Wuhan Coronavirus: Megathread - Got too big

Status
Not open for further replies.
New York state just issued a drastic new guideline urging emergency-services workers not to bother trying to revive anyone without a pulse when they get to a scene, amid an overload of coronavirus patients.

"Now you don’t get 20 minutes of CPR if you have no rhythm,” a veteran FDNY Emergency Medical Services worker told The Post, referring to cardiac-arrest patients who have no heart beat when paramedics arrive at the scene. “They simply let you die.” The paramedic acknowledged that only about three or four out of every 100 patients with no pulse — “a small percentage” — are actually brought back to life through CPR and other aggressive intervention such as drugs and hospitalization. But “for those 3 or 4 people, it’s a big deal,” the worker said.

I don't like this at all because while it seems reasonable under current conditions, it's going to lead to more of the same down the road. Not everyone being rushed to a hospital is a coronavirus patient.

Archive

more like 3 or 4 out of a thousand. If that much. In 20 years and thousands of CPR calls I’ve seen exactly 3 saves. And to clarify, no EMS is not “letting you die”. When they show up and you don’t have a pulse you’re already what is technically known as DEAD. And honestly, if they haven’t shocked you back to a rhythm in under 10 minutes, it ain’t happening. And everybody knows this. Everybody has known this for years. But for 40 years the MD’s have largely fought tooth and nail against non MD’s being allowed to declare death in the field. And limited that ability as much as possible.

awhat most people don’t realize is when you have no pulse, there are two possible rhythm’s on the EKG. V-fib. Which shows as a very fine vibrating line, and indicates there is still electrical activity in the heart. And Asystole. True flatline. You can sometimes get lucky and save V-fib. That’s what the defibrillator is for. Asystole is pretty much dead and not gonna change.
 
Tedros -Director-General of the WHO- is being rather cryptic on Twitter. Not sure if it means anything but he sent out tweets that are just "Forgive" and "Honesty".
Not sure if I need to archive but will edit later with them.

Projection much?

I hope this asshole hangs himself. The world would be a better place without him.
 
This whole sidebar from the article about no resuscitation is pretty funny
Screenshot 2020-04-21 at 7.06.15 PM.png
 
Last edited:
Medcram video on Vitamin C, Vitamin D and donning and doffing PPE

https://archive.vn/3awz2



He mentions another couple of over the counter drugs too - Quercetin and N-acetylcysteine (NAC). I get my RDA of all vitamins but I don't know enough about Quercetin and NAC to mess with them, to be honest.
 
Please listen to what this young nurse says about quitting his job to come to New York:


Watch the full thing if you have the time, later there's an interview with the NYPD. Later they interview the male nurse again and you can tell from the look in his eyes that he has already suffered PTSD.

Some positive/good news: Ruby Princess finally docks in Australia to allow their staff to return home:


For those of you who missed this story about the Ruby Princess in Australia, here's a backgrounder:


Here's professor Carl Bergstrom saying that the lockdowns should be extended until there is mass testing and tracking which of course will never happen:


Bergstrom says: before we relax our social distancing, he wants to see a significant drop in cases, extensive testing, also a scale up of contact tracing. He worries that stopping social distancing too soon, "would waste all the gains that we've made."

"also a scale up of contact tracing"? No, GTFO, you're not gonna exploit this for your 1984 Orwellian bullshit.

Consumers taking out their frustrations on essential workers:


30%-40% unemployment in the Blues Delta: "We don't feel the effects of a depression because we stay in one all the time."


They had lots of everything except yeast, which seems to be sold out all over town.

Same here. Youtube has literally become Breadtube.

There was a shortage of vitamins last time I checked too. I've got some multivitamins but they've only got 5ug of Vitamin D in them and I was thinking of getting some with just vitamin D because of Dr. Campbell's video (archive) I spend about half an hour in sunlight though and it's sunny here so I reckon I'll be OK.

It's interesting that vitamins have sold out actually as I don't think the media have even talked about vitamin D reducing respiratory diseases.

No, the MSM don't talk at all about supplements or the widely known fact (at least amongst health professionals) that plenty of people are mineral deficient. Nevertheless members of the general public have caught up and now all vitamin C, vitamin D, multivitamins and of course zinc supplements have disappeared from any drugstore I've been to recently, as have all the thermometers, echinacea supplements and tinctures, painkillers of all kinds and all kinds of soap (liquid and bars).

Check out this comment underneath the video:


Low oxygen is a late find smh geeez how did you guys get yah PhD we knew that since day one low oxygen means flooded lungs smh geez and I’m a high school drop out and I knew that since January

People are getting their medical information about Covid-19 from Youtube or specialist sites, not from the MSM. The MSM are pretty useless when it comes to disseminating that information.
 
USA approves first home-test for Coronavirus. It will first be made available to healthcare workers and first responders. It involves swabbing yourself at home and mailing the sample to the company.
(archive)
How does the self swab work? The article just states it's a cotton swab in the nose, but don't you have to go all the way towards the back of the nasal cavity to get a good sample? I don't know how well someone could do that by themselves.
 
Racist coronavirus graffiti sprayed on Chinese-Australian family's home in Melbourne
By Jason Fang, Samuel Yang and Bang Xiao

A Chinese-Australian family's home has been targeted by vandals for two nights in a row, leaving their garage covered in racist graffiti about the coronavirus pandemic, and one of their windows smashed with a large rock.

View attachment 1246313

Two nights in a row? The vandals must be very close by, if they keep coming back.
Maybe... they're hiding inside of the house itself!
 
you can tell from the look in his eyes that he has already suffered PTSD.
That's some good internet diagnosis work there. Tele medicine is easier than I thought. Do you do any other specialties, or is it just psychiatry?


Racist coronavirus graffiti sprayed on Chinese-Australian family's home in Melbourne
By Jason Fang, Samuel Yang and Bang Xiao

A Chinese-Australian family's home has been targeted by vandals for two nights in a row, leaving their garage covered in racist graffiti about the coronavirus pandemic, and one of their windows smashed with a large rock.

View attachment 1246313

LOL . They used the official non-racist WHO designated name . How progressive off them. "POCs go home!" as they chant on the marches.
Why are these always so unconvincing?
 
Article (Archive)
CDC chief: Coronavirus wave in winter could be 'even more difficult' than current outbreak
by Zachary Halaschak
| April 21, 2020 07:06 PM

Print this article





Robert Redfield, who leads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warned a second wave of the coronavirus could be worse than the current outbreak.
Redfield told the Washington Post on Tuesday that he worries the pandemic could worsen next winter when the illness coincides with flu season.
“There’s a possibility that the assault of the virus on our nation next winter will actually be even more difficult than the one we just went through,” Redfield said. “And when I’ve said this to others, they kind of put their head back, they don’t understand what I mean.”
The director said a two-fold wave of both COVID-19 and influenza could cause increased strain on the healthcare system as large numbers of people get sick.
Last week, Redfield said there might be a resurgence of cases as the weather begins to cool down, even if the United States gets the coronavirus under control in the next few months.
“I think we have to assume this is like other respiratory viruses, and there will be a seasonality to it,” Redfield said in an interview with ABC's Good Morning America.
“The CDC is science-based, data-driven, [so] until we see it, we don’t know for certain [there will be a resurgence],” he continued. “But it is critical that we plan that this virus is likely to follow a seasonality pattern similar to flu, and we’re going to have another battle with it upfront and aggressively next winter.”
Some states have already begun the process of lifting social distancing restrictions that shuttered stores and businesses across the country. Even as protests have sprouted across the country, drawing attention to a dire economic situation caused by stay-at-home orders, there remains some concern about there being a resurgence of COVID-19 cases once businesses and life begin to return to normalcy.
Dr. Deborah Birx, the response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force, addressed Redfield's comments during Tuesday's briefing. She said the U.S. was "working on an algorithm" in which patients are first tested for influenza and then tested for COVID-19. She said the country is "building the testing capacity to be able to do that."
"We're also hoping by that time that we have additional treatment options for people with COVID-19," Birx said. When further questioned whether she believes it will be worse than the outbreak now, Birx said she wasn't so sure.
"I don't know if it will be worse, I think this has been pretty bad," she said. "I believe that we'll have early warning signals."
The U.S. has had more than 820,000 cases of the coronavirus and at least 44,200 deaths since the pandemic began, according to Johns Hopkins University.
 
Two nights in a row? The vandals must be very close by, if they keep coming back.
Maybe... they're hiding inside of the house itself!
1587514129480.png

By the paint dispersion on the C and O it looks like whoever did this was not very tall :thinking:
prolly because they've never actually experienced racism, or never bothered to remember said racism.
It just screams sheltered.
Isn't Melbourne a Chinese providence at this stage? Their state governor signed onto the Belt & Road and their representative is Chinese also.
 
Article (Archive)
CDC chief: Coronavirus wave in winter could be 'even more difficult' than current outbreak
by Zachary Halaschak
| April 21, 2020 07:06 PM

Print this article





Robert Redfield, who leads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warned a second wave of the coronavirus could be worse than the current outbreak.
Redfield told the Washington Post on Tuesday that he worries the pandemic could worsen next winter when the illness coincides with flu season.
“There’s a possibility that the assault of the virus on our nation next winter will actually be even more difficult than the one we just went through,” Redfield said. “And when I’ve said this to others, they kind of put their head back, they don’t understand what I mean.”
The director said a two-fold wave of both COVID-19 and influenza could cause increased strain on the healthcare system as large numbers of people get sick.
Last week, Redfield said there might be a resurgence of cases as the weather begins to cool down, even if the United States gets the coronavirus under control in the next few months.
“I think we have to assume this is like other respiratory viruses, and there will be a seasonality to it,” Redfield said in an interview with ABC's Good Morning America.
“The CDC is science-based, data-driven, [so] until we see it, we don’t know for certain [there will be a resurgence],” he continued. “But it is critical that we plan that this virus is likely to follow a seasonality pattern similar to flu, and we’re going to have another battle with it upfront and aggressively next winter.”
Some states have already begun the process of lifting social distancing restrictions that shuttered stores and businesses across the country. Even as protests have sprouted across the country, drawing attention to a dire economic situation caused by stay-at-home orders, there remains some concern about there being a resurgence of COVID-19 cases once businesses and life begin to return to normalcy.
Dr. Deborah Birx, the response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force, addressed Redfield's comments during Tuesday's briefing. She said the U.S. was "working on an algorithm" in which patients are first tested for influenza and then tested for COVID-19. She said the country is "building the testing capacity to be able to do that."
"We're also hoping by that time that we have additional treatment options for people with COVID-19," Birx said. When further questioned whether she believes it will be worse than the outbreak now, Birx said she wasn't so sure.
"I don't know if it will be worse, I think this has been pretty bad," she said. "I believe that we'll have early warning signals."
The U.S. has had more than 820,000 cases of the coronavirus and at least 44,200 deaths since the pandemic began, according to Johns Hopkins University.
Tl:dr: We're all gonna die? What else is new? Let's just do it and get it over with.
 
That's some good internet diagnosis work there. Tele medicine is easier than I thought. Do you do any other specialties, or is it just psychiatry?

He detected Contrapoints was a fake tranny ages ago.

Anti lockdown protests in CA

https://archive.vn/KLWLu


This is from infamous troll/lunatic Jake the Asshole, formerly known as Flat Earth Asshole. He made this song, which is either deeply insane or some sort of troll but either way I kinda like it.

https://archive.vn/ZFVZy

 
Article (Archive)
CDC chief: Coronavirus wave in winter could be 'even more difficult' than current outbreak
by Zachary Halaschak
| April 21, 2020 07:06 PM

Print this article





Robert Redfield, who leads the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, warned a second wave of the coronavirus could be worse than the current outbreak.
Redfield told the Washington Post on Tuesday that he worries the pandemic could worsen next winter when the illness coincides with flu season.
“There’s a possibility that the assault of the virus on our nation next winter will actually be even more difficult than the one we just went through,” Redfield said. “And when I’ve said this to others, they kind of put their head back, they don’t understand what I mean.”
The director said a two-fold wave of both COVID-19 and influenza could cause increased strain on the healthcare system as large numbers of people get sick.
Last week, Redfield said there might be a resurgence of cases as the weather begins to cool down, even if the United States gets the coronavirus under control in the next few months.
“I think we have to assume this is like other respiratory viruses, and there will be a seasonality to it,” Redfield said in an interview with ABC's Good Morning America.
“The CDC is science-based, data-driven, [so] until we see it, we don’t know for certain [there will be a resurgence],” he continued. “But it is critical that we plan that this virus is likely to follow a seasonality pattern similar to flu, and we’re going to have another battle with it upfront and aggressively next winter.”
Some states have already begun the process of lifting social distancing restrictions that shuttered stores and businesses across the country. Even as protests have sprouted across the country, drawing attention to a dire economic situation caused by stay-at-home orders, there remains some concern about there being a resurgence of COVID-19 cases once businesses and life begin to return to normalcy.
Dr. Deborah Birx, the response coordinator for the White House Coronavirus Task Force, addressed Redfield's comments during Tuesday's briefing. She said the U.S. was "working on an algorithm" in which patients are first tested for influenza and then tested for COVID-19. She said the country is "building the testing capacity to be able to do that."
"We're also hoping by that time that we have additional treatment options for people with COVID-19," Birx said. When further questioned whether she believes it will be worse than the outbreak now, Birx said she wasn't so sure.
"I don't know if it will be worse, I think this has been pretty bad," she said. "I believe that we'll have early warning signals."
The U.S. has had more than 820,000 cases of the coronavirus and at least 44,200 deaths since the pandemic began, according to Johns Hopkins University.

Yes, because the CDC has been so accurate about so many things this entire time ...

There is so much inaccuracy surrounding this that I take literally everything I hear from everybody with a grain of salt at this point.

"It could be worse. We don't know ... But it COULD be." Fearmongering much?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back