Virtual ghost
Complex paradigm
- Joined
- Jun 6, 2008
- Messages
- 22,134
We again have 400 000+ day globally ... and counting.
A 1% mortality rate “means it is 10-times more lethal than the seasonal flu,†Fauci said. “I think that’s something people can get their arms around and understand.â€
But they sell ice cream. I think they may be dramatizing the fact they close every October due to winter and lack of customers.
As the coronavirus pandemic creeps toward its eighth month in the US, millions of Americans are coping with an economic catastrophe that they couldn’t have planned for; some like Adams have watched their account balances run down to zero. Working people who cautiously adhered to advice to save enough to cover three to six months of living expenses, a so-called emergency fund, are being decimated by a crisis that is dragging on far longer than that. Some have lost their homes.
They face the unsettling reality that no matter how hard they try, their ability to make it out of this is mostly out of their hands. There’s a belief that people can achieve financial security if they just work hard enough, that being poor is a kind of moral failing. But the crisis has shown that this is a myth. People are realizing now what those in precarious situations have long known: that so much of it is out of your control.
Since I saw someone bring up that Corona has a 99% survivability rate and it's stupid to do anything to prevent people from catching it if it interferes with the way things used to be, I thought I'd share this.
Fact check: Does COVID-19 have a mortality rate of 1%-2%?
True.
But just for the record: this is missing one important part. Mortality of 1-2% works only if healthcare system doesn't get overrun with large number of cases. Therefore if that happens mortality goes very drastically up.
Over the last few months, as the anxiety and despondency that accompanies prolonged social isolation has deepened, medical professionals have offered various tips and tricks for people combating coronavirus-induced malaise. “Create some predictable routines,†the Vanderbilt University Medical Center advised. “Focus on managing the things you have control over.†Likewise, UCLA’s hospital network urged, “Usher more joy into your days by creating new traditions. You’ll have something fun to look forward to and you might even decide to keep it up once the pandemic has passed.†As Colette Shade wrote here earlier this month, though such advice might be well-intentioned, and occasionally even useful, positive thinking alone won’t remedy our national pandemic fatigue. There’s no single switch that can flip it on or off, of course. But a functioning, minimally humane government would be a good start.
Center for Disease Control Director Robert Redfield said in a Buck Institute webinar that suicides and drug overdoses have surpassed the death rate for COVID-19 among high school students. Redfield argued that lockdowns and lack of public schooling constituted a disproportionally negative impact on young peoples’ mental health.
"But there has been another cost that we’ve seen, particularly in high schools," Redfield said. "We’re seeing, sadly, far greater suicides now than we are deaths from COVID. We’re seeing far greater deaths from drug overdose that are above excess that we had as background than we are seeing the deaths from COVID. So this is why I keep coming back for the overall social being of individuals, is let’s all work together and find out how we can find common ground to get these schools open in a way that people are comfortable and their safe."
...
...a doctor at John Muir Medical Center in Walnut Creek, CA claimed the facility has “seen a year’s worth of suicide attempts in the last four weeks.†He did not say how many deaths occurred, or whether the statement was exaggerated for emphasis.
"What I have seen recently, I have never seen before," Hansen said. "I have never seen so much intentional injury,†said a nurse from the same hospital.
Global daily record could fall again today. We are over 99% there.