Oct 31, 2020

COVID-19 Update

World
  • New Cases:   573,616 (⬆︎ 1.26%)
  • New Deaths:      7,510 (⬆︎   .63%)
USA
  • New Cases:   101,461 (⬆︎ 1.10%) 🥳 NEW RECORD! 🎉
  • New Deaths:         988 (⬆︎   .42%)
And President Stoopid is scheduled to do another dozen or so rallies before Election Day.

So I guess it's just not enough that he won't model the behavior that slows this fucking thing down - he has to amp it up by getting people together in large, close-in bunches so they can get real contagious-y with each other.

Here comes a shit load more infections and dead Americans.





First, coronavirus infections increased. 
Then, hospitalizations. 
Now, deaths are on the rise.

Coronavirus infections soared this week to record levels, hospitalizations are up in almost every state, and now — predictably, but slowly — deaths are rising, too.

The nation passed another milestone Friday with 9 million confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic, including more than 98,000 new cases, a daily record. More than 1,000 deaths in the United States from the novel coronavirus were reported each day Wednesday and Thursday, according to health data analyzed by The Washington Post, continuing an upward trend that began two weeks ago.

All signs indicate that this isn’t a blip but rather a reflection of a massive surge in infections that, without a dramatic effort to reverse the trend, will drive up the death toll for weeks to come. At least 229,000 people in the United States have died of covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.

But the mortality numbers have become political fodder on the campaign trail. Depending on whom you listen to, the coronavirus just isn’t that deadly anymore. Or it’s killing people in droves.

The truth is that mortality rates have improved, but the accelerating spread of the virus is driving up the absolute numbers of deaths.

Doctors have reported better outcomes thanks to improved techniques for treating patients and the use of the steroid dexamethasone and the antiviral remdesivir. In a widely reported study, researchers at NYU Langone Health found that the death rate among more than 5,000 patients in the system’s three hospitals dropped from 25.6 percent in March to 7.6 percent in August.

Still, this remains a potentially deadly disease, and a large proportion of the population is still vulnerable to infection. With the number of infections hitting daily records, there is reason to expect that deaths will keeping rising until the spread of the virus is contained.

Deaths lag infections by many weeks. In hard-hit North Dakota, daily infections have doubled since the end of September, while the average number of deaths from covid-19 is up 50 percent. In Indiana, cases are up 150 percent in that time, and deaths are up 93 percent.

In Wisconsin, cases began spiking in early September, and deaths began to rise sharply at the end of the month. Of the 2,029 deaths there from the pandemic, more than half have occurred since Sept. 25.

President Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. have in recent days said there has been an excessive focus on infections rather than deaths, which have not risen as quickly and remain lower than in the early days of the pandemic.

“Do you ever notice, they don’t use the word ‘death’? They use the word ‘cases,’ ” the president said Tuesday in Omaha. He brought up his 14-year-old son. “Like, Barron Trump is a case. He has sniffles, he was sniffling. One Kleenex, that’s all he needed, and he was better. But he’s a case.”

The younger Trump posted a graph on his Instagram account, based on incomplete Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, that he claimed showed deaths dropping.

“Why isn’t the ACTUAL data from the CDC being discussed? . . . [W]hile there have been increases in new cases per week, there has actually been a steady decrease in deaths per week,” Trump Jr. wrote. He echoed that argument in a television interview Thursday on Fox News, saying he asked himself why people weren’t talking about deaths, and deciding, “Oh, because the number is almost nothing. Because we’ve gotten control of this thing, we understand how it works.”

His description of the CDC death data is misleading. CDC official Robert Anderson, head of the agency’s mortality data branch, did not comment for this article but pointed to the CDC document — which Trump Jr. himself linked to from his Instagram account — that explains that the most recent death data is incomplete: “It is important to note that it can take several weeks for death records to be submitted to National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), processed, coded, and tabulated. Therefore, the data shown on this page may be incomplete, and will likely not include all deaths that occurred during a given time period, especially for the more recent time periods.”

Former vice president Joe Biden, by contrast, emphasizes the death toll in his speeches. In a short address Wednesday in Wilmington, Del., he said Trump’s minimizing of the death rate is “an insult” to everyone who has lost a loved one to covid-19.

He spoke of “the refusal of the Trump administration to recognize the reality we’re living through at a time when almost 1,000 Americans a day are dying,” and said that refusal “is an insult to every single person suffering from covid-19 and every family who’s lost a loved one.”

That cohort includes Kathryn Hering Rikess, whose son Cole Hering died in Knoxville, Tenn., at the age of 36 after a lengthy battle with covid-19. She said she is frustrated by the politicization of the virus and the refusal of some people to follow simple health guidelines such as mask-wearing. She keeps thinking her son is going to call on Sundays to talk football, to sign off with an “I love you, Mom.”

“No one should feel the pain that I’m feeling,” she said. “No one. Just follow the rules. Let’s get over this so I can have a funeral for my child and get on with it.”

White House spokesman Judd Deere said any suggestion that Trump hasn’t taken the threat of the virus seriously “is completely false,” and cited a number of actions by the president, including the travel ban affecting China and the spring shutdown of parts of the economy, “which saved millions of lives,” as well as support for therapeutics and a vaccine. “Thanks to the bold actions of President Trump, the risks today are dramatically lower than they were only a few months ago with mortality rates falling over 80%.”

Nationally, the daily death toll from the virus remains well below the numbers seen during the initial spring wave of the pandemic, when more than 2,200 people were dying each day on average. That declined until early July. But then a surge of infections in May and June, particularly in the Sun Belt and reflecting the end of many shutdowns and restrictions, began once again driving up the death toll.

The number dipped again in September but has risen steadily this month along with the arrival of colder weather and the accelerating spread of the virus. Since Oct. 22, 13 states have reached their all-time high for average daily deaths: Alaska, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

An influential model from the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation forecasts that, under current policies, more than 2,000 people will be dying each day by the end of December, close to the horrific death toll in April when the Northeast was first pounded by the pandemic.

But that is not set in stone: Public health measures can reverse the trends if people adhere to guidelines, including wearing facial coverings and maintaining physical distancing, and if communities are aggressive about contact tracing and isolation of people who are infected, experts say.

This week, Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said he is generally skeptical of models because their forecasts depend on many assumptions fed into them. He expressed alarm at the high rate of infections daily — the “baseline” — as the country heads deeper into fall and winter.

But he also noted that improved treatments have lowered mortality among the severely ill. There is no way to predict accurately what the death toll will be, he said.

“I would expect that as more people get infected, and more people get into the hospital, we will have an increase in deaths. It is impossible to predict what the level of deaths will be related to the number of hospitalizations,” Fauci said.

He and others have warned that widespread transmission of the virus among young people will lead to dangerous cases among the more vulnerable members of society — the elderly and people with chronic health conditions. The virus incubates for up to 14 days and the spread can be subtle and slow.

“One 20-year-old infects another 20-year-old who infects another 20-year-old who infects Grandma. So you have eight to 10 weeks,” Fauci said.

The scientific reality hasn’t changed since the start of the pandemic: This is a potentially lethal but quirky virus that can infect some people without generating any symptoms at all, while making others severely ill, damaging their lungs, heart, kidneys and other organs, with symptoms sometimes lingering for weeks or months — a syndrome known informally as “long covid.”

The CDC has stated that its best estimate for the infection fatality rate is 0.65 percent, meaning that for every 10,000 people who get the virus, 65 will die. There is a sharp age gradient: Mortality rises steadily with age, and the disease is far more likely to be fatal in the elderly. Other factors increasing risk involve underlying chronic conditions, including obesity, heart disease and diabetes.

The fatality rate, though, is not an intrinsic feature of the virus but rather one that depends on many factors, including improving treatments, level of exposure to the virus and access to health care.

Some demographic groups have borne a disproportionate burden of the disease. In the United States, African Americans account for 1 in 5 deaths, far exceeding their proportion of the population, and there are other disparities in infections, hospitalizations and deaths affecting people of color. Hispanics, for example, have much higher infection rates than Whites.

When infections rise, hospitalizations tend to increase a few weeks later. Some hospitalized patients end up in intensive care units, and some are placed on ventilators. This can take weeks to unfold. At the end of it, the death toll rises in an inescapable echo of the infections weeks earlier.

“Everything follows the thing before it. So the new positive cases drive the hospitalizations. The number of hospitalizations drive the pressure on the intensive care units. And those numbers drive the number of deaths,” said Bill Melms, chief medical officer at Wisconsin’s Marshfield Clinic Health System, which has locations in rural parts of the state.

Coronavirus hospitalizations across the Marshfield Clinic Health System were up 60 percent this week compared with last week. The system had 90 patients spread across nine hospitals Thursday — a number that is concerning because of the small, rural nature of their facilities. Melms expects the number could double in the next four weeks.

“We’re not going to see a light at the end of the tunnel — whether we’re talking about deaths, intensive care unit admissions or total hospital admissions — until we see the average number of positive cases in the state start to drop, and start to drop in a sustained way,” Melms said.

Experts said they believe the virus is spreading primarily in small, indoor gatherings, including inside bars and restaurants. Colder weather and the return of students to college campuses are also likely factors. Wisconsin, like many places in the United States far from the coasts, went largely unscathed in earlier waves of the pandemic. Those interior states are now flooded with cases.

Even so, some of the hardest-hit states have the lowest rates of mask-wearing.

“The current mind-set appears to be, at least, that people have said, ‘Well, it is what it is,’ ” said Nasia Safdar, medical director of infection control at University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics. “But it can’t really continue like this because health systems will soon have to come to a point where they may have to make very difficult decisions about covid care versus care for patients who don’t have covid but still need it.”

Trump has been blasting the news media for focusing on infections going up, falsely claiming this is simply because of more testing. His own testing czar, Adm. Brett Giroir, said this week that testing cannot explain the spike in cases because hospitalizations are rising.

Trump also used his own bout of covid-19 as a case study.

“I had it. Here I am, right?” he said in Omaha.

“That just shows you he doesn’t take this seriously even after he himself was hospitalized and had the whole world watching and hoping for his recovery,” said Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security and a spokesman for the Infectious Diseases Society of America. “There’s no way to minimize what this virus has done in any kind of honest way. This is another example of living in an alternative reality.”

Trump had access to experimental drugs not yet available to the general public. But his case is not statistically unusual: Most 74-year-old men with covid-19 survive, with or without special treatment.

This is not what rounding the corner looks like


Today's Today

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🦇 ☠️ ⬇︎ 🎃 ⬇︎ 👻 🧛🏻‍♂️
























Oct 30, 2020

COVID-19 Update

World
  • New Cases:   545,936 (⬆︎ 1.22%)
  • New Deaths:      7,172 (⬆︎   .61%)
USA
  • New Cases:   91,530 (⬆︎ 1.00%) 🥳 NEW RECORD! 🎉
  • New Deaths:    1,047 (⬆︎   .45%)





Donald Trump Jr. said covid-19 deaths are at ‘almost nothing.’
The virus killed more than 1,000 Americans the same day

Donald Trump Jr. declared on Thursday night that coronavirus deaths had dropped to “almost nothing,” questioning the seriousness of the pandemic on a record-breaking day for new cases in which more than 1,000 Americans died of the virus.

Speaking to Fox News host Laura Ingraham, Trump Jr. pointed to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that he suggested show a declining coronavirus death rate.

“I went through the CDC data, because I kept hearing about new infections, but I was like, ‘Why aren’t they talking about this?’ ” Trump Jr. said. “Oh, because the number is almost nothing. Because we’ve gotten control of this thing, we understand how it works. They have the therapeutics to be able to deal with this.”

While medical advances and less-crowded hospitals appear to have reduced the death rate from the early days of the pandemic, scientists warn it’s not clear whether that’s a long-term trend, The Washington Post reported. As cases surge across the United States, fatalities are often a lagging data point for CDC researchers, and reports can be incomplete in capturing the actual rate at which people are dying from the virus and its complications.

Physicians are also fearful that the latest burst in new cases, including a record 89,940 on Thursday, will lead to a greater number of deaths in the coming weeks, according to the New York Times.

“This is still a high death rate, much higher than we see for flu or other respiratory diseases,” Leora Horwitz, director of NYU Langone’s Center for Healthcare Innovation and Delivery Science, told the Times of the current death rate. “I don’t want to pretend this is benign.”

On Thursday night, though, the president’s eldest son pointed to a post from his Instagram account that he argued painted a more clear picture of the present state of a pandemic that has killed at least 228,000 people in the United States.

“If you look at my Instagram,” he said, “it’s gone to almost nothing."


At least 1,063 people in the United States died of the novel coronavirus on Thursday, the second-highest daily total for October, and 5,668 have died in the past seven days. This week has also featured two consecutive days of more than 1,000 deaths, marking the second time that has happened in as many weeks, according to The Post’s coronavirus tracker.

The discussion on Fox was sparked by an earlier segment on CNN, when Sanjay Gupta advised President Trump’s supporters not to attend his rallies. Gupta, the network’s chief medical correspondent, reported that new coronavirus cases had increased 82 percent of the time in counties that hosted a total of 17 rallies for the president between August and September. The infection rate in those counties had also climbed at a faster clip than the overall rate for their state, CNN reported.

Gupta noted that if anyone had been to one of Trump’s outdoor rallies, which have attracted thousands of maskless supporters not adhering to social distancing recommendations, they should assume they have been exposed to the coronavirus and quarantine for 14 days.

“Don’t go to these rallies,” Gupta said. “Look, just about anywhere in the country now, if you go to a gathering that’s several hundred people, it’s without a doubt the virus is attending that rally with you.”

On Fox, Ingraham said that Gupta’s words, along with Minnesota’s covid-19 guidelines capping the number of attendees at the president’s planned Friday rally to 250 people, was “a part of a larger media effort” to discourage attendance at Trump rallies. The president later tweeted his displeasure over the Minnesota limitations.

“Don, is he kidding me?” Ingraham asked Trump Jr., referring to Gupta. “They are pulling out all the stops. Now the virus is attending the rally. Apparently, they’re waving flags, too.” She added later, “A tragedy is not a reason to take people away from their candidate.” Trump Jr. scoffed at Gupta, calling him a “moron.”

Trump Jr.’s claim that death rates were now at “almost nothing,” captured in a clip that had been viewed more than 2 million times as of early Friday, prompted a strong response from critics and medical experts.

Alexis C. Madrigal, a staff writer at the Atlantic, concluded that Trump Jr.'s statement “may result from a common misinterpretation of CDC provisional death counts,” noting that incomplete data for recent weeks would incorrectly show deaths to be in decline.

Ashish K. Jha, a physician and the dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, suggested the claim showed a lack of empathy.

“I realize I am naive,” Jha tweeted. “But I’m still shocked by the casualness by which our political and media leaders and their families dismiss the daily deaths of nearly a thousand Americans.”

BTW - this is not what rounding the corner looks like:




Today's Quote


Give not thyself up, then, to fire, lest it invert thee, deaden thee, as for the time it did me. There is a wisdom that is woe; but there is a woe that is madness.
- Herman Melville, Moby Dick

Oct 29, 2020

What Is Understood

... needs no explanation.

The racists hear exactly what is being said.

QAnon Illustrated

It begins

And it ends


The Immortal Samuel L Jackson

I hope he lives forever cuz there will never be another one like him.





COVID-19 Update

World
  • New Cases:   504,412 (⬆︎ 1.14%)
  • New Deaths:      7,122 (⬆︎   .61%)

USA
  • New Cases:   81,581 (⬆︎ .90%) 🎉 NEW RECORD! 🥳
  • New Deaths:    1,030 (⬆︎ .44%)






Fauci expresses support for national mask mandate for the first time amid record-setting coronavirus infections

Anthony S. Fauci, the nation’s top infectious-disease expert, said for the first time Wednesday that the United States needs a nationwide mask mandate to combat the rising tide of coronavirus infections. In interviews with CNBC and the Journal of the American Medical Association, Fauci expressed regret that masks haven’t been adopted more widely and suggested that doing so would be key to avoiding another round of shutdowns.


Other Stuff:
  • With five days to go before Election Day on Nov. 3, President Trump and his Democratic challenger Joe Biden have crystallized opposing messages on a pandemic that has affected most aspects of American life, including voting.
  • Germany and France announced month-long lockdowns on Wednesday, saying that the resurgence of infections had spiraled out of control.
  • Taiwan celebrated its 200th day with no locally transmitted coronavirus infections, a milestone no other nation has reached. The country never went into lockdown, which experts say was due to its swift response, widespread mask use and close tracking of cases.
  • Health officials say the White House called off an investigation into its coronavirus outbreak, while failing to notify people who may have been exposed.
  • The United States has seen a steady increase in coronavirus infections and hospitalizations for almost the entire month of October, with record-high numbers of cases reported in the past week, according to data tracked by The Washington Post. More than 80,000 new cases were recorded on Wednesday, pushing the total number of infections past 8.8 million. At least 227,000 fatalities have been linked to the virus since February.
  • A federal government briefing document obtained by The Washington Post suggests that a traveler could theoretically drive all the way from the Canadian border to northern Mississippi without ever leaving a “hot-spot” county.

Today's Ad

Win America back - Interview 2020

Oct 28, 2020

Today's Tweet



In the Age Of Poe - some brilliant satire.