COVID-19 Pandemic (Coronavirus)

KalKal

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No Whammies!!
NYC looks like it has a significantly lower mortality rate than most of the other states. If you look at the mortality rate of Louisiana, Michigan, and Georgia is is alarmingly high. Hopefully it will decrease because that isn't a good sign. I wouldn't be suprised if the US has multiple Italy scenarios playing out all at once in about 2 or 3 weeks. This shaping up to be a real disaster.
Hopefully we'll see some advancements in treatments ASAP.

I've been watching the Cuomo conferences every day, and he always points out that they're testing a lot more per capita in NY than in the rest of the world. So the "total infected" numbers in NY are closer to reality, which makes the mortality rate lower. Based on some of the articles I've read about Mardi Gras, Louisiana probably has a massive number of unreported cases. So as they die off, of course the mortality rate will be much much higher than in NY.


I hate to say it but I seen this coming a mile away.:francis:


To be honest, just looking at Queens the reactions to this map are incorrect.

Some of the most expensive areas in Queens (e.g. Jamaica Estates, where Trump is from) are in the bright red areas of that map.
The most surprising thing is that Flushing is not in the brightest red area.

BUT, what this map is supposed to tell you is "Percentage of patients testing positive for COVID-19".
That by itself doesn't really tell you how bad Coronavirus is in a specific area. It just means "of the people in the hospital, this percentage has Covid-19". That one number doesn't tell you anything about "inequality" at all.
 

Doin2Much Williams

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Insignificant posting from an insignificant poster
Lol yeah I have this issue as well. also I notice women i've talked to tend to be less precautious and tend to only take things serious once the threat is in front of them. this is odd since i've always thought women to be more intuitive and precautious.




Modern women are shiit stains, breh.



Going through this with my sister as we speek.



This is the same broad that flew out to Spain the first week of March this year... only to get rattled and be home in 5 days (she originally planned a 3 weak trip).




Women... wtf.




.
 

BmoreGorilla

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I’m starting to think that maybe this is that second wave they were talking about. It doesn’t make sense to me that this shyt is affecting people so differently the way it does. Even with the flu nobody is asymptomatic. Makes me think a lot of people have already built up some antibodies to this. Just my opinion
:yeshrug:
 

eXodus

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I’m starting to think that maybe this is that second wave they were talking about. It doesn’t make sense to me that this shyt is affecting people so differently the way it does. Even with the flu nobody is asymptomatic. Makes me think a lot of people have already built up some antibodies to this. Just my opinion
:yeshrug:
That’s an interesting theory. Wish we could get antibody test available for some sort of home mail in testing
 

THE MACHINE

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P.G. County
Just got an alert on my phone that Maryland just broke the record for new diagnosis in one day with 250 new cases. I hope this shyt doesn’t become a new hot spot.

Dmv posters - y’all be safe.
My sis and nephew work at PG Hospital :snoop:

They said the block is getting hot over there. They need to get that new spot opened over at Magic Johnson Center.
 

Lord_nikon

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Yo so these masks I order just shipped. I look at the picture on amazon because some one did a review, I zoom in.. these bytches made in Wuhan
:francis:

the virus can’t survive on a most surfaces for more than 72hours but I might not use these shyts

:mjlol:

I seen some other 3-layers on eBay, a lot of 250 but they shipping from NY

:huhldup::deadmanny:

:smugfavre:Somebody I know works for a ppe :smugfavre: all , I mean all PPE is made in china,, it's shipped on ship and stored in American warehouses ,,,,, like I said in the other tread nothing is made in the US including ventilators ,,,,



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BmoreGorilla

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That’s an interesting theory. Wish we could get antibody test available for some sort of home mail in testing
My girl was saying this last night and it made sense. They always talk about how the second wave of the Spanish Flu was a lot worse. So maybe a lot of us got exposed a while ago to a milder version and that’s why you see so many people now with little to no symptoms becuz our immunity is being built up
 

TheDarkCloud

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A lot of that is due to those 66 people being positive at that nursing home out Mt Airy


My sis and nephew work at PG Hospital :snoop:

They said the block is getting hot over there. They need to get that new spot opened over at Magic Johnson Center.

And y’all know the number is going to increase when they open that testing center at FedEx field this week. smh
It would help if we knew where exactly in these counties the cases are. They’re saying Montgomery County and PG County are the two counties with the highest cases. I live in PG. They’re saying a whole lot but really not saying nothing at the same time. I know some dude at Northwestern High School died from it yesterday, so I know Hyattsville has some cases. Oxon Hill, too. But where are the other 340 cases? That’s what’s blowing me.
 

☑︎#VoteDemocrat

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The Deep State







The U.S. Tried to Build a New Fleet of Ventilators. The Mission Failed.
As the coronavirus spreads, the collapse of the project helps explain America’s acute shortage.




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A U.S. Strategic National Stockpile in Texas. The government has thousands of ventilators, but not enough to cope with the coronavirus pandemic.Credit...Cooper Neill for The New York Times
By Nicholas Kulish, Sarah Kliff and Jessica Silver-Greenberg

  • March 29, 2020Updated 11:04 a.m. ET

Thirteen years ago, a group of U.S. public health officials came up with a plan to address what they regarded as one of the medical system’s crucial vulnerabilities: a shortage of ventilators.

The breathing-assistance machines tended to be bulky, expensive and limited in number. The plan was to build a large fleet of inexpensive portable devices to deploy in a flu pandemic or another crisis.

Money was budgeted. A federal contract was signed. Work got underway.

And then things suddenly veered off course. A multibillion-dollar maker of medical devices bought the small California company that had been hired to design the new machines. The project ultimately produced zero ventilators.

That failure delayed the development of an affordable ventilator by at least half a decade, depriving hospitals, states and the federal government of the ability to stock up. The federal government started over with another company in 2014, whose ventilator was approved only last year and whose products have not yet been delivered.


Today, with the coronavirus ravaging America’s health care system, the nation’s emergency-response stockpile is still waiting on its first shipment. The scarcity of ventilators has become an emergency, forcing doctors to make life-or-death decisions about who gets to breathe and who does not.

The stalled efforts to create a new class of cheap, easy-to-use ventilators highlight the perils of outsourcing projects with critical public-health implications to private companies; their focus on maximizing profits is not always consistent with the government’s goal of preparing for a future crisis.




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Thomas R. Frieden, the former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “We definitely saw the problem,” he said.Credit...Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
“We definitely saw the problem,” said Dr. Thomas R. Frieden, who ran the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from 2009 to 2017. “We innovated to try and get a solution. We made really good progress, but it doesn’t appear to have resulted in the volume that we needed.”

The project — code-named Aura — came in the wake of a parade of near-miss pandemics: SARS, MERS, bird flu and swine flu.


Federal officials decided to re-evaluate their strategy for the next public health emergency. They considered vaccines, antiviral drugs, protective gear and ventilators, the last line of defense for patients suffering respiratory failure. The federal government’s Strategic National Stockpile had full-service ventilators in its warehouses, but not in the quantities that would be needed to combat a major pandemic.


In 2006, the Department of Health and Human Services established a new division, the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority, with a mandate to prepare medical responses to chemical, biological and nuclear attacks, as well as infectious diseases.

In its first year in operation, the research agency considered how to expand the number of ventilators. It estimated that an additional 70,000 machines would be required in a moderate influenza pandemic.

The ventilators in the national stockpile were not ideal. In addition to being big and expensive, they required a lot of training to use. The research agency convened a panel of experts in November 2007 to devise a set of requirements for a new generation of mobile, easy-to-use ventilators.

In 2008, the government requested proposals from companies that were interested in designing and building the ventilators.

The goal was for the machines to be approved by regulators for mass development by 2010 or 2011, according to budget documentsthat the Department of Health and Human Services submitted to Congress in 2008. After that, the government would buy as many as 40,000 new ventilators and add them to the national stockpile.





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The federal government has spent years trying to increase the supply of ventilators in its strategic stockpile.Credit...Cooper Neill for The New York Times
The ventilators were to cost less than $3,000 each. The lower the price, the more machines the government would be able to buy.


Companies submitted bids for the Project Aura job. The research agency opted not to go with a large, established device maker. Instead it chose Newport Medical Instruments, a small outfit in Costa Mesa, Calif.

Newport, which was owned by a Japanese medical device company, only made ventilators. Being a small, nimble company, Newport executives said, would help it efficiently fulfill the government’s needs.

Sign up to receive our daily Coronavirus Briefing, an informed guide with the latest developments and expert advice.


Ventilators at the time typically went for about $10,000 each, and getting the price down to $3,000 would be tough. But Newport’s executives bet they would be able to make up for any losses by selling the ventilators around the world.

“It would be very prestigious to be recognized as a supplier to the federal government,” said Richard Crawford, who was Newport’s head of research and development at the time. “We thought the international market would be strong, and there is where Newport would have a good profit on the product.”

Federal officials were pleased. In addition to replenishing the national stockpile, “we also thought they’d be so attractive that the commercial market would want to buy them, too,” said Nicole Lurie, who was then the assistant secretary for preparedness and response inside the Department of Health and Human Services. With luck, the new generation of ventilators would become ubiquitous, helping hospitals nationwide better prepare for a crisis.

The contract was officially awarded a few months after the H1N1 outbreak, which the C.D.C. estimated infected 60 million and killed 12,000 in the United States, began to taper off in 2010. The contract called for Newport to receive $6.1 million upfront, with the expectation that the government would pay millions more as it bought thousands of machines to fortify the stockpile.


Project Aura was Newport’s first job for the federal government. Things moved quickly and smoothly, employees and federal officials said in interviews.

Every three months, officials with the biomedical research agency would visit Newport’s headquarters. Mr. Crawford submitted monthly reports detailing the company’s spending and progress.

The federal officials “would check everything,” he said. “If we said we were buying equipment, they would want to know what it was used for. There were scheduled visits, scheduled requirements and deliverables each month.”

In 2011, Newport shipped three working prototypes from the company’s California plant to Washington for federal officials to review.

Dr. Frieden, who ran the C.D.C. at the time, got a demonstration in a small conference room attached to his office. “I got all excited,” he said. “It was a multiyear effort that had resulted in something that was going to be really useful.”

In April 2012, a senior Health and Human Services official testified before Congress that the program was “on schedule to file for market approval in September 2013.” After that, the machines would go into production.

Then everything changed.

The medical device industry was undergoing rapid consolidation, with one company after another merging with or acquiring other makers. Manufacturers wanted to pitch themselves as one-stop shops for hospitals, which were getting bigger, and that meant offering a broader suite of products. In May 2012, Covidien, a large medical device manufacturer, agreed to buy Newport for just over $100 million.


Covidien — a publicly traded company with sales of $12 billion that year — already sold traditional ventilators, but that was only a small part of its multifaceted businesses. In 2012 alone, Covidien bought five other medical device companies, in addition to Newport.

Newport executives and government officials working on the ventilator contract said they immediately noticed a change when Covidien took over. Developing inexpensive portable ventilators no longer seemed like a top priority.

Newport applied in June 2012 for clearance from the Food and Drug Administration to market the device, but two former federal officials said Covidien had demanded additional funding and a higher sales price for the ventilators. The government gave the company an additional $1.4 million, a drop in the bucket for a company Covidien’s size.

Government officials and executives at rival ventilator companies said they suspected that Covidien had acquired Newport to prevent it from building a cheaper product that would undermine Covidien’s profits from its existing ventilator business.

Some Newport executives who worked on the project were reassigned to other roles. Others decided to leave the company.

“Up until the time the company sold, I was really happy and excited about the project,” said Hong-Lin Du, Newport’s president at the time of its sale. “Then I was assigned to a different job.”



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Hong-Lin Du was the president of Newport Medical Instruments, a small company in Costa Mesa, Calif., at the time of its sale to Covidien.Credit...Tag Christof for The New York Times

In 2014, with no ventilators having been delivered to the government, Covidien executives told officials at the biomedical research agency that they wanted to get out of the contract, according to three former federal officials. The executives complained that it was not sufficiently profitable for the company.

The government agreed to cancel the contract. The world was focused at the time on the Ebola outbreak in West Africa. The research agency started over, awarding a new contract for $13.8 million to the giant Dutch company Philips. In 2015, Covidien was sold for $50 billion to another huge medical device company, Medtronic. Charles J. Dockendorff, Covidien’s former chief financial officer, said he did not know why the contract had fallen apart. “I am not aware of that issue,” he said in a text message.

Robert J. White, president of the minimally invasive therapies group at Medtronic who worked at Covidien during the Newport acquisition, initially said he had no recollection of the Project Aura contract. A Medtronic spokeswoman later said that Mr. White was under the impression that the contract had been winding down before Covidien bought Newport.

It wasn’t until last July that the F.D.A. signed off on the new Philips ventilator, the Trilogy Evo. The government ordered 10,000 units in December, setting a delivery date in mid-2020.

As the extent of the spread of the new coronavirus in the United States became clear, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, revealed on March 15that the stockpile had 12,700 ventilators ready to deploy. The government has since sped up maintenance to increase the number available to 16,660 — still fewer than a quarter of what officials years earlier had estimated would be required in a moderate flu pandemic.

Last week, the Health and Human Services Department contacted ventilator makers to see how soon they could produce thousands of machines. And it began pressing Philips to speed up its planned shipments.

The stockpile is “still awaiting delivery of the Trilogy Evo,” a Health and Human Services spokeswoman said. “We do not currently have any in inventory, though we are expecting them soon.”
 

BmoreGorilla

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And y’all know the number is going to increase when they open that testing center at FedEx field this week. smh
It would help if we knew where exactly in these counties the cases are. They’re saying Montgomery County and PG County are the two counties with the highest cases. I live in PG. They’re saying a whole lot but really not saying nothing at the same time. I know some dude at Northwestern High School died from it yesterday, so I know Hyattsville has some cases. Oxon Hill, too. But where are the other 340 cases? That’s what’s blowing me.
Yea they need to say what neighborhoods these people are from. Overall tho I think MD is doing a good job. 1200 confirmed cases but 12,000 tests came back negative. 10 deaths and like 40 people have fully recovered so far. Only like 200 people hospitalized. That’s relatively good considering how close we are to NY
 
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