Talking of taking precautions and not being an idiot:
{keynote speaker and balloons...}
WTF?
headdesk
Talking of taking precautions and not being an idiot:
{keynote speaker and balloons...}
WTF?
flu is still bad. we should all be responsible (unike me) and get the flu shot, that's something we can control and fight, unlike covid.Most likely it is the flu (and we are all rather healthy...I think...so even if we get it I think we are okay) rather than the COVID 19 because, as I said, no confirmed cases in the area, but it sparked an interesting discussion on the Corona virus and what should be done.
toilet paper I get, but why tf are people buying bottled water? we still have running water, guys.People used to give me a hard time for being a prepper (not like what you see on doomsday preppers; those are crazies used for ratings). But so far over the past few weeks I’ve been able to relax at home with plenty of supplies and not have to expose myself to the panicked crowds at COSTCO buying up all the toilet paper.
And as an introvert who hates crowds, that alone makes it all worth it![]()
What exactly do you think is a rational reaction to a disease with apparently an R0 of higher than 2.5 and a mortality rate of higher than 3.4%?
I'm not denying that there is a certain amount of hype, but those two numbers I think pretty much tell the whole story. You either believe those numbers are real, or you don't - in which case your distrust extends to far more than just 'the media'.
So, as for myself, I don't think we'll meet for two reasons.
First, and most importantly, for the sake of people outside our group who would be at high risk in the event of a general epidemic. For the sake of the elderly, it just doesn't make any sense to put our enjoyment ahead of their lives.
And secondly, several members of my group have the single most important co-morbidity factor - high blood pressure. So, even though mortality in our age group is quite low, with the high blood pressure present in it's in the 1% range. And that's to not even get into the relatively high risk that they'd need to be on oxygen for 2 to 4 weeks.
honestly I feel like we should appreciate we have things like skype and/or discord and roll 20 to help us do things like play rpgs online. we wouldn't be having this discussion 20 years ago, and even 10 years ago it would be tenuous at best. 30 years ago we'd just have to cancel altogether (though it wouldn't surprise me if some crafty gamers did this sort of thing over the phone, as expensive as that sounds).
currently I'm working from home, the powers that be finally decided this was the best idea. idk if we'd postpone the game I'm currently in, but we don't meet in public so the concern isn't as great.
huh, was this with speaker phone? I can't imagine it wouldn't be awkward otherwise lol.In the 80s, I actually did run a number of AD&D sessions with friends via the phone. Only local calls, mind you.
yeah, my job can easily be done at home, but I'm very worried for the people who have jobs that have to be done on location. hopefully this doesn't last long :/I suspect that at work we're going to be told that working from home is mandatory soon enough. I'm lucky I have that option. The aforementioned missus works at a salon, and will likely be out-of-pocket come a lockdown/quarantine situation.
That tweet thread was sobering stuff!The war has literally exploded and battles are uninterrupted day and night. But now that need for beds has arrived in all its drama. One after the other the departments that had been emptied fill up at an impressive pace. The boards with the names of the patients, of different colours depending on the operating unit, are now all red and instead of surgery you see the diagnosis, which is always the damned same: bilateral interstitial pneumonia.
My logic tells me that one should take the deaths over the total closed cases to get a more accurate percentage - because active cases can still lead to more deaths. Ofcourse there is the estimated part of the formula which messes it all up a bit.
Just a data point for consideration: the US mortality rate for influenza and pneumonia last year was 6.9%.
Cite, please?
"CDC estimates that influenza was associated with more than 35.5 million illnesses, more than 16.5 million medical visits, 490,600 hospitalizations, and 34,200 deaths during the 2018–2019 influenza season. "
Estimated Flu-Related Illnesses, Medical visits, Hospitalizations, and Deaths in the United States — 2018–2019 Flu Season | CDC
CDC calculates estimates of disease burden in the United States using surveillance data and modeling to adjust for sources of under-detection. Burden estimates for the 2018-2019 season found here.www.cdc.gov
That puts the mortality rate for influenza down around 0.1%. "Pneumonia and influenza" isn't a great comparison, because pneumonia has many, many different sources.