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Coronavirus prep

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  • Posts: 91 Member
    edited July 2020
    @moonangel12

    I wish we had that type of graphic news available here. Today reports of 48 new cases in a week and up to two weeks ago we had none most days for over a month. Its coming back!
  • Posts: 3,788 Member
    cwolfman13 wrote: »
    Just received our school reopening plan this morning for my to be 3rd and 5th graders. Distance learning starting August 12 and then back to the classroom after labor day on an every other week schedule. Last name A-L one week Tuesday through Friday and M-Z the next week Tuesday through Friday. Masks required. Mondays will be distance learning for all while the school gets a deep clean.

    Kansas gave their announcement as well. We are delaying the first day of school until after Labor Day (set to start August 13). Further information on how the in-person learning is yet to be announced, but I do know there will be a virtual option. Hoping our numbers will start to decrease soon, and if not that those who can keep their kids home do so as to not over populate the schools/classrooms any more than necessary.
  • Posts: 3,685 Member
    edited July 2020

    I am in NY and we still don't have gyms open even though we are doing way better than most other states!

    I work in healthcare and have to wear N95 for 12-15h a day. It does suck, but it is better than spreading the virus. I even developed a really bad face rash because of it the past few weeks. I do find it really hard to breath as I have asthma, but I am allowed to take it off during my breaks when I can go outside which helps.

    I've seen a lot of people on bike paths running and biking with masks and don't know how they can do it but if they can while working out, I should be able to with light activity.

    We, Illinois, followed NY example. We shutdown fast and started making progress. The cases are rising but not as fast as the Southern states. If everyone can get on the same page we might be able to fight it better
  • Posts: 7,887 Member
    In some ways we actually shut down before NY, but since it hasn't been as dire here (although it's been bad enough), I think some people still aren't taking it seriously enough -- particularly the young.

    Here's a somewhat frustrating story about that, that echoes what I've seen: https://www.chicagotribune.com/coronavirus/ct-life-young-adults-chicago-covid-uptick-reaction-tt-0715-20200716-vslgp4i2t5eudgt3hchthv6ute-story.html

  • Posts: 10,171 Member
    TonyB0588 wrote: »

    Even before COVID19, a bus driver here would simply drive to the nearest police station if they were contentious persons on board. Don't know if that would work in your area, but worth a try.

    The incidents I see on the local news since they installed security cams on all the buses typically don't look like they allow for that kind of time. E.g., someone boards and doesn't pay. As soon as the driver says something, the person takes out a weapon or just starts pummeling the driver. Then they generally depart pretty quickly.

    I suppose it might work in situations where the passenger gets involved in an altercation with another passenger. The driver could just let it go down while driving to the police station. But I would think in most cases the offending passenger would eventually notice the driver has gone off track. If they suspected what was happening (and after the first couple of times a driver managed to get the bus to the police station, everybody would know it was happening), the result would be the same: turn the weapon or fists on the driver and then leave.
  • Posts: 2,563 Member
    One of the the larger school districts in our area announced their plan. Parents will make a binding choice for the fall semester
    • Child will go to school in person with distancing measures, masks required, etc. Classes will be taught by the district's teachers. If there is an outbreak these kids will be taught remotely by their regular teachers
    • Child will remote school. Instruction will be through a 3rd party provider.
  • Posts: 11,502 Member
    Theoldguy1 wrote: »
    One of the the larger school districts in our area announced their plan. Parents will make a binding choice for the fall semester
    • Child will go to school in person with distancing measures, masks required, etc. Classes will be taught by the district's teachers. If there is an outbreak these kids will be taught remotely by their regular teachers
    • Child will remote school. Instruction will be through a 3rd party provider.

    This is interesting because I was just asking elsewhere about the plan. If a teacher or student is infected, then everyone who rode the bus or had a class with that person quarantines for 2 weeks? And if one of them ends up sick, does everyone who rode the bus or had a class with that teacher or student quarantine for 2 weeks?
  • Posts: 25,763 Member
    ahoy_m8 wrote: »
    Agreed. In Wuhan, cohabitants of infected people, by and large, became infected. They moved infected people who weren't very sick to a quarantine center (often against their will) to prevent spreading to others in the domicile who might get very sick. Here in the US, I can see how in a crowded home, it would spread as in Wuhan. Some homes are spacious, though, spacious enough to distance and to prevent spread to cohabitants. It highlights yet another contrast between real life consequences to rich vs. poor.

    So in janejellyroll's example, in a rich school district, policies could assume siblings can isolate, but it's a bad assumption in less affluent areas. And most districts aren't uniformly affluent. So what do you do... have different rules depending on how big a family's home is? Less affluent families have more pressure to work (and therefore to send kids to school). How can policies account for that? Hard to see how this could be implemented practically.

    The NYT just had an interesting article delineating measures private schools can afford to open safely vs. under-resourced public schools. My county health dept just issued an order prohibiting all schools, public and private, from opening in person before Labor Day. I'm sure things will get murky beyond that. The harsh reality is that those with the fewest resources to keep safe have the most pressure to get back to pre-covid practices.

    Not to mention that the families who have less room to isolate are more likely to have adults in the home who are working public facing jobs and may not have the available sick leave in order to self-isolate if they find out someone in the household is exposed. The risk is going to go both ways - school children will bring COVID home and adults will take it to their workplaces.
  • Posts: 2,563 Member

    This is interesting because I was just asking elsewhere about the plan. If a teacher or student is infected, then everyone who rode the bus or had a class with that person quarantines for 2 weeks? And if one of them ends up sick, does everyone who rode the bus or had a class with that teacher or student quarantine for 2 weeks?

    I was told parents were being surveyed to see if the home had the ability to take the kid's temperature before leaving the house. In theory a sick kid won't be getting on the bus.
  • Posts: 96 Member

    Honestly this restriction has gone on long enough that this group is probably approaching critical mass right now.

    Those of you in this thread who are the loudest proponents of social distancing and masks and quarantines...how would you feel about all this were you not privileged? It's easy for those with stay-home capability to pontificate from their keyboards but the reality is that tens of millions of people are living basically hand-to-mouth even in the best of economic times.

    Unless you know a way to fabricate money out of thin air, I think allowing everyone to make their own choice is going to be the only way forward. Yes, people are going to die. More people won't. The choice should not be up to rich people living in comfortable isolation with plenty of money.

    I've often wondered as I'm reading this thread how those who are isolated are doing. I see so many people saying we need to keep parents/grandparents safe and essentially totally isolated to keep them from getting Covid. In no way do I think we should deliberately spread it to those who are most vulnerable, but is it worth grandpa getting a longer life if that life is spent in isolation and him being unhappy due to not being able to spend time, hug or even see his family? There needs to be balance for all...I'm not sure what the answer is but the mental health effects on our most vulnerable are not being taken into consideration it seems like.

    Plus e-learning just won't work for so many kids - whether it's because they do not have the resources at home to be able to utilize it, don't have the necessary supervision/involved parents to be successful or a multitude of other factors - we aren't doing most kids any favors by keeping them at home.
  • Posts: 100 Member
    I live in Hampton Roads VA, the biggest problem center in Virginia.

    I've walked by several house parties in the afternoons. One of them was a volleyball party, with teenagers coming over and hugging each other and whatnot. It's disheartening that people are acting this way.

    In grocery stores, most people I see wear masks, but there are always a couple that don't. And some of those that do, don't wear them properly- not covering their nose.

    On my walks, my neighbors will get super close to me and want to talk, while neither of us are wearing masks. I do a lot of crossing the street/turning around/avoiding. I need to just bite the bullet and wear a mask walking around my neighborhood- in the past I've not come across a lot of people, so I didn't prioritize wearing a mask for exercise, but I guess that's done now. I walk early in the morning, around 4, when no one's out, and then in the afternoon, that's when everyone's out.

    I'm in a text group where the moms say that they're "beaching it," doing normal summer things. I don't know whether they take precautions or not, or whether they go at off-hours, or whatever. I hope they are.

    People are just tired of confining themselves, I guess. And so am I. But I'm not tired enough to stop trying to keep my family and my neighbors safe. I do feel that the people around me believe I'm overreacting. My extended family is having a *kitten* reunion in a week, flying in from all over the country. We are of course not going. I hope nothing bad happens.

    i try to do my best to keep my mask in my pocket, or i run/walk in the rain lol. People stay inside usually so i get the whole road to myself when i do this!
  • Posts: 11,502 Member

    Not to mention that multiple families have more than one child in school. Compound this by what the plan is if someone in class A gets sick and someone in that classroom has a sibling in Class B. Is all of Class B now expected to quarantine? The logistics of this seem almost overwhelming.

    Exactly! Just have everyone do virtual. Students without a computer/internet can maybe be sent packets of materials to read and complete.
  • Posts: 34,689 Member
    edited July 2020
    kimny72 wrote: »

    I agree it was destined to be more of a challenge here. But if you look at the numbers, our cases per capita and deaths per capita contradict your post. Most of the EU has it under control. Canada is doing light years better than we are. But the only reason it HAD to be like this in the US is because of where we put our priorities. IMHO it was a choice, and we soothe ourselves by ignoring the other options we had. I can't really say more without getting political.

    I'm privileged enough to be able to work from home, but I am now and have always been barely keeping my head above water, so it's hard for me to financially help others. I try my best though. It's frustrating that there's plenty of money out there, it's just not being used to get the people struggling through this. I don't think I'm required to be paying other people's rent to express dissatisfaction with the way our government and corporate America has handled the last 6 months

    Most of the EU has it under control.

    No.


    We're going to have to agree to disagree here. EU didn't do any better job.

    https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/data/mortality

    I would venture a guess that we have better reporting than a lot of the countries that fall below us rate-wise. I would also venture a guess that many of those countries are operating behind a veil of partial secrecy/denial/trying to keep the masses calm and their economies as open as possible.



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