C19 Topics

Turtle

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Testing is up, so I'm shocked, shocked, I tell you, that cases are up.

The only things that matter is, the hospitalization rate, and the death rate, two things that isn't getting reported.
 

RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Testing is up, so I'm shocked, shocked, I tell you, that cases are up.

The only things that matter is, the hospitalization rate, and the death rate, two things that isn't getting reported.

What media are you following to make that assertion (that hospitalizations and deaths aren’t being reported)

Because it’s obviously very different than what I’m watching and reading.




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Ragman

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Retired Expediter
What media are you following to make that assertion (that hospitalizations and deaths aren’t being reported)

Because it’s obviously very different than what I’m watching and reading.




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Same here...


Every other story is about hospitals and new deaths.
 
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Turtle

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Retired Expediter
What media are you following to make that assertion (that hospitalizations and deaths aren’t being reported)

Because it’s obviously very different than what I’m watching and reading.
That's probably because you reinterpreted what I said to mean something very different from what I actually said. I didn't say hospitalizations and deaths, I said hospitalization RATE and death RATE.

What's the current death RATE?

Please list your news media outlet source.
 
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Turtle

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Retired Expediter

I guess I'll just have to rely on social distancing.
That video is so flawed it's LOL funny. The guy's a moron. A certified stone-cold idiot.
He's using an OSHA approved atmospheric monitor, which falls under 29 CFR 1910, and is specifically designed to monitor atmospheric gases in confined spaces. The one he's using is designed, and calibrated, specifically for firefighters to use at fire scenes.

A confined space is defined as a space "large enough for a person to enter and perform assigned work in; it has limited or restricted ways to enter or exit the space; and it was not designed to be occupied continuously by a worker." I guarantee you that a restricted space immediately surrounding the exhaust pipe of a human being is not a confined space in which an atmospheric monitor's readings are even a little bit valid. He's essentially testing the atmospheric conditions inside a mechanic's 4-bay garage by inserting the detection tube up into the tail pipe of a running car, and than declaring the garage is not safe to enter.

If you want to test the oxygen level of a mask wearer, you don't test the carbon dioxide output level at the point of exhalation (or even the amount of oxygen present at the point of inhalation), you test the blood oxygen (oxygen saturation) level of the mask wearer. You do that with a Pulse Oximeter (that little thing they clamp onto your finger at the doctor's office). It ill also test your pulse rate, which will rise considerably to compensate if there is a lack of oxygen, in order to keep your blood oxygen saturation level consistent.

There are people who work in hospitals who wear masks ALL DAY LONG and none of them are dropping onto the floor because of low oxygen levels or high levels of carbon dioxide, nor are they experiencing higher pulse or heart rates, nor are they reporting headaches. There are construction workers and landscapers and industrial workers who wear masks ALL DAY LONG and none of them are dropping onto the ground because of low oxygen levels or high levels of carbon dioxide, nor are they experiencing higher pulse or heart rates, nor are they reporting headaches.

Get a pulse oximeter and test it yourself. 5 minutes is plenty, but test it for as long as you want. One with no mask, one with a surgical mask, one with an N95 mask, one with a vented N95 mask and then go crazy and test it with an N95 mask AND a surgical mask. You will find the same thing that countless doctors, nurses, hospitals and OSHA tests have found, that there is no significant change in you oxygen saturation (or pulse rate) in any scenario. There's a reason those masks are OSHA approved.

If your normal, at rest, without a mask, oxygen level is, say, 95, then in the worst case scenario, where you don both a surgical mask and an N95 mask, your blood oxygen level might drop as low as 90.

"Ninety!!! OMG!" you might say. But normal blood oxygen levels are between 75-100 (but ideally between 90-100). Below 75 is low, but headaches don't begin until actual hypoxemia sets in, which happens at or below 60. If your at-rest blood oxygen level (SpO2) is consistently below 90 for a prolonged period of time,like for weeks or months, especially if there is an objective cause, like COPD, lung damage, an illness, etc., then supplemental oxygen may be needed.

Construction workers and others who's mask becomes clogged (with dust or has gotten wet) to the point where it's difficult to breathe, their blood oxygen concentrations might drop by as much as 8% according to OSHA and CDC testing. Still safe, but OSHA and the CDC recommends swapping out a mask when it becomes too difficult to breathe.

As someone who over the last several weeks who has had more than my fair share of encounters with pulse oximeters, including wearing one for 24 hours a day for 6 days, I can tell you that I asked a lot of questions (to the point where I think I annoyed more than one person) and have done a lot of research, and I now know more about them and oxygen levels than any normal person should know. I can tell you that they are not as accurate as drawing blood directly from a vein and doing a ABG (Arterial Blood Gas) test, because dirty fingers and fingernail polish will affect the accuracy of the oximeter. The oximeter works by passing small beams of light pass through the blood in the finger (or toe, or even earlobe for someone with long and/or painted fingernails), measuring the amount of oxygen. It does this by measuring changes of light absorption in oxygenated or deoxygenated blood. But the accuracy of a pulse oximeter is close enough, within 2%. Meaning, if your oxygen saturation reads 92% on the pulse oximeter, it may be actually anywhere from 90 to 94%.

So to recap, the guy in the video is an idiot, and people who complain of headaches while wearing masks are whiny little children looking for an excuse not to wear a mask.
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter

I guess I'll just have to rely on social distancing.

That guy is what you get when his mother married her brother ... and then decided it would be a good idea to go ahead and procreate and raise a family ...

Meanwhile “Karen” in Dallas apparently saw his video and now is feeling very, very threatened and oppressed - because CAPITALISM and PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS - and is going to make sure anyone in her vicinity knows just how she feels about all this masking wearing nonsense:


 

coalminer

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
Its been proven that masks work to reduce the spread of the virus. But the real benefit isnt the person who wears it, but the person who may be infected, but not know it.

I think what you are seeing is that people have the attitude that why should I do something that does not benefit me?
 
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Turtle

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Retired Expediter
As Freddie Mercury famously sang...

No mask on your face
A big disgrace
Spreading your germs
All over the place
We will, we will rock you!
 
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muttly

Veteran Expediter
Its been proven that masks work to reduce the spread of the virus. But the real benefit isnt the person who wears it, but the person who may be infected, but not know it.

I think what you are seeing is that people have the attitude that why should I do something that does not benefit me?
My current work environment with two hours in an office consists of a quarter or less of people wearing a mask. And many that wear the mask wear it improperly. Around their neck. Over just their mouth. They take it off so they can talk loudly to someone. They put it on after they've walked closely by everyone at the beginning of the day.
It's mandated that everyone wear the mask, but many just refuse to wear one. Too hot and stuffy. Or medical reasons. So it's pointless for me to wear one also.
 

Turtle

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Retired Expediter
Pointless? I can see how one might give in to that, but wearing a mask when others aren't will, at a minimum, reduce your dose of the virus, and we know dose matters.
In the words of Commander Peter Quincy Taggart, the commander of the NSEA Protector, "Never give up! Never surrender!"

Any ol mask is better than nothing, but I'd have N95 masks with a ventilator high on my list of things to get.
 
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RLENT

Veteran Expediter
Its been proven that masks work to reduce the spread of the virus. But the real benefit isnt the person who wears it, but the person who may be infected, but not know it.

I think what you are seeing is that people have the attitude that why should I do something that does not benefit me?

Actually, the real benefit is to the person or persons Typhoid Karen and Typhoid Kevin don’t infect through their irresponsible behavior ...
 

coalminer

Veteran Expediter
Retired Expediter
One more thought about this, contact tracing is not going to be effective here because there are going to be way too many people that will tell the tracers its none of their business where they have been and who they had contact with.
 

Turtle

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Retired Expediter
Contact tracing is only effective in stopping or slowing the spread in areas where there is little infection and little transmission. In those places, when someone gets the infection, you isolate them, and then anyone they have been in contact with you notify, monitor, test and maybe isolate. That will contain the spread. But once a virus has begun to spread in any significant way, contact tracing is useless, other than as a tool to create a spider web map of where the virus as already spread.

The county in which I live, they got a good handle on contact tracing from the very beginning. The very first case was someone from out of town, who was visiting, ironally, a nurse from the hospital, and the nurse took the friend to church. A few days later that friend came down with COVIC-19. They got on the contact tracing right away, and have been all over it ever since. To complicate matters, this is a college town, so we have people coming in from all over. Once they shut down the school, that enabled better tracing and mitigation. Almost no one is out in public without wearing a mask, and everybody does the social distancing thing. As of 06/29/2020 the running total number of cases in the county (of 39,000 people) is 79, with 64 being fully recovered, 13 isolated at home, 1 hospitalized, and 1 death. That's pretty good.
 
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