Nov 4, 2021

Today's Pix

click a pic











































Today's Head-Shaker

Somebody needs to burn for this.


A COVID-19 victim was dissected in front of a paying audience in Oregon without his family’s knowledge or consent, according to a report from local outlet KING 5 News. The autopsy of David Saunders, 98, was hosted in a Portland Marriott hotel ballroom on Oct. 17 as part of the traveling “Oddities and Curiosities Expo.” Organizers sold tickets for up to $500. Saunders’ widow and other family members only learned of the fate of Saunders’ body from a previous KING 5 investigation, the outlet said.

Mike Clark, the funeral director who had handled the preparation of Saunders’ body, handed it off to a private company with the family’s expectation his remains would be used for medical research. Clark was “totally horrified,” he said, when he discovered where the body had actually ended up. Jeremy Ciliberto, the autopsy’s organizer and founder of DeathScience.org, claimed that Saunders and his family did give consent. A representative for the middleman firm, Med Ed Labs, said that they had been misled by the “beyond” dishonest Ciliberto. The spokesperson, Obteen Nassiri, said the company had been told by Ciliberto that Saunders’ body would be used for a medical class. Nassiri could not explain to KING 5 why he had supplied a client with COVID-infected remains, however.

Please explain to me how we are not behaving like a buncha fuckin' Romans in about 35 BCE.



Hope You're Feelin' Better

Rachel highlights from last night.

Biden has done better in elections this year than any president since Reagan.

COVID-19 Update

It's "official"
750,000 dead Americans

And we'll be counting costs for a long long time.


Covid study finds some 28 million extra years of life lost in 2020, with U.S. male life expectancy badly hit

More than 28 million extra years of human life were lost in 2020, a year marked by the global spread of the coronavirus, according to a study released Wednesday that further underscored the immense human toll that the pandemic has wrought.

The international study, published in the BMJ journal, examined changes to life expectancy in 37 upper-middle to high-income countries where researchers said reliable data was available. The study, led by an Oxford University public health researcher, also considered years of life lost, a metric that measures the degree of premature mortality among the dead, by comparing the ages of the deceased to their life expectancies.

The authors said the measure was more precise in calculating the impact of the pandemic than, for instance, just looking at excess deaths, a metric that does not distinguish between the death of a 17-year-old and that of a 70-year-old. The researchers used life expectancy between 2005 and 2019 as a benchmark for their study.

“Our results strongly justify a more nuanced estimation of the lives lost,” the authors wrote. “More than 222 million years of life were lost in 2020, which is 28.1 million … years of life lost more than expected.”

The highest fall in life expectancy occurred in Russia, where men lost 2.33 extra years at birth, and women 2.14 years. The United States was second, with men losing 2.27 extra years, and women 1.61. Bulgaria, Lithuania, Chile, and Spain followed.

In six places — New Zealand, Taiwan, Iceland, South Korea, Norway and Denmark — where the public health response to the pandemic was largely seen as effective, life expectancy either increased or marked no change. The first four economies have recorded fewer than 10 covid-linked deaths for every 100,000 residents, while Norway and Denmark respectively logged 17 and 47 deaths for every 100,000 people, according to Washington Post figures.

This week, the number of Americans killed by the deadly disease reached 750,000. That translates to about 228 people per 100,000 residents of the United States.

More people have died of covid in 2021 than last year, World Health Organization data show, suggesting that the extra years of life lost from the pandemic will be much higher than measured in the new study.

At the end of 2020, approximately 1.9 million people had died because of the pandemic, WHO figures show. Some 5 million people are now dead.

In terms of years of life lost, the coronavirus pandemic is the deadliest global disease outbreak since the 1918-19 influenza pandemic, which cut short an estimated 63.7 million years of life, according to one study.

The 1918 pandemic killed relatively young people as opposed to covid-19, of which the elderly have borne the brunt.

But there is a bit of good news too.


Britain authorizes Merck’s molnupiravir, the world’s first approval of oral covid-19 treatment pill

LONDON — Regulators in Britain granted approval to the experimental drug molnupiravir from U.S. pharmaceutical giant Merck on Thursday, marking the first authorization from a public health body for an oral antiviral treatment for covid-19 in adults.

Experts have said that if widely authorized, the medicine could have huge potential to help fight the coronavirus pandemic: Pills are easier to take, manufacture and store, making them particularly useful in lower- to middle-income countries with weaker infrastructure and limited vaccine supplies.

“We will continue to move with both rigor and urgency to bring molnupiravir to patients around the world as quickly as possible,” Merck President Robert M. Davis said in a statement.

The company, which added that it would submit applications to other regulatory agencies, has applied to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for emergency use authorization, while the European Medicines Agency has launched a rolling review of the drug.


- snip -

What to know about the covid-19 treatment molnupiravir

A global clinical trial showed the pill reduced hospitalizations and deaths by nearly half among higher-risk adult coronavirus patients diagnosed with mild to moderate illness, Merck — which worked on the drug with partner Ridgeback Biotherapeutics — said last month. The first dose given to a volunteer in the trial was in the United Kingdom.