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-   -   How Is Covid-19 Impacting Life in Your City? (https://skyscraperpage.com/forum/showthread.php?t=242036)

Pedestrian May 14, 2021 5:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 10023 (Post 9280319)
And if it does break out, just accept that it’s out instead of pretending we’re in some Matt Damon disaster movie. It’s going to kill who it’s going to kill. A quick conflagration would have been preferable to this slow burn.

Says the person who all along wanted to lock up the unaffected "vulnerable" so his lifestyle could remain as hedonistic as ever.

Urban Politician has a point that we need effective contact tracing and isolation procedures for the infected and infectious but that is far from the same as segregating portions of the unaffected population and violating their rights to equal treatment under law, especially when the reason for it is pure selfishness.

homebucket May 14, 2021 5:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pedestrian (Post 9280337)
My understanding of infectious disease doesn't have much to do with this issue. My recognition that doctors aren't gods and that they owe their patients respect for the patients' comfort--mental and physical--is. When doctor and patient interact, its the patient's comfort zone that should be respected whenever possible. If you don't recognize that, you are a problem for the profession.

Exactly. 95% of the battle is building trust between the patient-provider relationship. If a doctor insists on barging into a patient room in an acute care medical center without a mask, without asking for permission first regarding the patients' mask preferences, they've already lost that trust.

JManc May 14, 2021 7:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9280032)
Not having a gym is not an excuse to be fat.

Most of weight control involves diet. Exercise helps, but diet is WAY more important.

Absolutely. Working out makes you more toned but if you don't watch your diet, you'll have enviable abs under a layer of fat.

the urban politician May 14, 2021 8:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pedestrian (Post 9280337)
My understanding of infectious disease doesn't have much to do with this issue. My recognition that doctors aren't gods and that they owe their patients respect for the patients' comfort--mental and physical--is. When doctor and patient interact, its the patient's comfort zone that should be respected whenever possible. If you don't recognize that, you are a problem for the profession.

I never said that I wouldn't respect a patient's "comfort zone" and refuse a mask if asked. You wouldn't believe the kind of nonsense some hypochondriacs make me bend over backwards for.

I said that "most patients aren't Howard Hughes types like you", and I stand by that. Some patients would probably still want me to wear a mask, but most probably wouldn't mind as more people listen to CDC guidance and get their vaccines.

the urban politician May 14, 2021 9:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JManc (Post 9280483)
Absolutely. Working out makes you more toned but if you don't watch your diet, you'll have enviable abs under a layer of fat.

That's right.

Exercise but eating too much:

https://imageresizer.static9.net.au/...ers-160816.jpg


Versus....


Exercise + strict diet:


https://content.api.news/v3/images/b...8e043382a51ecd

Camelback May 14, 2021 9:18 PM

HGH and steroids help too.

SIGSEGV May 14, 2021 9:59 PM

Interesting working paper here: https://bfi.uchicago.edu/working-paper/2021-56/
Quote:

Work from Home & Productivity: Evidence from Personnel & Analytics Data on IT Professionals

Using personnel and analytics data from over 10,000 skilled professionals at a large Asian IT services company, we compare productivity before and during the work from home [WFH] period of the Covid-19 pandemic. Total hours worked increased by roughly 30%, including a rise of 18% in working after normal business hours. Average output did not significantly change. Therefore, productivity fell by about 20%. Time spent on coordination activities and meetings increased, but uninterrupted work hours shrank considerably. Employees also spent less time networking, and received less coaching and 1:1 meetings with supervisors. These findings suggest that communication and coordination costs increased substantially during WFH, and constituted an important source of the decline in productivity. Employees with children living at home increased hours worked more than those without children at home, and suffered a bigger decline in productivity than those without children.
Anecdotally, this squares with my experience of spending more time working to get approximately the same (or less done, since my makeshift home lab is nothing like a real lab). These last few weeks I've been going to campus much more often and it's been great.

Obviously different people will have different experiences, and it's certainly possible for some individuals to be more productive WFH, but clearly this does not generalize to the population.

10023 May 15, 2021 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pedestrian (Post 9280347)
Says the person who all along wanted to lock up the unaffected "vulnerable" so his lifestyle could remain as hedonistic as ever.

Urban Politician has a point that we need effective contact tracing and isolation procedures for the infected and infectious but that is far from the same as segregating portions of the unaffected population and violating their rights to equal treatment under law, especially when the reason for it is pure selfishness.

I wanted to make people responsible for their own well-being, once it became obvious who was vulnerable and who was not, rather than imposing collective punishment so that 80-year-olds didn’t stupidly go do things they shouldn’t or feel left out. That was essentially the approach in Florida, which was correct.

the urban politician May 15, 2021 12:41 PM

^ Your approach works better in an advanced country where vaccines can get developed and ramped up rather quickly.

But India’s lesson teaches us that the “Florida approach” could be disastrous.

The Indian population are literally sitting ducks to this virus.

iheartthed May 15, 2021 2:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9281069)
^ Your approach works better in an advanced country where vaccines can get developed and ramped up rather quickly.

But India’s lesson teaches us that the “Florida approach” could be disastrous.

The Indian population are literally sitting ducks to this virus.

Brazil is also an example of that.

10023 May 16, 2021 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by the urban politician (Post 9281069)
^ Your approach works better in an advanced country where vaccines can get developed and ramped up rather quickly.

But India’s lesson teaches us that the “Florida approach” could be disastrous.

The Indian population are literally sitting ducks to this virus.

Florida’s approach has been like that since about last June, long before vaccines were available. Older people just needed to be careful, wear masks, avoid meeting others indoors, etc. And most importantly, segregate from the young who were around other people for work and/or socially.

The opposite approach is the British/European one, where older people went to shops and pubs and restaurants as soon as they reopened, our 70-year-old senior partners went back to the office (and promptly got Covid), and older people continued to have family and friends around to the house (maskless) throughout.

Governments created such a litany of rules about socialising and closed or restricted so many businesses (reservations only, table service only, limited capacity, etc) that people vulnerable to the virus were lulled into a false sense of security. It would have been better if they had been kept more afraid of the virus.

More generally, the fault was not acknowledging the fact that a minority of people are endangered by the virus and the majority are not. This means that a one-size-fits-all approach cannot work. The rules will be unnecessarily onerous, bordering on laughable, for most people, while being insufficiently strict for others.

For example, opening pubs to everyone with 25% capacity and only table service was the wrong approach. They were still unsafe for the elderly, but also unprofitable for the owners and not really enjoyable for the patrons. They should have been allowed to operate more normally, but with the vulnerable strongly urged* not to go at all.


* Better would be to restrict people over say 65 by rule, especially in a country with a shaky public health system facing nurse shortages and capacity constraints. We’ve argued the legality of this ad nauseam on this forum, but frankly it’s no more of an illegal overreach than much of what governments have ordered over the past 14 months.

the urban politician May 16, 2021 1:09 PM

^ I’m the first to agree with you, against the grain of this forum, that Government generally makes things worse when they try too hard to police and micromanage everyday life. Even during the worst of the pandemic I think we could have had equal results from simply banning large gatherings and otherwise using strong social messaging to encourage people to wear masks and maintain social distancing, with particular emphasis on advising people over 65 to stay at home as much as possible.

I can’t stand the fact that some Governors can just do whatever they want on the basis of declaring a perpetual “State of Emergency”. It’s utter BS, it goes against the whole idea of checks and balances as laid out in our Constitution.

10023 May 16, 2021 1:40 PM

^ Exactly.

But I would also hope that in retrospect people realize the error in just thinking everyone needed to do (or not do) the same things regardless of personal circumstances.

There was all this talk of creating “Covid safe” environments, but we all know that isn’t possible. A shop full of people wearing masks and encouraged to maintain 6 foot social distancing may be a bit safer than a shop full of people not wearing masks, but not by much. And on the flip side most people were never in any danger at all. Government messaging was just all wrong, because they didn’t want to offend the damn Boomers.

Cue Pedestrian trying to claim that lots of young people are dying or facing lifelong disability due to Covid... :rolleyes:

TWAK May 16, 2021 3:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 10023 (Post 9281736)
^ Exactly.

But I would also hope that in retrospect people realize the error in just thinking everyone needed to do (or not do) the same things regardless of personal circumstances.

There was all this talk of creating “Covid safe” environments, but we all know that isn’t possible. A shop full of people wearing masks and encouraged to maintain 6 foot social distancing may be a bit safer than a shop full of people not wearing masks, but not by much. And on the flip side most people were never in any danger at all. Government messaging was just all wrong, because they didn’t want to offend the damn Boomers.

Cue Pedestrian trying to claim that lots of young people are dying or facing lifelong disability due to Covid... :rolleyes:

Oh I got a good one.....what use is even going to the bar when nothing works? It's almost every day there is new material about covid damaging something in the body like taste, smell, blood vessels, ect. I will view any downplaying as a lie, because all men want their stuff to work, and all fear the loss.
Quote:

- Men now have one more compelling reason to get a COVID-19 vaccine — doctors suspect the new coronavirus could make it hard to perform in the bedroom.

How? Coronavirus infection is already known to damage blood vessels, and vessels that supply blood to the penis appear to be no exception.

Researchers armed with an electron microscope found coronavirus particles in penile tissue samples taken from two former COVID-19 patients who became impotent following their infection, which had occurred six and eight months earlier.

Further study revealed evidence of blood vessel damage in the penises of the COVID-19 patients, compared to two other men with erectile dysfunction who'd never been infected, the researchers reported May 7 in the World Journal of Men's Health.
Source

chris08876 May 16, 2021 3:36 PM

Was in NYC yesterday and the city is much much busier. Noticed dramatic increase since 4 weeks ago of folks and traffic. Also a ton of folks, I mean a ton of folks that are maskless. Big difference yesterday versus a month ago.

Its time for places to return employees to the office in mass. I'm not fully happy until every street and side walk is people gridlock and traffic hell. "Blocking the box" is a sign of a healthy city!


https://aws1.discourse-cdn.com/busin...5655a33fa.jpeg

iheartthed May 16, 2021 4:52 PM

This was the Sheep Meadow at Central Park yesterday:

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-U...peg?authuser=0
Credit: mine

The picture looks less crowded than it actually was.

homebucket May 16, 2021 5:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by iheartthed (Post 9281855)
This was the Sheep Meadow at Central Park yesterday:

https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-U...peg?authuser=0
Credit: mine

The picture looks less crowded than it actually was.

That looks awesome. Glad we are gradually returning to the “old normal”.

10023 May 16, 2021 5:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TWAK (Post 9281801)
Oh I got a good one.....what use is even going to the bar when nothing works? It's almost every day there is new material about covid damaging something in the body like taste, smell, blood vessels, ect. I will view any downplaying as a lie, because all men want their stuff to work, and all fear the loss.

Source

Nonsense. Covid will only “damage blood vessels” in the case of very serious disease which young people don’t get.

All of these stories take rare or anecdotal examples and try to blow it up into a general concern to frighten younger people. But it has an element of “the boy who cried Wolf” about it. People aren’t that stupid, and the more they try to downplay the very age- and health-dependent impacts of the virus, the more people just believe the whole thing is a “scamdemic”.

Better to just say “look, this virus is very dangerous to the elderly, the obese and the immune-compromised, more so than even a bad flu strain, so please wear a mask in public places where you might be around such people, and keep your distance from elderly relatives”. That would have been perfectly reasonable and rational guidance. And again, not visiting grandma was always more important than not dining indoors.

TWAK May 16, 2021 6:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by 10023 (Post 9281903)
Nonsense. Covid will only “damage blood vessels” in the case of very serious disease which young people don’t get.

No. Conspiracy theory.
The article said "Coronavirus infection is already known to damage blood vessels" so you're gonna need to give a source to dispute the article. If you have two articles vs my one article....would be harder for me to dispute.

Quote:

All of these stories take rare or anecdotal examples and try to blow it up into a general concern to frighten younger people. But it has an element of “the boy who cried Wolf” about it. People aren’t that stupid, and the more they try to downplay the very age- and health-dependent impacts of the virus, the more people just believe the whole thing is a “scamdemic”.
The younger people will accept the fear of erectile disfunction and the CDC should team up with the MSM and run with it. Or give em money.

Quote:

Better to just say “look, this virus is very dangerous to the elderly, the obese and the immune-compromised, more so than even a bad flu strain, so please wear a mask in public places where you might be around such people, and keep your distance from elderly relatives”. That would have been perfectly reasonable and rational guidance. And again, not visiting grandma was always more important than not dining indoors.
Nonsense.
Ok that's kinda unfair, but I'm seeing how it works.

10023 May 16, 2021 7:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TWAK (Post 9281920)
Nonsense.
Ok that's kinda unfair, but I'm seeing how it works.

It doesn’t matter whether you think it’s “fair”. If you think it’s unfair you should take it up with the SARS-CoV-2 virus, or with the whole process of ageing that weakens the immune system in later life, or with the people whose own poor diets and exercise habits made them obese and therefore less able to fight off the infection as well. It is what it is.

If anything, it’s unfair to impose a sort of society-wide collective punishment for over a year, when the lives of most people could have been improved greatly by encouraging greater caution amongst a minority.

The old have lived their lives. They enjoyed their 20s, 30s end 40s. They could have stayed home for a bit longer, for their own well-being, and we could have avoided subsequent lockdowns after the initial (and necessary) one last spring. That’s all there is to it.


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