Neverending Covid-19 Coronavirus


Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick (R) called for the reopening of his state and the country late Monday, saying there are "more important things than living.”

Patrick said on Fox News’s “Tucker Carlson Tonight” that he was “vindicated” after being criticized for saying in March that he thought “lots of grandparents” across the country would risk their survival to keep the country afloat economically.

“There are more important things than living, and that’s saving this country for my children and grandchildren and saving this country for all of us,” he said Monday.

“I don’t want to die," he added. “Nobody wants to die, but man we gotta take some risks and get back in the game and get this country back up and running.”

The Texas official stood by his March remarks and said the country “should not have been locked down.”

“I’m thankful that we are now beginning to open up Texas and other states because it’s long overdue,” Patrick said.

“We cannot endure this much longer,” he added. “Every month we stay closed, it’s going to take two to three months to rebuild.”

Patrick also said that “every life is valuable,” but Texas should not be shut down because a small percentage of the population is dying.

Texas’s 2019 population estimate reached almost 29 million people. The coronavirus has infected 19,458 Texans, leading to 495 fatalities, according to the state health department.
 

“There’s a big difference in how people handle this virus,” says Robert Murphy, a professor of medicine and the director of the Center for Global Communicable Diseases at Northwestern University. “It’s very unusual. None of this variability really fits with any other diseases we’re used to dealing with.”

This degree of uncertainty has less to do with the virus itself than how our bodies respond to it. As Murphy puts it, when doctors see this sort of variation in disease severity, “that’s not the virus; that’s the host.”
 

I'm very intrigued by this. It means that community spreading was present in north america well ahead of what we thought. Based on the number of hospitalisations, it may have been spreading in places like New York as early as December. In Wuhan, it may have been around way earlier than December.

Same with Montreal, which is hit fairly hard and which is relevant to me. I had a weird 3-4 day cold back around mid-february. My daughter had a light cough first in early february, 2-3 days after we returned from Montreal (we definitely were in crowds, since we took the subway several times and went to see a hockey game). What I had started with severe fatigue and a light fever, with a bit of gastrointestinal issues. It lasted 3-4 days and I was better. My wife had a light cough for weeks afterwards. We dismissed it because of the timing - the first cases were identified in Quebec several weeks later. Now I wonder, since the symptoms would correspond to mild cases.
 
BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine human trial starting in Germany. They are looking to start a similar trial in the US soon as well. This is the 5th vaccine to get to human trials around the world.


This french article is on the same subject. Here they point out that BioNTech/Pfizer are 80% confident it will work, so they are ramping up commercial production immediately so they can start providing it in September if it pans out. They say the initial results should come out end of June to early July.

 
BioNTech/Pfizer vaccine human trial starting in Germany. They are looking to start a similar trial in the US soon as well. This is the 5th vaccine to get to human trials around the world.


This french article is on the same subject. Here they point out that BioNTech/Pfizer are 80% confident it will work, so they are ramping up commercial production immediately so they can start providing it in September if it pans out. They say the initial results should come out end of June to early July.

This would be groundbreaking if a vaccine is able to become widely available that quickly.
 
Okayyyyy so this is the thing about being a Las Vegas mayor. It’s part time and ceremonial. She had no real power or control. That’s the commission. Her husband was the previous mayor (he was a mob lawyer and is photographed all the time with a martini and showgirls) and only a small portion of Las Vegas can vote for her. Some of the strip isn’t in the proper city.

she’s a moron. CNN should have done a bit more research before giving her a platform like that.
 
Not really, it’s about as fast as the H1N1 vaccine took.

The big difference though, is that we have known how to make a vaccine against influenza since the 1960s. The same time frame starting from scratch is amazing. I do believe it's possible given the sheer amount of teams and resources going into it though.

I'll say this - if Pfizer is so sure it will work, I would wager that they already injected it into humans and observed production of antibodies. Obviously, they already had it kill virus in cell cultures and showed it works and is safe in animals if they got approval for a human trial. They now need to prove it works and that it's safe with a formal trial.

EDIT: I'm referring only to the current type of trivalent vaccine that started in the 60s - live attenuated flu vaccines started being used in the 40s (I don't think anyone wants to go the live attenuated route anymore, if that's even still allowed).
 
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Whew, RIP Las Vegas:


The hunger games have started and Las Vegas just pulled a Katniss and asked to be tribute.

I had seen some evidence that ventilators are detrimental but it seemed somewhat anecdotal. I'm glad they are taking a critical look at this. It will lead to better treatment.
 


My doctor friend here in Akron has said the same thing. If you get put on a vent, you're screwed.
 
And here's more on why the ventilators may not be working. This looks to me like an immune response gone wild. This is exactly what happened with the Spanish Flu. Now, the next question for me to ask is that if you are already exhibiting a mild immune over reaction, will this make it worse for you if you get COVID?

Doctors are seeing better results with steroid therapy than ventilators.
 
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