498 cases in NC; 55,000k nationwide.
packgrad said:
It would be nice if they gave more detail on these numbers. How many still have it, Severity, etc?
The numbers, as presented now, provide little value other than inspiring fear.
The government can't just make a private company defer a payment. That is how they stay in business. I think that is the purpose for the checks instead. Unfortunately alot of people are gonna go out and blow the check instead of spending it on billsTopsailWolf said:
Don't get the one time $1200 check. That's not helpful at all if this shutdown lasts even 4 more weeks. Defer mortgage/rent payments and utility payments for the time being, increase unemployment benefits (which they did), and give out checks once the country opens back up for business to help stimulate economic spending.
TopsailWolf said:
Don't get the one time $1200 check. That's not helpful at all if this shutdown lasts even 4 more weeks. Defer mortgage/rent payments and utility payments for the time being, increase unemployment benefits (which they did), and give out checks once the country opens back up for business to help stimulate economic spending.
55k cases, so 11k are in the hospital? I find that difficult to believeburnbarn said:
With the flu, 2% of cases are hospitalizations. With Covid19 it is 20%.. this is the strain on the medical system regardless of deaths.
They aren't the same decision makers... you can't really draw that line. The same medical people calling for the cancellation of events also wanted to strictly limit mass gatherings. Just because the governor of Florida and other municipalities were slow to act, and people were dumb to show up, doesn't mean anyone is being inconsistent.wilmwolf80 said:
I wonder if you will see higher numbers at the big spring break destinations as a result of extending spring break, allowing kids from all over the country to spend extra time together being the opposite of socially distant. That move I question. Not letting kids play basketball together in an empty arena, but letting them on the beaches by the tens of thousands. Doesn't make sense to me.
statefan91 said:
What does everyone think has caused the numbers in NYC and Louisiana? Is it population density? People not taking it seriously and it being able to spread so quickly? I know it's growing here in Mecklenburg but i'm glad to see no deaths yet.
I'm wondering if that is a typo. (10k vs 100k)wilmwolf80 said:
There are 500 cases in NC and only 29 of those are in the hospital. Maybe eventually 20 percent will end up there, but it's not the case currently, in NC anyway. It is a higher number than the flu, but how many of those in the hospital currently are just there out of an abundance of caution? I would think right now that the 100,000 tests that have been performed are much more of a strain on the healthcare system than the 500 positives.
(Numbers are from here https://www.newsobserver.com/news/coronavirus/article241479931.html)
wilmwolf80 said:
I wonder if you will see higher numbers at the big spring break destinations as a result of extending spring break, allowing kids from all over the country to spend extra time together being the opposite of socially distant. That move I question. Not letting kids play basketball together in an empty arena, but letting them on the beaches by the tens of thousands. Doesn't make sense to me.
The decision I'm talking about was made by the same people. The decision to cancel the ACC tournament was was reportedly made by the president of Duke when he directed them to not show up for our game and forced the ACC's hand. It was also the same people that run the universities that decided to extend spring break by a week instead of having the students come back to campus. I'm just wondering aloud what that extra week of partying did for the spread of the virus. Even with the beaches open, if the kids had been made to come back to school on time, that would've been one less week of potential contact. I'm speaking strictly of the decision by most colleges to extend spring break for a week. I understand that many of them did it to try and regroup and come up with a plan, but from the standpoint of the actual health safety of the kids, I think it was the wrong call.IseWolf22 said:They aren't the same decision makers... you can't really draw that line. The same medical people calling for the cancellation of events also wanted to strictly limit mass gatherings. Just because the governor of Florida and other municipalities were slow to act, and people were dumb to show up, doesn't mean anyone is being inconsistent.wilmwolf80 said:
I wonder if you will see higher numbers at the big spring break destinations as a result of extending spring break, allowing kids from all over the country to spend extra time together being the opposite of socially distant. That move I question. Not letting kids play basketball together in an empty arena, but letting them on the beaches by the tens of thousands. Doesn't make sense to me.
That said, I believe at least the conference tournaments could have been finished in empty arenas
You are assuming that extending spring break is equivalent to "Go party in mass groups ignoring all expert medical advice" and that it was worse then bringing them all back into dorms living together.wilmwolf80 said:The decision I'm talking about was made by the same people. The decision to cancel the ACC tournament was was reportedly made by the president of Duke when he directed them to not show up for our game and forced the ACC's hand. It was also the same people that run the universities that decided to extend spring break by a week instead of having the students come back to campus. I'm just wondering aloud what that extra week of partying did for the spread of the virus. Even with the beaches open, if the kids had been made to come back to school on time, that would've been one less week of potential contact. I'm speaking strictly of the decision by most colleges to extend spring break for a week. I understand that many of them did it to try and regroup and come up with a plan, but from the standpoint of the actual health safety of the kids, I think it was the wrong call.IseWolf22 said:They aren't the same decision makers... you can't really draw that line. The same medical people calling for the cancellation of events also wanted to strictly limit mass gatherings. Just because the governor of Florida and other municipalities were slow to act, and people were dumb to show up, doesn't mean anyone is being inconsistent.wilmwolf80 said:
I wonder if you will see higher numbers at the big spring break destinations as a result of extending spring break, allowing kids from all over the country to spend extra time together being the opposite of socially distant. That move I question. Not letting kids play basketball together in an empty arena, but letting them on the beaches by the tens of thousands. Doesn't make sense to me.
That said, I believe at least the conference tournaments could have been finished in empty arenas
packgrad said:
Not exactly true when local governments are issuing stay at home orders. Perhaps incomplete information is sufficient for some. I prefer more information when government is instituting lock down orders.
Pacfanweb said:
So, my link to the COVID Tracking Project above (in the article) that has all the raw data says this:
https://covidtracking.com/us-daily/
As of yesterday, 3/24:
56 States and territories
Total tests: 359,161
Positives: 51,970
Negatives: 292,758
Pending: 14,433
Hospitalized: 4,468
Deaths: 675
So, nowhere NEAR any 20% are being hospitalized. 8.59%. And about 1.2% death rate of the positive cases, and we know that's lower because of all the likely positive cases that aren't tested yet, or at all.
A concern, absolutely. Panic? No. Don't want the strain on the hospital system, but as far as there being a million or more deaths from this...I'm not seeing it.
Yep, I don't think the upward trend will continue since the country mostly has gotten on top of this before it really infested us.Ground_Chuck said:Pacfanweb said:
So, my link to the COVID Tracking Project above (in the article) that has all the raw data says this:
https://covidtracking.com/us-daily/
As of yesterday, 3/24:
56 States and territories
Total tests: 359,161
Positives: 51,970
Negatives: 292,758
Pending: 14,433
Hospitalized: 4,468
Deaths: 675
So, nowhere NEAR any 20% are being hospitalized. 8.59%. And about 1.2% death rate of the positive cases, and we know that's lower because of all the likely positive cases that aren't tested yet, or at all.
A concern, absolutely. Panic? No. Don't want the strain on the hospital system, but as far as there being a million or more deaths from this...I'm not seeing it.
If all the social distancing stuff works, it will seem completely unnecessary.
Quote:
https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/coronavirus/article241241216.html?
Is a person in their late 70s with several medical conditions something you can blame on COVID? I understand as a contributing factor standpoint but I'm having trouble with that.Quote:
Gov. Roy Cooper said in a news release that a person from Cabarrus County died on March 24 from complications associated with the virus. The person was in their late 70s and had several medical conditions, Cooper said.
A second person in their 60s from Virginia who was traveling through North Carolina also died.
"We extend our deepest sympathies to the families and loved ones. This is a stark warning that for some people COVID-19 is a serious illness. All of us must do our part to stop the spread by staying at home as much as possible and practicing social distancing," Cooper said.
statefan91 said:Quote:
https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/coronavirus/article241241216.html?Is a person in their late 70s with several medical conditions something you can blame on COVID? I understand as a contributing factor standpoint but I'm having trouble with that.Quote:
Gov. Roy Cooper said in a news release that a person from Cabarrus County died on March 24 from complications associated with the virus. The person was in their late 70s and had several medical conditions, Cooper said.
A second person in their 60s from Virginia who was traveling through North Carolina also died.
"We extend our deepest sympathies to the families and loved ones. This is a stark warning that for some people COVID-19 is a serious illness. All of us must do our part to stop the spread by staying at home as much as possible and practicing social distancing," Cooper said.