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airdvr

Some perspective on Covid-19 on a local level

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Interesting interactive map of the US.  I think we all agree that this is bad but take a moment to see exactly how bad it is for you on a local level.

This part of the country (ohio) has done a fairly good job of flattening the curve.  In my very small part of the world (county level) there are 95 confirmed cases and 5 deaths.  There are roughly 366,000 people in the county.  While caution is the word of the day hysteria is not.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/coronavirus-us-cases.html

I'd be interested to hear what it's like in your local area.

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2 minutes ago, airdvr said:

Interesting interactive map of the US.  I think we all agree that this is bad but take a moment to see exactly how bad it is for you on a local level.

This part of the country (ohio) has done a fairly good job of flattening the curve.  In my very small part of the world (county level) there are 95 confirmed cases and 5 deaths.  There are roughly 366,000 people in the county.  While caution is the word of the day hysteria is not.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/coronavirus-us-cases.html

I'd be interested to hear what it's like in your local area.

1200 cases and 18 deaths.  No hysteria here either.  (And really, other than one fight on TV over toilet paper I haven't seen any hysteria anywhere.)

 

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(edited)

We're doing OK here, (our country has 125 cases and 2 deaths -- population of 160,000.  But a veterans' nursing home just south of us (next county) has had probably 20 deaths so far. Their staff was way overloaded, their facility is not suitable for a contagious disease (1950's, and not enough air exchanges), and things just went from bad to worse. They aren't even sure how it got in; it's been locked down for over 3 weeks, so probably asymptomatic staff. That county has 733 cases and 35 deaths (it's also got the city of Springfield, and the city of Holyoke -- they're much more cities rather than towns). Its population is about 500,000.

My sister-in-law is an infection control specialist who's been called on to help there. She said that the Army and National Guard are there now (its not VA, but it is veterans), and they've been a huge lifesaver. So much staff is out sick with COVID that the understaffed-already facility was pretty bad.

Massachusetts was one of the first foci for the infection; there was a big convention in Boston that spread it around. The state as a whole had its first case February 1.

Wendy P.

Edited by wmw999

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(edited)

My city/county: population 70,000, 44 cases, 2 deaths.

I was talking to the cop-next-door yesterday. All vacation has been canceled, and everyone is on-call all the time. But at least they are getting on-call pay. He was bemoaning the hassle of trying to disinfect all the gear he straps on, as well as the shortage of Lysol (or equivalent). 

Edited by ryoder

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Perspective from the front line here in Frederick, MD. Three weeks ago while working an overtime shift "down town", I witnessed A LOT of people not taking the social distancing seriously. Today at the grocery story I got a more dire vibe. One dude was rocking a tyvex suit! 

Many more people wearing masks of some sort... 

For me, the Firefighter, I was sent home after an EMS call to the local assisted living facility. The Patients ONLY symptom was coughing. No fever or ANY other sign or symptom. I went in wearing only a N95 and gloves. This was a flagged PUI (person under investigation) call, the proper PPE was mask, gloves, eye wear AND gown. I went through a FULL decon and sent hope for self isolation until the PT's covid test came back. Negative thank goodness. Full return to work!  Even if the PT had been positive I feel strongly that the minimal PPE I had on would have protected me. 

This is REAL, people who have down played it are waking up and realizing that this isn't going away anytime soon.  

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22 hours ago, airdvr said:

Interesting interactive map of the US.  I think we all agree that this is bad but take a moment to see exactly how bad it is for you on a local level.

This part of the country (ohio) has done a fairly good job of flattening the curve.  In my very small part of the world (county level) there are 95 confirmed cases and 5 deaths.  There are roughly 366,000 people in the county.  While caution is the word of the day hysteria is not.

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2020/us/coronavirus-us-cases.html

I'd be interested to hear what it's like in your local area.

 

The last time I saw the rate of increase map my area was in the 3-5 days range. It's now in the 5-7.

 

Fingers crossed this indicates the stay at home order is working.

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(edited)
2 hours ago, lummy said:

By town, 8 cases with 38k population
county population ~1.1million 
I believe only Seattle area has been on SIP longer than we have

119738554_ScreenShot2020-04-06at1_42_00PM.png.29e0d8ff6f6f6ff5aee468a34fcaef0b.png

Nah, they were on the 23rd. Bay Area was what, Mar 17th, with the rest of us in CA on the 19th? 

 

I'm not sure who was first.

Edited by yoink

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