Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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#31
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#32
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Why hasn't anyone suggested everyone wear something over their face? If the virus enters thru the nose or mouth doesn't it make sense if everyone was covered when they left the house this thing would be gone in a short period of time?
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#33
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I’ve read a report by a doctor in New Orleans that says that about 80% of the people out on respirators there die on them. Only about 20% get well enough to breathe on their own again, and some of them will have brain damage. (Before people are put onto respirators, they are given anesthesia and their muscles are relaxed so they don’t fight the endotracheal tube, and they are kept that way for the duration, so if they die on the respirator, they don’t even know it.) The ones most likely to die are those with pre-existing conditions. If we had the guts, we could make it nation-wide policy that those with pre-existent conditions who need a respirator get only palliative care in a special unit (like a gymnasium). Then there would be no shortage of respirators for those who might survive, and a much larger percentage of those put on a respirator would survive it. Sorry to be morbid. |
#34
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I don’t disagree with your post. The social distancing was always intended to not overwhelm our limited medical resources and facilities. There was no mention that flattening the curve would drastically reduce the death count. However, that’ll never be proven. The measures taken now will provide the needed time to develop both a vaccine and cure. Hopefully, both will be available or the cycle starts again.
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#35
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Of course our govt doesnt have a plan...Niether does the rest of the world. No one alive today has ever seen a worldwide pandemic like this. The last one was in 1918.
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#36
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I live in south east Asia for part of the winter, almost everybody wears a mask because of air pollution. But it also was a way for countries like Korea, Singapore, Taiwan to stop the virus. Maybe we TV could learn from them, they live longer than us and are certainly a lot slimmer than the cart riding TV person
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#37
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During the Great Flu of 1918, there was no such thing as social distancing or even a vaccine. So, the disease was free to infect virtually everyone in the world and everyone got sick. The result was the death of 50 million people which amounted to 1/5 of the population. Today that statistic would translate to 1,400,000,000 (1.4 Billion) deaths. Do I hear any volunteers? |
#38
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I find the original post has several flaws, including lack of secondary and tertiary effects analysis, theoretical assumptions which may not prove out in reality, and reactive only vs proactive behavior with a lack of responsibility to the outcome.
The first theoretical assumption I challenge is that “herd immunity” only results from unrestrained R0, or infection rate. “Herd immunity” can also be gained over time with a lower R0 as the total population infected rate converges to the same percentage, just to a different future date. The second omission I challenge is the lack of secondary effect on the current healthcare system design. An unrestrained R0 can overwhelm a healthcare system, in more than one way: financially and staffing. Very similar to a bank run, the system can collapse and create extreme chaos for more than the infected, but for the healthy as well as standard healthcare evaporates. In that scenario, current curable or manageable illnesses turn deadly, as maintenance care is no longer available and the indirect death rate rises as well. Third, studying human behavior and having a wife work along side doctors in the medical field, I find that most of the medical field in hospitals and primary care are in a reactive situation only. They react to what walks in the door, they have prescribed methods to deal in their situation in front of them. And like a teacher, they are the expert but have little control over what comes in, and some control over the outcome. But once out the door, they have much less control on the eventual outcome. This reactive position struggles with strategy and proactive behaviors. In my field of finance, I try to quantify risk, a concept of uncertainty, and be proactive to minimize the risk across the organization. That’s where my wife works, dealing with data, the risk and the outcomes to the total organization. Most, not all, primary care or emergency room doctor lacks that perspective, the strategic long term perspective of the entire organization, and the secondary and tierary effects which risks must be mitigated. I see the same blind spot in other people and professions. Finally, I see and hear the differences with “older” doctors to whom I have had appointments, who have tough time with data analytics, with large systems, which collects more data for better outcome analysis, and don’t understand the trade off between time and cost to clean data, and the improvement in outcome, to the point that I hear about doctors who shun medical systems in favor of a blackboard with a single number. Again, from personal experience watching and studying questions of process or strategy, outcome or process, reactive versus proactive risk behavioral adjustment. In my risk analysis, the choice before us is one of balance between economic damage, human damage, and healthcare system damage. As society progresses with medical advances, there is more emphasis on the value of life, and minimizing human damage. Having just bought a retirement home and a year or two away from retirement and joining the villages life, I am doing everything I can to survive to be able to enjoy the outdoor and active lifestyle I enjoy. Wanting to risk that with an outcome I can’t control, not sure I agree with the assumption of “herd” immunity by unrestrained R0 versus a constrained R0 which will give the healthcare industry time to prepare for a scenario that is rarely seen. A comparison could be made between corona virus and H1N1 virus, in which little proactive behavior was initiated with H1N1 and the death rate will probably be higher with H1N1 (a prediction which is not yet proven nor disproven). The economic damage will be much higher, but again temporary, and recoverable in the medium term. There are ways to recover from temporary economic dislocations, not so with healthcare dislocations. Doctors, nurses take years to educate and prepare. We have not read the MIT article, but we have had lots of discussions after being well prepared as I saw this coming in January. I asked a life long nurse with 10 letters after her name, about the virus in January. She said she wasn’t worried. Now both she and her husband have it, and we are hoping they survive. The person they got it from is on a ventilator. Sportsguy and CoachK |
#39
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#40
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The government of any country are not the saviors, they are the taker’s
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#41
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So which one are you? Isolated or out and about.
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#42
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#43
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CDC Data for the U.S -2017
Leading Causes of Death: Heart disease: 647,457. Cancer: 599,108. Accidents (unintentional injuries): 169,936. Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 160,201. Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 146,383. Alzheimer's disease: 121,404. Diabetes: 83,564. Influenza and pneumonia: 55,672. More items... Centers for Disease Control and Prevention › nchs › fastats The reason the above deaths did not get the mass hysteria is because the deaths were spread out over an entire year (2017). I speculate that Covid-19 deaths will be less than from influenza and pneumonia, but because of the condensed time frame of the virus outbreak, there’s a need to spread out the cases. |
#44
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Being quarantined is frustrating to many people. One of its byproducts is suggesting other methods of dealing with the virus that won't confine people. One of those is the herd immunity strategy.
For it to work, we would have to, as a society, decide we will let lots of people die (including the young since they are not completely immune) and isolate the elderly in their homes for as long as it takes to develop a vaccine. We can put as smooth a gloss on it as we think is needed, but that is a cruel method of dealing with the problem. I think it goes against our instincts to protect the most vulnerable among us. It says to the young (anyone under 65): "Go about your business. Some of you will die, from the virus or from not being able to get into a hospital, but the rest of us will develop immunity." And to the old: "Stay indoors, because there will be no room for you at the hospitals if you catch the virus." That is an approach that looks attractive to anyone that thinks they are unlikely to either be locked up or unfortunate enough to catch it and die. |
#45
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I think your article was great, but a dumb question... if herd immunity is the answer, why has it not worked for the flu? Many people contract it and die each year.
Also, I think our political news system will make it very hard for any politician to vote for the quick approach.
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New Jersey, St. Charles, Mo, Rockford & Arlington Hts Il, Guntersville Al, and now.... |
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