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And change into a new set of clothes every day. |
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Since the company I work for is considered an essential business, today my employer gave me and my co-workers copies of a letter on company letterhead addressed to "Local, State and Federal Law Enforcement and Government Agencies" stating that we are an essential business, yada yada yada, and we're supposed to show it to law enforcement just in case we get pulled over and asked why we're out and about, in case rules in California get stricter and we're stopped while on our way to/from work.
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Anedoctatly, the daughter of a coworker of mine, living in a town between Milan and Turin, got a severe flu (or covid19, she'll never knows) that left her in bed for a whole week. When she tried to look for assistance on ER, on the very beginning of the outbreak, she was told to go back home immediately. It was a severe case, with all the symptoms, that was not even got the chance to be registered/tested. |
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On the other hand, the places with an early onset of the epidemic like China and Italy might have under-reported deaths at first . . . until the doctors there realized what they were dealing with. So if anything, the death rates in the late comers like the US, Germany et al might be slightly higher than they should be and those in the first-affected slightly lower. I keep being amazed at the media fixation on testing. Doctors like having objective data to confirm what they are already pretty certain about, but few of them really need a coronavirus test on patients at risk of death to know what is the problem. It's the person with few or no symtpoms who needs the most to be tested because they might have a common cold or even an allergy. |
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Moreover, I read somewhere today Germany is not testing people who died without being previously diagnosed, so their Covid19 deaths might be a bit underreported. |
I get what you're saying. I'm saying that those unknown positives don't show up in that 10,779 death figure for Italy.
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Almost half of our cases are in Quebec. Quebec needs our help and support.... as does New York state. |
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I guess only the US, Germany and South Korea, relatively speaking, are testing ahead. |
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is the hasidic community also shut down in Brooklyn?
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It's very hard to find current test numbers for Italy but I did find this: Quote:
As to the difference between Germany and Italy, I also found this (which makes sense to me, along with the Italina healthcare system being totally overwhelmed) as the main reason for the difference: Quote:
By contrast the US has now done about 735,000 tests which, because of our large population, is still only about 2250/million. That's much more than any European country in total but only about half what Germany has done per million people (and slightly more than the UK). |
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As for Houston, there are about a thousand cases here and rising exponentially with someone dying in my neighborhood a few days ago. |
its in montreal, its in houston...nyc was hit earlier due to high population density, but it'll show up in other major cities v soon.
and a lot harder to stay inside when you're in an apartment or highrise in the suburbs at least you've got a yard.. |
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