavirus’s most potent damage is inflicted on the heartlink https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/17/opinion/covid-19-heart-disease.html
SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, was initially thought to primarily impact the lungs — SARS stands for “severe acute respiratory syndrome.” Now we know there is barely a part of the body this infection spares. And emerging data show that some of the virus’s most potent damage is inflicted on the heart.
Eduardo Rodriguez was poised to start as the No. 1 pitcher for the Boston Red Sox this season. But in July the 27-year-old tested positive for Covid-19. Feeling “100 years old,” he told reporters: “I’ve never been that sick in my life, and I don’t want to get that sick again.” His symptoms abated, but a few weeks later he felt so tired after throwing about 20 pitches during practice that his team told him to stop and rest.
Further investigation revealed that he had a condition many are still struggling to understand: Covid-19-associated myocarditis. Mr. Rodriguez won’t be playing baseball this season.
Myocarditis means inflammation of the heart muscle. Some patients are never bothered by it, but for others it can have serious implications. And Mr. Rodriguez isn’t the only athlete to suffer from it: Multiple college football players have possibly developed myocarditis from Covid-19, putting the entire college football landscape in jeopardy.
I recently treated one Covid-19 patient in his early 50s. He had been in perfect shape with no history of serious illness. When the fevers and body aches started, he locked himself in his room. But instead of getting better, his condition deteriorated and he eventually accumulated gallons of fluid in his legs. When he came to the hospital unable to catch a breath, it wasn’t his lungs that had pushed him to the brink — it was his heart. Now we are evaluating him to see if he needs a heart transplant.
An intriguing new study from Germany offers a glimpse into how SARS-CoV-2 affects the heart. Researchers studied 100 individuals, with a median age of just 49, who had recovered from Covid-19. Most were asymptomatic or had mild symptoms.
An average of two months after they received the diagnosis, the researchers performed M.R.I. scans of their hearts and made some alarming discoveries: Nearly 80 percent had persistent abnormalities and 60 percent had evidence of myocarditis. The degree of myocarditis was not explained by the severity of the initial illness.
Though the study has some flaws, and the generalizability and significance of its findings not fully known, it makes clear that in young patients who had seemingly overcome SARS-CoV-2 it’s fairly common for the heart to be affected. We may be seeing only the beginning of the damage.
Researchers are still figuring out how SARS-CoV-2 causes myocarditis — whether it’s through the virus directly injuring the heart or whether it’s from the virulent immune reaction that it stimulates. It’s possible that part of the success of immunosuppressant medications such as the steroid dexamethasone in treating sick Covid-19 patients comes from their preventing inflammatory damage to the heart. Such steroids are commonly used to treat cases of myocarditis. Despite treatment, more severe forms of Covid-19-associated myocarditis can lead to permanent damage of the heart — which, in turn, can lead to heart failure.
But myocarditis is not the only way Covid-19 can cause more people to die of heart disease. When I analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, I found that since February nearly 25,000 more Americans have died of heart disease compared with the same period in previous years. Some of these deaths could be put down to Covid-19, but the majority are likely to be because patients deferred care for their hearts. That could lead to a wave of untreated heart disease in the wake of the pandemic.
Many patients are understandably apprehensive about coming back to the clinic or hospital. The American Heart Association has started a campaign called “Don’t Die of Doubt” to address the alarming reduction in people calling 911 or seeking medical care after a heart attack or stroke.
Since the beginning of the pandemic, it’s been clear that people with heart disease or related conditions such as diabetes or high blood pressure are at increased risk for severe Covid-19 illness. The C.D.C. recommends that the more than 30 million Americans living with heart disease practice extra precautions to avoid infection. Hospitals and clinics should work overtime both to ensure they are safe for patients and to bolster telemedicine services so that patients can be cared for without having to leave their homes.
Doctors and researchers should no longer think of Covid-19 as a disease of the lungs but as one that can affect any part of the body, especially the heart. The only way to prevent more people dying of heart disease, both from damage caused by the virus as well as from deferred care of heart disease, is to control the pandemic.
August 21, 2020 at 11:34 pm #119796znModeratorOh, shit, is this thing contagious?! https://t.co/MMOd7Ad74p
— Elika Sadeghi (@elikasadeghi) August 22, 2020
August 22, 2020 at 4:04 pm #119810znModeratorCompared to whites, #COVID19 death rates are:
3.8X higher for Blacks
3.2X higher for AIAN
2.6X higher for NHPI
2.5X higher for Latinos
1.5X higher for Asians
Another example of the importance of age standardization, from @APMResearch https://t.co/8mFVmpwVZ1 #healthequity #phealth pic.twitter.com/kwDHIHniTo— Mark Abraham (@urbandata) July 8, 2020
August 24, 2020 at 6:42 pm #119914znModeratorMasks. ❤️😷
“56 people got the coronavirus at a Starbucks in South Korea. The only people who didn’t were employees wearing masks”https://t.co/AuoAVVIEQX
— Marc Benioff (@Benioff) August 24, 2020
August 25, 2020 at 6:23 am #119971znModeratorUniversity of Alabama reports over 500 cases of COVID-19 positives https://t.co/UrhbaFSAQj
— ProFootballTalk (@ProFootballTalk) August 25, 2020
August 28, 2020 at 7:33 am #120101znModeratorOn the lack of social distancing or face masks at Trump’s #RNC2020 acceptance speech in the middle of the deadly coronavirus pandemic, a senior White House official tells @Acosta: “Everybody is going to catch this thing eventually.” 🤯 pic.twitter.com/0T5e6r3BSx
— Josh Campbell (@joshscampbell) August 28, 2020
August 28, 2020 at 10:32 am #120111Billy_TParticipantAt the beginning of the outbreak, I thought coverups — private and public sector — would happen right away. Which is yet Reason # 10 billion why the idiots who think the media have over-counted the infections and deaths are . . . well, idiots:
Excerpt:
Lindsay Ruck was just starting her Father’s Day brunch shift at the Cheesecake Factory in Chandler, Ariz., when her boss told her a co-worker had Covid-19. In between making bloody marys, Ruck shared the news with several of her colleagues, who’d been worrying about such a moment since the restaurant reopened the month before. At the end of Ruck’s shift, when she went to the back office to count her cash, her boss and another supervisor were waiting.
Her boss, the general manager, told her she wasn’t allowed to mention the coronavirus case to anyone, including fellow staff. The company was informing only the people who’d worked during the sick employee’s last shift, and, per Cheesecake higher-ups, even the information that any worker had tested positive was deemed private, Ruck recalls. Realizing she could be among those kept in the dark about the next sick colleague, she filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board and took a couple of weeks off while awaiting the results of a Covid test and weighing whether to keep working there. After getting a negative test result, she returned to the restaurant, in need of the paycheck.
August 29, 2020 at 8:29 am #120134znModeratorBarbara Malmet@B52Malmet
Speaking with my friend, an anesthesiologist at a major hospital in #NYC today he said “You know, the CDC, the FDA, they were the gold standard in the WORLD. Every country turned to us for public health facts. We had the data. We had the science. Trump has wrecked all of it.”August 29, 2020 at 1:49 pm #120149znModeratorMike Smith@MJSmitty625
Them: “it’s their business, if they do not want to make a cake for a same sex couple it’s their choice.”Also them: how dare this business tell me I need to put a mask on to enter it, it’s my constitutional right not to wear a mask, even if it’s inside a business.”
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