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Coronavirus prep

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  • Posts: 5,429 Member
    Yes the lag time on this thing is deadly. It’s why I insisted on starting remote work and other precautions a week ago after just the first case in TX. I already knew it was here but couldn’t justify to management yet
  • Posts: 18,249 Member
  • Posts: 315 Member
    I went to YouTube, to just watch my normal stuff but along the side was drone footage, of empty cities worldwide & it makes me wonder when this' over, how empty they'll still be because of the death toll, via this.
  • Posts: 25,763 Member

    We have lot of smokers and the Chinese do too.

    Yeah, I can't remember the exact numbers but I remember seeing a partial breakdown of Chinese deaths and it seemed pretty clear that smoking may be a significant factor.
  • Posts: 3,565 Member
    edited March 2020

    Well--a lot of Chinese died too.

    Yes, I realize that. And I'm no scientist- that's why I asked (and more like I was wondering out loud). But the fact the death rate is so high in Italy at the moment compared to other countries, and the curious fact that none of the family members in the article I quoted were said to have had underlying conditions (the mother & 3 adult children), is what prompted the question.

    https://www.businessinsider.com/coronavirus-death-rate-by-country-current-fatalities-compared-to-cases-2020-3
  • Posts: 6,137 Member
    NYC is in a crisis... things are so bad here.

    What's happening in NYC?? What's it like? Can't imagine.
  • Posts: 8,169 Member
    London has not gone into lockdown yet, but cafes, restaurants, gyms, bars, theatres were told not to re-open after tonight.

    Potatoes are starting to get scarce in my bit of central London. Hubby managed to find some at the Bangladeshi supermarket. At least the ethnic grocers are still well stocked.
  • Posts: 315 Member
    There's an ice cream truck, within my apartment complex now.
  • Posts: 315 Member
    COGypsy wrote: »

    And not just the death of people. So many small businesses aren't going to make it through this, even with stimulus/bailout money. As someone who generally shops and eats at local places, I wonder what it's going to be like without those places once this starts to turn around.

    Edited for typo

    Plus the permanent disability, of previously able to work survivors & people that didn't wanna retire even though they've been eligible now're choosing to, to preserve their health.
  • Posts: 7,887 Member
    acpgee wrote: »
    London has not gone into lockdown yet, but cafes, restaurants, gyms, bars, theatres were told not to re-open after tonight.

    Potatoes are starting to get scarce in my bit of central London. Hubby managed to find some at the Bangladeshi supermarket. At least the ethnic grocers are still well stocked.

    One of the things I bought at my local meat market on Monday was potatoes (it seemed normal, stores here in general are getting back to normal although we are expecting a shelter in place order any day so BestBuy and similar stores and liquor stores have been nuts and I'm sure Costco has been).
  • Posts: 186 Member
    bearly63 wrote: »
    @Chef_Barbell I am so sorry to hear that. My son was told this morning after Cuomo's speech that his boss considers him "essential" and to keep reporting to the client's location ( An international Hotel Chain). My son is a project management consulting for a company that does a lot of large real estate construction projects.

    LA is supposedly shutting down construction so I am shocked that hotels etc get to keep going as "essential". I could see infrastructure but hotels?

    So he will keep going and getting exposed. I just worry that if he is one of the unlucky ones that needs medical intervention he will be *kitten*-out-of-luck as they say. And no one there to get him what he needs to be sick at home.
    Stressed for him and all the workers and healthcare employees in NYC.

    Whoa now. As I understand it "essential" means these places and people will be allowed to work not that they have to work. My son is a grocery store cashier, as a front line food supply worker his work is considered essential, but he and everyone he works with is free to take leave-of-absence with a guarantee of getting his job back later. No one is, or should be, forced to work during this time if they choose not to take the risk and that includes medical personnel.

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