- Joined
- Jul 14, 2019
Fantastic reading. I have a copy of this ebook on hand, if anyone wants to read it.Sure did. Recently finished reading Tombstone, the Great Chinese Famine 1958-62. Once you read that, the CCP playbook re this virus is obvious.
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Fantastic reading. I have a copy of this ebook on hand, if anyone wants to read it.Sure did. Recently finished reading Tombstone, the Great Chinese Famine 1958-62. Once you read that, the CCP playbook re this virus is obvious.
So in one day, we've gone from the incubation period being between 3-14 days, up to 3-24, and now 3-42?Good news everyone!
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“Virus can't put out the passion for life! Video shows #coronavirus infected patients with mild syndromes isolated in a temporary hospital in #Wuhan taking up dancing. https://t.co/2lImpV7rmK”twitter.com
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“A medic harmonizes the ward showing Chinese traditional Qigong outside a quarantine chamber, as if telling the patients: "Don't worry. Things will get better." https://t.co/BqOSRk83yh”twitter.com
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What in the fucking fuck are these people thinking? do they think that posting this means "oh look, we've got it under control! I mean look how much fun we're having! it's all good!"
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So in one day, we've gone from the incubation period being between 3-14 days, up to 3-24, and now 3-42?
Find the most moral, competent, and decent people I've locked up and have them sent to a specific location with an envelope and instructions to not open it until three days have past.Who's up for a little thought exercise?
What if you suddenly woke up as Xi Jinping the next day? You suddenly grew a moral conscience and so you intend to fix the situation as best as possible instead of using the CCP's money and run away. No do-overs, so you inherit the problems facing China right now, with multiple patients, supplies running out, quarantines all over, and multiple countries imposing travel bans. What would your course of action be?
Yeah, that's what I'm thinking. Probably managed to make it out of Wuhan without coming into contact with any infected, then met an asymptomatic carrier in the last two-ish weeks.JIf it's only one case, could likely be a mistake and the woman had contact with someone who had the virus but had no symptoms.
14:17 February 11, 2020
SEOUL, Feb. 11 (Yonhap) -- South Korea on Tuesday strongly advised its nationals to refrain from traveling to Singapore and five other Asian countries, in addition to China, which has reported the most confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus.
In an effort to contain the virus that has rapidly spread across the continent, the Seoul government asked people to limit their travel to Japan, Taiwan, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore.
"The measure is part of efforts to prevent the inflow of the novel coronavirus into the country through a third nation," Kim Gang-lip, deputy head of the central disaster headquarters, said during a regular press briefing.
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A thermal scanner is set up at the National Assembly in Seoul on Feb. 10, 2020, to check arriving people's body temperatures as part of measures to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus originating in China. Anyone with his or her fever rising to 37.5 C or higher is prohibited from entering parliament. (Yonhap)
On Sunday, the World Health Organization (WHO) picked the six countries as possible places where the virus is possibly spreading within communities.
The advisory was made by the disaster headquarters that is operated by the Ministry of Health and Welfare, and it is separate from a regular travel warning announced by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
The foreign ministry currently maintains the second-highest level of "withdrawal recommendation" for China's Hubei province, the epicenter of the outbreak. It also applies the alert level of "restraint," the third highest in its four-tier travel warning system, for the entire country, including Hong Kong and Macao.
khj@yna.co.kr
The knives are coming out.
Exclusive: Hong Kong’s leading public health epidemiologist says other countries should consider adopting China-style containment measures
Sarah Boseley Health editor
Tue 11 Feb 2020 01.00 ESTLast modified on Tue 11 Feb 2020 01.02 EST
Police cordon off a residential estate in Hong Kong. The global death toll from coronavirus could be massive, says Gabriel Leung. Photograph: Anthony Wallace/AFP via Getty Images
The novel coronavirus epidemic could spread to two-thirds of the world’s population if it cannot be controlled, according to Hong Kong’s leading public health epidemiologist.
His warning came after the head of the World Health Organisation (WHO) said recent cases of coronavirus patients who have never visited China could be the “tip of the iceberg”. Professor Gabriel Leung, chair of Public Health Medicine at Hong Kong University, said the overriding question was to figure out the size and shape of the iceberg. Most experts thought that each person infected would go on to transmit the virus to around 2.5 other people. That gave an “attack rate” of 60-80%.
“Sixty per cent of the world’s population is an awfully big number,” Leung told the Guardian in London, en route to an expert meeting at the WHO in Geneva.
Even if the general fatality rate is as low as 1%, which Leung thinks is possible once milder cases are taken into account, the death toll would be massive.
He will tell the WHO expert meeting that the main issue is the scale of the growing worldwide epidemic and the second priority is to find out whether the drastic measures taken by China to prevent the spread have worked – because if so, other countries should think about adopting them.
Leung – one of the world’s experts on coronavirus epidemics, who played a major role in the Sars outbreak in 2002-2003 – works closely with other leading scientists such as counterparts at Imperial College London and Oxford University.
At the end of January he warned in a paper in the Lancet that outbreaks were likely to be “growing exponentially” in cities in China, lagging just one to two weeks behind Wuhan. Elsewhere, “independent self-sustaining outbreaks in major cities globally could become inevitable” because of the substantial movement of people who were infected but had not yet developed symptoms, and the absence of public health measures to stop the spread.
Epidemiologists and modellers were all trying to figure out what was likely to happen, said Leung. “Is 60 to 80% of the world’s population going to get infected? Maybe not. Maybe this will come in waves. Maybe the virus is going to attenuate its lethality because it certainly doesn’t help it if it kills everybody in its path, because it will get killed as well,” he said.
Experts also need to know whether the restrictions in the epicentre of Wuhan and other cities have reduced infections. “Have these massive public health interventions, social distancing, and mobility restrictions worked in China?” he asked. “If so, how can we roll them out, or is it not possible?”
There would be difficulties. “Let’s assume that they have worked. But how long can you close schools for? How long can you lock down an entire city for? How long can you keep people away from shopping malls? And if you remove those [restrictions], then is it all going to come right back and rage again? So those are very real questions,” he said.
If China’s lockdown has not worked, there is another unpalatable truth to face: that the coronavirus might not be possible to contain. Then the world will have to switch tracks: instead of trying to contain the virus, it will have to work to mitigate its effects.
For now, containment measures are essential. Leung said the period of time when people were infected but showed no symptoms remained a huge problem. Quarantine was necessary, but to ensure people were not still carrying the virus when they left, everybody should ideally be tested every couple of days. If anyone within a quarantine camp or on a stricken cruise ship tested positive, the clock should be reset to 14 days more for all the others.
Some countries at risk because of the movement of people to and from China have taken precautions. On a visit to Thailand three weeks ago Leung talked to the health minister, who is also deputy prime minister, and advised the setting up of quarantine camps, which the government has now done. But other countries with links to China appear, inexplicably, to have no cases – such as Indonesia. “Where are they?” he asked.
Scientists still do not know for sure whether transmission is through droplets from coughs or possibly airborne particles. “It’s rather difficult to do that kind of careful detailed work when everything is raging. And unless it is raging you are unlikely to get enough confirmed cases,” he said. “In Sars we never had the chance to do these kinds of studies.”
Hong Kong, which now has 36 confirmed cases of coronavirus, was in the worst possible set of circumstances for fighting a raging epidemic, said Leung.
“You need extra trust, extra sense of solidarity, extra sense of goodwill, all of which have been completely used up – every last drop in that social capital fuel tank has been exhausted after now eight months of social unrest, so it couldn’t have come at a worse time,” he said.
People needed to have faith and trust in their government while the uncertainties of the new outbreak were worked out by the scientific community, he said, “and of course when you have social media and fake news and real news all mixed in there and then zero trust, how do you fight that epidemic?”
In January Leung published two papers in the Lancet. The first examined the damage done by social unrest to the mental health of the Hong Kong population. The second was on the spread of coronavirus. “So the two have now come together. The first has made the second impossible to deal with – impossible. I mean, how do you bring your population along when there’s been this huge chasm in society?” he said.
It brought up an interesting problem. The EMTs are trained to take homeless patients to the emergency room. ERs don't test for NCP unless you fit some specific criteria, most of which need to be communicated verbally. None of the patients were responsive, nothing would have triggered a test.
Worst DJ set ever.View attachment 1139300
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“Virus can't put out the passion for life! Video shows #coronavirus infected patients with mild syndromes isolated in a temporary hospital in #Wuhan taking up dancing. https://t.co/2lImpV7rmK”twitter.com
View attachment 1139302
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“A medic harmonizes the ward showing Chinese traditional Qigong outside a quarantine chamber, as if telling the patients: "Don't worry. Things will get better." https://t.co/BqOSRk83yh”twitter.com
View attachment 1139304
What in the fucking fuck are these people thinking? do they think that posting this means "oh look, we've got it under control! I mean look how much fun we're having! it's all good!"
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Gee, it's almost as if so-called "xenophobia" and other right wing ideals are actually a society's collective immune system. I wonder if the rise of woke shit is enabled by recent medical advances, why fear getting pozzed if you can just take drugs and suppress all the symptoms?Not to drag politics into this, but as we move forward into the US's every 4 year political madness keep this in mind. Look at oh so many of the Dem's left wing lunatics policies, then apply Corona-Chan to them.
- No Borders, No Immigration Enforcement whatsoever
- No single family dwellings
- the concerted push to high density urban living
- the constant push towards dense packed mass transit
Pay attention to how many pieces have to keep working continuously without fail to prevent the Democratic Socialists Utopia from falling over. Food, Power, Police, Fire, Medical, etc. And how quickly those thinly spread services collapse in a crisis.
He had 3 points:Honestly, what does he expect us to do? Only the CDC has the test kits for 2019-nCoV, so we'd have to take samples and overnight them to either the CDC or someone who has them near us.
Doing this on every homeless person with flu-like symptoms would be a ridiculous cost to our medical system without much benefit. That's including pre-screening with dFA.
Ah yes, the hot newWorst DJ set ever.![]()
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He had 3 points:
- EMTs state-wide are concerned about NCP spreading through homeless populations. Mostly because the people they deal with don't seek treatment until they're critical.
- CA is unprepared to deal with an outbreak. The protocols for identifying NCP cases in CA depend upon verbal communication, homeless people in ERs are often unable to speak, for various reasons. Quarantining them doesn't work, they often become threats to themselves and other patients.
- LA hospitals routinely dump homeless patients. He implied this happened with the 4 people from last Friday. He's concerned this practice could lead to an epidemic.
I'm not a health expert, I don't know the proper threshold for tests. But there appears to be a huge vulnerability in place in CA. The cost / benefit of increased testing is probably above my pay grade.
Imagine living in one of the quarantine zones.View attachment 1139300
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“Virus can't put out the passion for life! Video shows #coronavirus infected patients with mild syndromes isolated in a temporary hospital in #Wuhan taking up dancing. https://t.co/2lImpV7rmK”twitter.com
View attachment 1139302
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People's Daily, China on Twitter
“A medic harmonizes the ward showing Chinese traditional Qigong outside a quarantine chamber, as if telling the patients: "Don't worry. Things will get better." https://t.co/BqOSRk83yh”twitter.com
View attachment 1139304
What in the fucking fuck are these people thinking? do they think that posting this means "oh look, we've got it under control! I mean look how much fun we're having! it's all good!"
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