I can’t do links, but you should find a reference to it if you look up coloradovirtuallibrary and ‘How Gunnison dealt with the 1918 Spanish Flu Pandemic’.That'ld be here (https://www.coloradovirtuallibrary.org/digital-colorado/colorado-histories/how-gunnison-dealt-with-the-1918-spanish-flu-pandemic/), I suppose.
Honestly, the scariest part is that none of this surprises me the slightest. It's just the natural consequence of how things have always been done around here. Incompetence, greed and using major crises for personal/political advantage is just how the Polish elites roll.
they liedYes, that sounds so very, very familiar.
Yes, in France it is the same, the government decided a few years ago to stop having a stock of ffp2 masks, to make savings. And now, to hide the fact that there were not enough masks for the medical staff, they lied and said that these masks were not useful, and that they couldn't stop the contamination. It is a shame, I am really pissed off about it.
On the subject of masks, now they're recommending the general public to wear "alternative" masks, which boils down to a "better have mask you made yourself than nothing at all" stance.The US seems to be shifting to a similar stance. One of my friends who works at a hospital in NYC has talked about how frustrating it is to see people on the subway wearing N95s when her hospital is constantly on the brink of running out. The message surrounding masks has been very confusing over here, especially since different countries are saying different things about them.
According to my own fact-checking, while it's true they reduced stocks to save money and they didn't manage the end result of that lack of stock in the best way possible, the claim about ffp2 masks was actually that they weren't useful to the general public. I didn't see anything about them saying they weren't useful to medical staff. Now, it my have been an omission on your part and/or my fact-checking may have lacked depth, but the statement as you had written it was kind of misleading and we're trying to keep misinformation out of the Covid-19 threads.
I checked again, and you're right, the declaration about the masks being unuseful was for the public (the fact that it was an official declaration by the government spokeperson misled me). I am really sorry about this !
At this time, there is no evidence that companion animals, including pets, can spread COVID-19 to people [ . . . ]
CDC has not received any reports of pets or other animals becoming sick with COVID-19 in the United States.
CDC is aware of a very small number of pets outside the United States reported to be infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 after close contact with people with COVID-19. To date, there is no evidence that pets can spread the virus to other animals or people.
On the downside, despite all the supermarkets crowing about how well they're managing the crisis, I still cannot find any toilet paper anywhere. I am down to a mere three rolls.
[...]
On the downside, despite all the supermarkets crowing about how well they're managing the crisis, I still cannot find any toilet paper anywhere. I am down to a mere three rolls.
We've just been officially told that we're hunkering down for another four weeks over here.And that after they want to re-open daycares and schools, but not test everybody because hahaha, why to care about that, workers ?
Is there a stigma surrounding recovered CV19 patients? I haven't noticed that here, but is this a thing elsewhere?
Surely those recovered are seen as "safe" due to presumed immunity?The jury's still out on how reliable and how long-term the immunity from a cured case of Covid-19 actually is. Right now, the experts are discussing whether the handful patients in Asia that went pos-neg-pos are due to unreliable tests, a flareup of the original infection that was not quite gone yet, or an actual reinfection. (And IMHO that list is still missing the possibility of immunity simply being incomplete in the occasional patient.)
but there was something about using blood plasma from recovered covid patients as a sort of vaccine.Cure/treatment, not vaccine. The antibodies contained in the plasma flag the currently present viruses for the patient's immune system to combat; in order for it to deal with a later ingression, it has to learn to constantly produce antibodies itself.
Of course if the virus mutates significantly, that immunity will be partial at best...As far as we currently know, the mutation rate of SARS-CoV-2 seems to be the "usual" one for coronaviruses. High enough to allow to determine which continent one's local outbreak has come from (hence the reports that the U.S. was primarily infected by travelers from Europe, not Asia), low enough not to invalidate the theory that the similarity to bat CoVs indicates that that's where it originally came from (possibly through another intermediary host species, though), and IIUC less than the mutation rate of the common flu.
I can't help thinking that setting out purposefully to get this is, to put it mildly, folly.The jury is also still out on the question of residual long-term effects of an infection past. Lasting deterioration of lung and nerve tissues are possibilities currently on the table.
They will have to explain to me how to work in a daycare with masks (Spoilers : it's not possible, either we scare the babies [...](I suppose that swaddling (https://www.france24.com/en/20200414-thai-hospitals-protect-babies-born-in-a-pandemic-with-face-shields) is as unusual in France as it is in Germany?)
(I suppose that swaddling (https://www.france24.com/en/20200414-thai-hospitals-protect-babies-born-in-a-pandemic-with-face-shields) is as unusual in France as it is in Germany?)I never saw that. We have babies and young kids between now 4/5 months old and 3 years. I let you imagine how fast they would manage to take that off ^-^
The local blithering idiots league here in Michigan held a protest at our state capital, complaining about our strict shelter in place orders. Not a one with a mask or gloves while congregating in big groups...
Is NOLA maybe something to do with New Orleans/Louisiana?To coin a phrase, the very same.
Well, first off, people down here in the NOLA area really love their parties. (I don't care for them, but that's besides the point.)/me waves hi from Belle Chasse
Is NOLA maybe something to do with New Orleans/Louisiana?
The extension of events means that yeeeah no wedding for me. We'll get married at a courthouse as soon as we possibly can (not that soon, maybe in two months time), and maybe just have a party next year sometime.I'm sorry for both of you, Len :( You've been in my mind. Hopefully you'll get at least reunited soon...
I'm sorry for both of you, Len :( You've been in my mind. Hopefully you'll get at least reunited soon...
Here all is a big mess. Our dear president and government seems to think that we should all wear mask in common spaces and transports for the reopening, but to date it's impossible to find some, and I highly doubt that "One mask for everybody" will be manageable before May 11th (Just for going to work and back, I need two masks per day...)
I still have no news about daycare's reopening, and I'm waiting to discover what impossible rules they're about to give to us. I fear that we will just have to work with absolutely no protection at all *Sighs*
Children of serveral categories of essential workers (health workers at least) are still being cared for here, but that only requires a fraction of the childcare workers, so a large majority of them are currently out of work nonetheless.Indeed. At the beginning I thought that I could be called, including by the maternity hospital.
The number of COVID-19 cases in the US has exceeded one million, with almost 57,000 deaths. I sense - and fear - that such a figure might be a tipping point in reactions to the crisis, and not in a good way. I hope that I'm wrong.I hope so too :/ It would be terrible for our numbers to skyrocket again due to people reacting poorly. At least one of my friends who works as a nurse has gotten the virus and had to continue working due to how understaffed the hospitals currently are in NYC, and I've heard (anecdotally, so I don't have news sources for it) that that's been common for hospitals in New Jersey as well. I can't imagine how overwhelming it would be for them to get a resurgence of patients.
Newfoundland is getting ready to start loosening restrictions. As of today, each household may choose one other household to interact with. Basically you can merge your "bubble" with one other, neither household can visit with any others.
Wow, that sounds like it's asking for a whole lot of arguments and hurt feelings.
Crumpite, You are not allowed to die. No exceptions on that rule. Please be very careful and stay at home unless it's absolutely necessary.Seconded. Also, just out of curiosity...
Since Jitter already enlisted our mages I'll have a word with Reynir, so don't be surprised to see a huge stave draw around your house and a glimpse of a long red braid...
I'll also talk with Väinö to make sure that anyone without a mask that comes close to your house will be immediately bombed by a group of seagulls. :)
Errm, 1,000 pushups?Spoiler: show
If I read the equations and tea leaves correctly, we can expect to see another wave in the US starting in less than a month.If you asked my mom, she would say that's already happening in my city (she lives in a different state). There were 7 new cases yesterday, and today there are 9 new cases, which is enough of an increase to make her start worrying. I hope the increase nothing more than a blip instead of a sign of the start of a second wave, but I also hope that the second wave of the virus isn't nearly as big as the first one when it does eventually hit us.
To RanVor: inflict sundry indignities causing those you left behind to suffer even more. A specialty of despots and tyrants throughout the ages.I must admit I don't understand. Could you clarify?
Fortunately, we have none of those types within this community.
Well, unless you count wraparound good wishes to be an indignity. It occurs to me that you just might.
I'll also talk with Väinö to make sure that anyone without a mask that comes close to your house will be immediately bombed by a group of seagulls. :)Given the local fauna, you might get better deterrence from Sointu (http://www.sssscomic.com/comic2.php?page=177) ...
Also, just out of curiosity...Spoiler: show
Wow, that sounds like it's asking for a whole lot of arguments and hurt feelings.
"why you chose her bubble and not mine ?" ::) This is going to be complicated... And who will keep track of all those bubble connections? And make sure that people stay inside their chosen connections? Sounds completely unpractical to implement.
like the woman who was arrested twice in one day for not observing the mandatory 14 days self-isolation on entering the province.I take it that she tested negative after that? Positive people playing fast+loose with their restrictions tend to experience more pronounced reactions (https://www.ksta.de/politik/corona-tests-in-hochhauskomplex--fuenf-bewohner-infiziert-36614504) ...
Yes, JoB and Roisín, being intercepted by a bunch of snakes seems way more effective than being bombed by seagulls. If you put an anaconda in that bunch it can be an even more effective (and definitive) mean of deterrence... :)Erm, anacondas are South American, and Sointu is called "eyes of vipers" - for whatever that's worth (living in Finland, she certainly never had a chance to try her mental hand at boids).
My dear JoB, what will I do without your inquisitive mind checking the accuracy of my posts?... make a fortune as a producer of Tarzan movies?
So, as Crumpite (and you, dear reader of this post) you are forbidden to die in the coming times, under the penalty of 1000 push-ups, as Mebediel pointed.No problem, our garden centers are open and should be able to provide the required plants (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/push_up_daisies). O:-)
As for the Anaconda, we can always imagine that some circus or zoo near Crumpite has one, and that it escaped (what would be alarming if it wasn't under the control of a fictional Finnish mage from the Future :) )If we have to employ a time-traveler from the future already, shouldn't we try to even out the effects on the timeline (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanoboa) ... ?
As for update from my zone, today Portugal ends its "State of Emergency" and steps down to "State of Calamity" :DLet me guess, public celebrations will happen once Portugal has worked its way back to "State of Mild Inconvenience"? :3
...
Ok, now that you stopped laughing, let me tell you that it means a lot, because some contention rules will be lifted, signaling a slow return to activity (just some kind of business, usually small) and, most important, that I'll finally get a haircut! :)
As for update from my zone, today Portugal ends its "State of Emergency" and steps down to "State of Calamity" :DState of Calamity sounds way worse than State of Emergency. You sure it's not the other way around?
...
Ok, now that you stopped laughing, let me tell you that it means a lot, because some contention rules will be lifted, signaling a slow return to activity (just some kind of business, usually small) and, most important, that I'll finally get a haircut! :)
... make a fortune as a producer of Tarzan movies?
No problem, our garden centers are open and should be able to provide the required plants. O:-)
If we have to employ a time-traveler from the future already, shouldn't we try to even out the effects on the timeline ... ?
Let me guess, public celebrations will happen once Portugal has worked its way back to "State of Mild Inconvenience"? :3
State of Calamity sounds way worse than State of Emergency. You sure it's not the other way around?
I'm imagining the next Tarzan movie featuring an epic battle between our jungle hero and penguins!
On personal level I have contracted something, I have mild respiratory symptoms and fatigue. I don’t feel seriously ill, so no reason to worry! But current health advisory is that any symptoms of the respiratory tract should be considered potential covid-19. Hopefully it’s the garden variety.
From the bottom of my heart I wish you can get your partner to live with you and you can get the ceremony arranged! The wedding celebration is secondary, and in any case you can have a celebration later if you wish!
Yesterday I heard something that I haven't heard in some weeks; the sound of jet engines overheard.Congrats ... my home (and, at least for today, office) is near the take-off/landing pathes of a military air base that's currently having quick-scramble fighter squadron duty for half of the nation ... :(
The virus has struck my family. My sister's mother-in-law who was 98 and in a nursing home in Missouri has passed from it. I had not seen her in many years since that branch of the family lives a few hundred miles away but I still remembered her as a very nice lady. I hope the home she was in does not become a cluster. She was the 3rd resident to catch it.
The virus has struck my family. My sister's mother-in-law who was 98 and in a nursing home in Missouri has passed from it. I had not seen her in many years since that branch of the family lives a few hundred miles away but I still remembered her as a very nice lady. I hope the home she was in does not become a cluster. She was the 3rd resident to catch it.
I’m sorry to hear that Ran! But the health care situation in Poland probably is such that it’s better to stay home still.
Now that things probably have calmed down at bit with the university management (as in online courses are rolling already and there’s probably some “business as usual” already) the dean’s office should be able to reschedule your meeting into a proper meeting online. Of course “should be” is not very useful, if they don’t. But here’s hoping! *Hugs*
New Zealand has 10 consecutive days with no new cases, and only 1 active case still extant.
This is cause to celebrate, but the fallout will continue for an unforeseeable future. The company I work for has done their projections, and is letting two people go and asking remaining staff to take a 10% pay cut. The Directors are taking a 20% cut themselves.
Oh no Yastreb, please get well soon!
(I luckily don´t live in Nordrhein-Westfalia by the way, so don´t worry.)(Well, I do, but luckily the prohibitions to travel elsewhere are assigned by county, not by state.)
The test is not nice - the second one I had was taken while I already had inflamed sinuses and a sore throat, so it was much worse than the first. (Fortunately, both were negative.) Still, better than a blood test or stool sample!
From the sound of it, I would much rather have either a blood test or stool sample. Or both.
Melbourne is not doing well, from what I hear - fortunately you both (and Keep Looking & Purple Wyrm et al) are not in that vicinity.
Researchers in Finland are now testing a method of detecting it from exhaled air - I very much hope it will work!Cool, maybe we can have a combo SARS-CoV-2+H.pylori (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urea_breath_test) test/screening for the price of one (pandemic) then ... :3
Actually, I am in Melbourne. Do'kha. (Róisín knows what that last word means.)
Yeah, it’s used as a swear in this context.
I invented the word Do'kha for my fantasy saga.
If it can reassure you, I got a very bad cough in early Febuary (so bad it kept me up at night and I still had phlegm a couple months into lockdown), but my covid antibody test still came out negative.
Not necessarily reassuring, but the tests do produce some false negatives. So despite the result it's possible that you did have it.
Here's hoping that whatever anybody's got it goes away quickly and without complications.
I got my pandemic hair cut yesterday! It was about time too, when the hairdresser asked me what I wanted done I said “Miracles” :reynir: :emil:
Does anybody know if it's possible to make a vaccine that gives you a much better immunity than actually having the disease?
Does anybody know if it's possible to make a vaccine that gives you a much better immunity than actually having the disease?Giving a shot with vaccine simulates the presence of the germ to our immune system. Repeating the shots for longer than the actual disease takes to be cured simulates a disease that miraculously became much harder to get rid of. Our immune system is supposed to react to that in such a way that the final result, the immune reaction upon re-exposition, gets more pronounced. Which means that it should also take longer to be "forgotten" again.
To everyone: i'm glad people have access to masks.Heh. I was finally able to start my new job this month, after a three-month delay due to the lockdown. Got a welcome bag on my first day. Contents: a folder with information about my new place of work, a folder with information about the COVID-19 prevention measures they've put in place, a pencil with the organisation's logo to push lift buttons with, a plastic bag to open door handles with, a small flask with disinfectant hand gel, five reusable cloth masks, a plastic box for clean masks, and one for used masks.
<snip> a pencil with the organisation's logo to push lift buttons with, <snip>
Yes. But then they did have to close for three months and even now, a month after reopening, only a fraction of the normal amount of visitors is allowed inside, with very strict rules, and most employees are still working from home several days a week. The masks are very useful for my commute (I don't come into contact with the public, and can mostly keep my distance from my colleagues, so I don't have to wear them at work most of the time), and pencils are always useful.
so the minister figured playing bridge regularly with 3 others should be fine... but suggested buying a new pack of cards each week.Hmmm. Are you sure said minister doesn't have any stakes in a card-making company? :P
Hmmm. Are you sure said minister doesn't have any stakes in a card-making company? :P
But yeah, you're of course right. I just wish people would take the sensible measures seriously. Infections have been rising here for two weeks now, and I wouldn't be surprised if some of the recent relaxations get reversed again.
Shep, "Twelve Monkeys" is a rather old movie (nineties I think, but not sure) I stumbled across when researching for a school presentation on post-apocalyptic fiction a year ago (the same presentation that made me find SSSS in fact). I think it got a remake recently, but I´ve only seen the original, back when the entire lockdown-thing started.
*shakes fist at entire US*Most people here didn't wear one either when wearing a mask was merely recommended, but it turned out many people were actually in favour of making mask-wearing obligatory (as well as the virologists and epidemiologists who advise the government, obviously), so they made it obligatory in basically all enclosed public spaces (public transport, shops, places of worship, libraries, ...). And, importantly, they installed fines of €250 for a first offence, and up to €4000 or a week to a few months in jail for a second offence. You still see people not wearing a mask, and a lot of people wearing theirs incorrectly, but the vast majority does, whether it's because they see the need or because they simply don't want to risk a fine.
I know multiple people who refuse to wear masks. Thankfully, they don't go out much, but it's incredibly frustrating.
Hmmm. Are you sure said minister doesn't have any stakes in a card-making company? :P
But yeah, you're of course right. I just wish people would take the sensible measures seriously. Infections have been rising here for two weeks now, and I wouldn't be surprised if some of the recent relaxations get reversed again.
Unfortunately, in case anyone thinks it's a US-only thing, the number of anti-mask people has grown enough in France that media are talking about itAccording to our local media, the anti-mask demonstrations in Berlin have been noted internationally, so I'll spare you the details.
(As someone who does privacy protection, among other things, for a living, and has eyed the German normal-times prohibition of wearing masks on demonstrations as a murky case of denying citizens a right to anonymity, words fail me to express my position on people protesting an obligation to wear them. "Maulkorb", my posterior. As if those masks were gags to physically silence you. Or prevent you having your name printed on your shirt in five-inch-high letters if you insist on nonanonymity.)
I doubt we'd cooperate nearly so well in a second wave.That seems to be a recurring theme. And we are currently in a second wave. Not a second lockdown (although one province is in a lockdown-light, sort of), but some of the restrictions that had been lifted have been put into place again.
Cases are going up that fast because people are returning from vacation in risk areas. But somehow nobody saw this coming.Yeah. Tourists bringing it back with them is exactly how the first clusters started in Belgium, and I'm sure in many other places as well.
* apparently there is no legal way to make such a thing mandatory
* apparently there is no legal way to make such a thing mandatory
From 11:59pm on Sunday 2 August, face coverings will also be mandatory for all of Victoria.
The same lawful exemptions that currently apply in metropolitan Melbourne and Mitchell Shire, will apply across Victoria. These include if you have a medical condition or other condition that impairs your ability to wear a face covering, doing strenuous exercise or if you are unable to do your job while wearing a face covering.
Wearing a face covering protects you and your community by providing an additional physical barrier to coronavirus (COVID-19).
People who do not wear face coverings and do not have a lawful excuse can be fined $200.
They told us that too in the beginning, but apparently they found a way now.The German IfSG (https://dejure.org/gesetze/IfSG/16.html) does not provide strict "epidemics control trumps civil liberty X, but not civil right Y" guidelines (in spite of naming the rights to property and of the inviolability of the home as possibly getting trumped). The general understanding is that once restrictions are demonstrated to be "necessary, effective, and without alternative", they are legal to be imposed, for that moment - and those properties can, of course, be doubted, and challenged in court.
I obviously meant no legal way to make it mandatory in Finland. Of course laws can be changed, but that's a tenuous process and since Finns tend to follow recommendations pretty well it's probably what we'll be getting.
The German IfSG (https://dejure.org/gesetze/IfSG/16.html) does not provide strict "epidemics control trumps civil liberty X, but not civil right Y" guidelines (in spite of naming the rights to property and of the inviolability of the home as possibly getting trumped). The general understanding is that once restrictions are demonstrated to be "necessary, effective, and without alternative", they are legal to be imposed, for that moment - and those properties can, of course, be doubted, and challenged in court.About the same in Finland too. The "necessary" part in particular as in Finnish (välttämätön) interpretation that includes effective (why do something that doesn't work?) and no better alternative (well if there was, why don't we do that?). Such as separating one part of the country from the rest. The distinction between things that absolutely MUST be done due to being necessary and things that SHOULD be done was made clear there. Once it no longer was a MUST, that restriction was lifted.
Mirasol, I understood your comment just the way you mean it. More it was for Yastreb.
I expressed myself rather bluntly in my post, and I apologise for the tone of it.
Yastreb, best of luck with your state’s reopening! Let us just hope that no idiots mess it up with carelessness this time!
Errr, that would be us this time. Australia finally cracked open their borders to New Zealand to allow quarantine-free travel NZ -> Oz (not the other way yet), but only to NSW and Northern Territories. First thing, some New Zealanders travel to Sydney, then book onto flights to Melbourne and Perth. *facepalm*
Granted, we have no community transmission at the moment (just cases in managed isolation), but still, what numpties.
Things are progressing exactly as the experts warned months ago.
Courtesy of the ABC: Victoria has recorded 28 days in a row of zero new cases of coronavirus and no deaths.(https://41.media.tumblr.com/a3b4396e726b74afb6f0ff7a542b7137/tumblr_inline_nxd1r1HzWD1r2g2kx_540.png)
There are no active cases in the state.
It means Victoria has achieved what is widely considered to be the official benchmark for eliminating COVID-19 from the community.
We did it.
Stand Still, Stay Silent behind your mask and may the virus pass without noticing you ;)Well said!
Germany is going back into hard lockdown starting Wednesday, 16.12., with [various measures]... but no coordinated say on curfews. So, when I make the trip back from France on the 16th (a solid 12h at the steering wheel), I'm subject to
What trips me off is changes in rules happening in the middle of the work week. Something changing between the weekend and a traditional workday (or even Saturday and Sunday) feels more normal than something changing between two workdays.
Need to cross a lot of borders, I gather?Umh, no? Just one national border (from France into Germany, going through Benelux would complicate things even more) and I don't go to France particularly often, but when I do, it's for family reasons and if the date set turns out to be "a bad choice", it usually isn't a choice of mine in the first place. :(
Drive safely, JoBThanks, but I don't think that the driving will be the particularly risky part of the trip this time ... :3
Updates ...
- a requirement to preregister my arrival (https://www.einreiseanmeldung.de/) in Germany,
- [...]
- once I arrive in Nordrhein-Westfalen, there is neither a curfew nor a requirement to quarantine
There's apparently a new strain of Covid that's more contagious in the UK. If it made it to the contient, chances are that France is involved in some way.
Also, is a there an achievement for "presidents of both countries for which you have a passport have tested positive"?
It's pretty much a "the only plot twist is that it didn't happen sooner" situation, but more the contagious mutant was found in France.I considered "hopefully we can keep the 'UK mutation' off the continent proper" a failure when Denmark reported ~30 cases all over the country ... :(
"Great news!" was my spontaneaous reaction, but some people did end up in the hospital, so I'll settle for "Not bad considering how much worse it could have been!"Indeed, Grade E Cat, however most of the people who ended up in the hospitals are already home and/or got the infusions, so we are doing quite good ;)
Figures in Germany are unsatisfying, Feds and state MPs will meet again tomorrow (ahead of schedule), rumor has it that they'll discuss not only extending the lockdown into / all across February, but also nightly curfews and upgrading part of the mandatory mask-wearing to FFP2 masks.Ooooookay then, lockdown extended 'til mid-February (very much expected), no curfews, and apart from the somewhat elusive FFP2 masks, we may also use KN95, N95 (essentially only heard of), and "OP-Masken" ("surgical masks"), which is a term I've never heard before in the context of either regulation or shops' specifications, only colloquially for whatever appears on the screen when you watch Scrubs, Dr. House, Medical Detectives etc. etc..
A few days ago my wife, that is a doctor, examined a COVID positive patient that lied (on entrance she didn't declare any symptoms, just admitting them at the end... >:( ), including watching closely her throat. The only thing between them was a single type II medical mask, and my wife wasn't contaminated (she had to be tested after that). So you can trust that they are good enough.I'm fairly sure that professional masks used in a professional manner will do their job, as that is what they're made for. But on the other hand, I have not yet heard any of the authorities talking to the general public address the additional requirements for that, like beards/shaving or when and how to do a fit-test. Or that "vented" masks(*) pretty much drop the part of protecting others - and, for that matter, places you visit - from contamination. There seems to be a lot of experts convinced that if you have the hoi polloi wear medical or FFP2 masks whichever way they want, without specific training how to do that properly, they'll turn out to not be any more effective than non-rated ones.
Anyway one should not take chances and be very careful and disciplined about washing hands and avoiding crowded places as much as possible.[hasn't met other people outside the occasional visit to the supermarket since mid-December]
Just if any of you are in the mood for reading a scientific paper on that issue: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-72798-7#Sec12... is it just me, or did the medical mask consistently outperform the (unvented) KN95 there?
JoB, what our medical personal use (when they don't have a N95, that are white and pointy) are those greenish medical masks... since you suggested the reverse priority here ...
I'm fairly sure that professional masks used in a professional manner will do their job, as that is what they're made for. But on the other hand, I have not yet heard any of the authorities talking to the general public address the additional requirements for that, like beards/shaving or when and how to do a fit-test. Or that "vented" masks(*) pretty much drop the part of protecting others - and, for that matter, places you visit - from contamination. There seems to be a lot of experts convinced that if you have the hoi polloi wear medical or FFP2 masks whichever way they want, without specific training how to do that properly, they'll turn out to not be any more effective than non-rated ones.That's something that puzzles me too: Why we don't see public advice (particularly on TV) on how to put and use those medical masks. Yes, it's simple, but I see everyday people wearing it wrong, like not covering the nose (!) or pushing them below the chin without removing them (thus putting the internal side in contact with exposed skin, just to put that internal side, moments later, in direct contact with their own mouths and noses...)
[hasn't met other people outside the occasional visit to the supermarket since mid-December]I don't use a beard and never thought about the problem that it could mean when one wants to wear a mask. But I see doctors using them over beards without much thought, so I suppose (but I may be wrong) that beards don't have a significant effect. otherwise surgeons would be required not to use beards, right?
[which is why I've permitted my beard to grow extra long right now ..]
... is it just me, or did the medical mask consistently outperform the (unvented) KN95 there?... since you suggested the reverse priority here ...In the paper they tested efficiency in blocking outgoing droplets, and that's what medical masks are created for, to prevent doctors to infect patients. They also work the other way, but IIRC their ability to filter incoming droplets is more or less 80%. KN95 are named like that because they filter at least 95% of the incoming air, but as we see in the study are not so efficient on stopping the outgoing droplets. So if the main objective is to protect the professional (that is constantly exposed and is a valuable, hard-to-replace asset) them KN95, even if more expensive and demanding to produce, are the option. Otherwise medical masks are the choice because they are cheaper and easier to produce in large quantities, but always bearing in mind that when we use one we are mainly protecting others, while they protect us. That's why I find people that find excuses* for not wearing them so selfish.
I see everyday people wearing it wrong, like not covering the nose (!)(https://img-9gag-fun.9cache.com/photo/a5WdqVV_460s.jpg)
I don't use a beard and never thought about the problem that it could mean when one wants to wear a mask. But I see doctors using them over beards without much thought, so I suppose (but I may be wrong) that beards don't have a significant effect. otherwise surgeons would be required not to use beards, right?Dunno about Portugal, but word in Germany is that medical personnel is encouraged to shave, but allowed to decide according to their professional knowledge and diligence.
You really can´t blame the teachers here, but I think someone should at least give us information whether the stricter mask-rules now also apply to schools...No final statement on that until the states have written and enacted (and hopefully put online - looking at you, Saarland!) the actual legalese. So far, the wording is that the requirement for certified masks is aimed at public transport and shops only ...
Spoiler: bit of ranting show
The kind my wife and other medical staff preferably use are FFP2 - KN95, that is unvented, and not N95. It would make no sense to protect the professional while exposing patients.
Spoiler: show
No final statement on that until the states have written and enacted (and hopefully put online - looking at you, Saarland!) the actual legalese. So far, the wording is that the requirement for certified masks is aimed at public transport and shops only ...... aaaand at least NRW also added doctors' offices and religious congregations (https://www.land.nrw/sites/default/files/asset/document/2021-01-21_coronaschvo_ab_25.01.2021_lesefassung_mit_markierungen_0.pdf#4) to the list - but not schools ...
Spoiler: show
My mask, as promised. It looks a bit weird, but meets the government requirements.
Oh, and on top of the virus, the city is now burning down[/url]
Yeah, my family switched to hand-made masks as soon as the pandemic started. In the beginning there were actually no disposable masks in the stores, so we made them ourselves.
(I'm saying, Minna should start selling the masks designed like the ones in her comic, I would have bought one!)With the fully automated transparency and hammerspace features? Heck yeah take my money! :kroner: Can we have a little Mikkelaundromate add-on as well, pretty please? >:D
Now we have a box full of self-made and bought reusable masks, but sadly they don´t meet the safety-standarts anymore. Well, at least for 2020 I could walk around with a colorful mask with flowers and birds on it. It was nice while it lasted.Haven't tried that myself yet, but untrained users supposedly have more of a problem avoiding leaks at the edges of FFP2 and similar masks (which prevents them from having the full effect they're certified for) and can improve the situation by wearing a second, simple mask over that, to better press the FFP2 against the face. Certainly, that will make it yet another bit harder to breathe ...
Not in Cologne. The organizers teamed up with another currently-impeded pinnacle of local culture, the "Hänneschen-Theater (https://www.haenneschen.de/)", the folks building the parade floats(*) did so in 1:3 scale, and the parade will now get played out and broadcast on WDR as a stick puppet show (https://koelnerkarneval.de/der-kolner-rosenmontagszug-2021-findet-statt-als-puppenspiel-in-kooperation-mit-dem-hanneschen-theater/)!
It's being marketed as "der ausgefallenste Zoch (https://www.koeln.de/tourismus/karneval/highlights/rosenmontagszug_519031.html)" - a double entendre calling this year's parade the "most unusual" as well as the "most cancelled". :)) (It's downright Sigrunesque, isn't it?)
Oh, that reminds me of the video that went through the news the other day! It was from a family of carnival-fans who, to make up for the not-happening of parades this year, proceeded to build small parade-wagons from lego-bricks and filmed their own parade. I can´t find it right now, but apparently many people followed the example and made their own.Rondorf (https://www.ksta.de/koeln/zwei-wochen-gebastelt-koelner-familie-baut-karnevalszug-aus-lego---video-wird-zum-hit-37995824)? Niederzier/Düren (https://www.aachener-zeitung.de/lokales/dueren/dann-faehrt-das-dreigestirn-halt-durchs-wohnzimmer_aid-56028277)? By now, organizers in Goch (https://www.rzk-goch.de/index.php/rosenmontag) and Rietberg (https://www.wa.de/leben/so-zieht-der-karnevalszug-durchs-kinderzimmer-zr-90192978.html) have called for competitions for the best Lego etc. built parade video ...
I think it was the one from the first link you sent, but there aren´t any pictures, so I´m not sure.... there's an entire video on top of the page (https://www.ksta.de/koeln/zwei-wochen-gebastelt-koelner-familie-baut-karnevalszug-aus-lego---video-wird-zum-hit-37995824) for me, but it does take a moment to load ...
(there’s handshakes)Yeah, I can see how that would be worth a televised documentary in Finland ... :3
the dresses on the dolls are individually designed and sewn from formal dress materials.I can believe that when I look at the men's suits, the fabric has a structure that looks very coarse in those small suits, but if those pearls (https://www.vau.fi/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/helen3-684x1024.jpg) and paillettes (https://www.vau.fi/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/peppi-684x1024.jpg) really are the same size they would use for actual dresses, It'd take a lot of mystery out of the price tags ... :o
... there's an entire video on top of the page (https://www.ksta.de/koeln/zwei-wochen-gebastelt-koelner-familie-baut-karnevalszug-aus-lego---video-wird-zum-hit-37995824) for me, but it does take a moment to load ...
Haha JoB, the point is that the handshakes take a very long time. The poor president and their spouse need to shake hands with about 1800 people.... new headcanon: This tradition came to be when the back-then president had to quick-fix the problem that his dining hall would seat only one third of the people that had been invited ...
Seriously, with the guests standing as far apart in line as the Barbie Queue version suggests - which is perfectly believable, considering that everyone wants the camera to have an unobscured view of their dress -, and assuming that it's a faux pas to use both hands to shake with POTUS and FLOTUS(*) at once, I'd guess that the throughput is limited to six seconds for a single guest, and eight for a couple. Times 1800 guests, and assuming that they're mostly coming inAlso, everyone can wear gloves! I mean, even regular leather gloves could work, if people didn’t sneeze into them :'DShivanesque Siamese Shapespairs, gives a minimum of four hours of defilée ...Spoiler: (*) show
Oh, wow, Jitter, those are sooo cool! XoX And so tiny! The smallest clothing I have ever done was for a 12-centimeter doll of one of my characters, that I made as a Christmas present for my sister (she is my biggest fan).Very impressive, sonds like a lot of diffcult work.
(https://i.postimg.cc/VkgxSDLW/87946996-FCA8-43-A7-AD0-C-49-B6-E8-C6767-E.jpg)
It took me a month to make (not without several moments of despair when I wanted to throw everything into the trash and cry a river of tears) and it’s actually a jointed doll made from scratch out of polymer clay.
Woah, Annuil, I have made dollclothes and -accessories before (I know the pain with the superglued shoes...), but your entire doll is a completely different level! XoX And it looks amazing! Did you have a manual to follow or did you develop the shapes you needed yourself?Ooh, I love those, Mirasol! The little one in the fir coat looks so cute! :)) and the boots on the darker haired one are so good! XoX Did you make those?? And those bags, and books, and the lamp!.. looks really cool :DSpoiler: some pictures under the cut because I don´t want to steal Annuil´s spotlight show
Thank you, guys! It did take a lot of my patience but my sister loved him too, so the suffering was compensated. He was actually an addition to the doll I made for her birthday in August. That was a little easier to make since it was like three times bigger. Here are a few pics:
https://1drv.ms/f/s!AsSnHPIBASO_wDeEW8Yba8q0oRwd
They are a father and a son from my stories. (I’m still in the processes of making one other doll for myself but I get so tiered after I make one that I need a rest of a few months to be able to do another one :'D)
Ooh, I love those, Mirasol! The little one in the fir coat looks so cute! :)) and the boots on the darker haired one are so good! XoX Did you make those?? And those bags, and books, and the lamp!.. looks really cool :D
Oh, that one looks really cool too! I like the little gemstone-details. I used similar ones for the belt of my dark-haired doll. :)) What material did you make his shoes from? They look almost like real leather-boots!Gem-stones are the best. I didn't make mine, I bought them...
But understandable that you need a break. It seems like a real lot of work!
Thank you! Yes, I made all the accessories myself. In the case of the boots, (Also the lamp, shield and skull-mask) I made them from... uh... this foam-stuff... this (https://www.eusmile.com/items/OT00951/5.jpg). You can heat it a bit with a candle (not too much, or it will catch fire...), then you can form it and it keeps shape. Mostly. Superglue helps. :'D Then I painted it with Acrylics. For the books, there´s a really cool doll-sized book-binding-tutorial (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LYKHQSoY5KM&list=PLwf5az3O7M4c4UbZ3mWdCjGAKHgpBL8Nc&index=2) on Youtube, you should check it out!
And thank you for the pictures of the joints and the work behind it! This is really interesting!
Gem-stones are the best. I didn't make mine, I bought them...
The boots are made from actual leather, yes ;) And so is scabbarth for his sword. There is also a tutorial on how to make shoes but sadly I don't know what it was named and it was in Russian, so, not very helpful... I used the main ideas from there, just to pick up the main shapes of the shoe.
The leather was pretty thin (I think it's called goat skin), I used thicker type for the bottoms.
I use weird materials sometimes, like for the scabbarth, its made of leather and aluminum foil (the little metallic-looking stripes on it). I also use ribbons to make the hair (the most amusing process). :'D Or for the little one's sword I used toothpicks.
Edit: pics on the shoes and on the scab bath:
https://1drv.ms/f/s!AsSnHPIBASO_wEGm7ffE4FKA8GkS
O-oh, that is super interesting, I need to look into that foam thing, it can make so many things way easier... Thank you for the links! ;D I will definitely use them one day!
Agreed. Though I didn´t really "make" mine either, I´m afraid. I salvaged them from an old necklace and sewed them together. I couldn´t figure out how to make something like that from absolute scratch. ^^"Phaha, yes, mine also were supposed to be part of a necklace :'D
Interesting! I didn´t know leather could be this thin. It definitly turned out really good.O-oh! I never even thought of using those ribbons and those would fit perfectly for such tiny things XoX
Weird materials are the best part! :)) Basically all the tiny ribbons I used in the three outfits are those that are on new (human-)shirts to make them stay on their clothing-hangers. And the pants of the doll in the middle originated as a pair of socks. I haven´t thought about using tinfoil so far... Hm... *mind whirring*
As for the hair, do you mean yarn? I´ve only heard of a method for making dollhair from yarn before. There´s one involving ribbons? :o
O-oh! I never even thought of using those ribbons and those would fit perfectly for such tiny things XoX
No, I actually do mean ribbons, let me explain it under a spoiler:Spoiler: show
They do! They are exactly the right size, easy to keep from fraying by burning the ends and come in all kinds of colors! (As long as you wear very colorful clothing, that is...)Yes, and usually those colors are quite unusual ;)
Oh, cool! This method seems pretty similar to the yarn-method, minus having to glue them together to make the streaks. Yes, this is very helpful! :reynir:Yay! I helped! :reynir:
Vulpes, I actually usually find it easier to work on a smaller scale. Better for figuring out what parts you need. However, I once sewed a school-uniform for a 6cm cat-figurine, that was a nightmare! It was so little fabric that my sewing-mashine kept on sucking it in. >:( I will definitly not do that again...
Wouldn't like to weight you with my problems, but since everyone is sharing...If we minded, we wouldn't have an entire thread (https://ssssforum.com/index.php?topic=384.0) dedicated to dumping our problems onto others.
Edit 2: Turns out that both "OP-Maske" and "medizinische Maske" are tied to EU norm EN 14683 (https://www.bfarm.de/SharedDocs/Risikoinformationen/Medizinprodukte/DE/schutzmasken.html) (with rumors of "only class 3 thereof"), which doesn't necessarily appear on the mask itself beyond a bare CE sign (which has much lower requirements IIUC). See vendor's descriptions, and use of forgery blacklists (https://www.tuv.com/germany/de/schwarze-liste/index.jsp) might well be advisable ...P.S.: Grabbed a 50-pack of "EN14683:2019+AC:2019 Type IIR" masks, a.k.a. "medical masks", yesterday as I came across them. There's absolutely nothing on the masks themselves, not even the general CE logo, that would allow someone to tell those from the entirely non-certified masks I already had a 50-pack of. (It's all stated on the packaging alone.) Enforcing the requirement that everyone walking into a shop must wear the former (or FFP2), not the latter, sounds more and more like a job for some specialists (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Cops).
P.S.: Grabbed a 50-pack of "EN14683:2019+AC:2019 Type IIR" masks, a.k.a. "medical masks", yesterday as I came across them. There's absolutely nothing on the masks themselves, not even the general CE logo, that would allow someone to tell those from the entirely non-certified masks I already had a 50-pack of. (It's all stated on the packaging alone.) Enforcing the requirement that everyone walking into a shop must wear the former (or FFP2), not the latter, sounds more and more like a job for some specialists (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keystone_Cops).Wait, you guys actually think on how to enforce requirements? Portuguese authorities usually let that part for later, when it's time to replace the obsolete requirement for a new one...
Wait, you guys actually think on how to enforce requirements? Portuguese authorities usually let that part for later, when it's time to replace the obsolete requirement for a new one...Oh, I'm not saying that the German authorities do not seem to be doing just that. But there's a twist to those thoughts: Legislation that declares something a misdemeanor but fails to threaten it with actual punishment - and IIUC plain unenforcability qualifies here - is to be ruled null and void when challenged in court ...
Well some requirements are enforced and some not. It differs from state to state (and we have 16 of them). The actual enforment is in the responsibility of the states, and in some cases of the municipality. So sometimes you just have to go one or two kilometers to get a different law enforcement.To be fair, the beforehand passing of all this legalese is up to the states, too, at least so far; if it all were a federal matter, the regulations wouldn't look so disparate from one state to the next in the first place. The Bund-Länder-Beratungen are not a legislative organ - actually, not an official organ of anything.
We were over at Mount Barker today, seeing Star’s wound care specialist and doing some catchup shopping, and I was surprised how much it surprised the hospital staff when we used the Covid checkin app and were actually careful about distancing and hygiene protocol. I gather that doesn’t happen much there. I guess they will be seeing us often, because Star has three appointments a week there for the next month while they experiment with a new kind of pressure dressings for his legs. It always makes me nervous to be around a hospital so much during a pandemic, let’s hope the risk turns out worthwhile.Yes, it must be very stressing to be forced to go there, and so many times! But if it has to be this way... Luckily your numbers in AUS are quite low. Please stay as safe as possible, and tell Star I sent a hug to him.
I got the Moderna vaccine 1st shot yesterday. I woke up a couple of times feeling quite warm and needed to move around a bit to loosen up some muscle aches. This morning I feel OK. I'm from the old school of medicine and expect a remedy to taste or hurt a bit to be effective.That's great midwestmutt! We have a say that goes like: Remedy that burns, cures.
So sorry. This is just a lot of complaining.
Keep distancing and hand-washing, we'll get through this eventually!Yep, as I said some time ago, stand still and stay silent behind your mask and may the virus pass by you without noticing ;) :reynir:
Yep, as I said some time ago, stand still and stay silent behind your mask and may the virus pass by you without noticing ;) :reynir:
New Zealand is going to open a travel bubble with Australia in two weeks' time, and Fiji, Tonga, and Samoa in early May, therefore freeing up many spaces reserved in managed isolation over the next few months. (Currently everyone entering the country must go to a managed isolation hotel for two weeks, no exceptions.) Specifics are being ironed out.
And Star came home from hospital this morning, in time for Yastreb to visit with him too
It seems that there's finally some data published about how long CoViD-19 vaccinations last before they'll have to be refreshed ("boosted").
<snip> ...the (federal) government passed legalese that effectively labels vaccination-induced immunity as eternal... <snip>
"Finally"?That would be the case if immunity were just a binary variable; wait 'til it flips from "yes" to "no", then you know how long it takes until the flip. But actually, when you want to positively know whether someone has "immunity", vaccine induced or not, you take a blood sample, determine the amount of counteragents against CoViD contained therein, and compare it to the level deemed "sufficient" for effective immunity. That blood titer is slowly decreasing over time, and apparently in predictive enough a manner that estimates of how long - as in, a range - immunity may last post infection were available pretty much the moment news broke about repeat infections being a thing at all.
They can't possibly have data from before the vaccine trials expanded to enough people to produce it; and data produced once the vaccines became available to more than just the people in the trials is going to be better than the data from the limited number in the trials. And that was only a few months ago -- so, at most, they know whether the vaccine's good for that long. (Which it seems to be.) When it's been a year, then they'll know whether it's good for a year (variants aside.) And so on. But they can't possibly know whether it's good for a year, or longer, until it's been out for a year, or longer.
That's on a par with the legislation proposed in Indiana in 1897 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indiana_Pi_Bill) that declared the value of pi to be 3.2! (That's how it's portrayed, the truth is more subtle and weird, see link.)Not quite, in all probability, it was an intentional omission due to the lack of a good estimate when the legalese was phrased. (While better estimates for π were available since ancient Greece; it's also called "Archimedes' constant (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pi#Polygon_approximation_era)" for a reason.) After all, an act saying that "proof of vaccination [as of whatever date] can be substituted for a negative test [not older than ...]" can simply be superseded by a newer version, and in Germany, legalese invalidating constitutional rights is required to have an explicit limited (to a couple weeks) lifetime in the first place.
That would be the case if immunity were just a binary variable; wait 'til it flips from "yes" to "no", then you know how long it takes until the flip. But actually, when you want to positively know whether someone has "immunity", vaccine induced or not, you take a blood sample, determine the amount of counteragents against CoViD contained therein, and compare it to the level deemed "sufficient" for effective immunity. That blood titer is slowly decreasing over time, and apparently in predictive enough a manner that estimates of how long - as in, a range - immunity may last post infection were available pretty much the moment news broke about repeat infections being a thing at all.
Could immunity drop off at a given rate for a while, but then much faster or slower later on?
-- for an example from another field entirely, not because I think it's directly relevant which it isn't, but just to give an example of the sort of thing I'm talking about: in some species, seed viability drops off only slowly for a while, and then much faster -- germination may be great in year one, very good in year two, only moderately worse in year three -- but the seed's effectively dead in year four, when just extrapolating from the speed of earlier dropoff would lead you to expect that maybe half or more of it would sprout.
But how sure can they be about that predictive manner? Could immunity drop off at a given rate for a while, but then much faster or slower later on?I guess that that's where it comes really handy that the development at the failing end of the scale has already been observed, in those people whose lesser(!), actual-infection-induced titres eventually failed to prevent a second infection.
Also, I'm not sure that they really know how much a particular antibody titre adds up to effective protection, and whether a particular level prevents disease, prevents serious disease, lowers transmission... although admittedly I've been having trouble keeping up with it all.The existing vaccines never fully prevented infection, period. They're said to, in practice, prevent 90+% of ensuing disease, and a solid 100% of grave cases. "In practice" being the keyword here, because whether you get infected or not is not only a function of how high the level of antibodies in your blood is, but also of how high a load of viruses you were exposed to. Which is why, in terms of trying to stop the pandemic, a vaccine could be "good enough" even if it were not to prevent the disease in the vaccinated at all and "only" lowered the amount of new viruses the person exhales so as to infect the next guy.
It's an incredibly fast-moving area of research, which doubtless frustrates politcians who really want certainty.They say that the one talent that a manager needs is the ability to make reasonably good decisions in spite of uncertainty, so I don't know whether politicians really want certainty for themselves here ...
I guess that that's where it comes really handy that the development at the failing end of the scale has already been observed, in those people whose lesser(!), actual-infection-induced titres eventually failed to prevent a second infection.
Which, again, is information we at this point have for only a limited length of timeYes, but it's about the stretch of time (where the titres fall below the "working" levels) that vaccine-induced immunity, in most cases, still has to get to, thus improving the forecast.
And I thought vaccination was supposed to provide better immunity than infection; so, if it's different in that way, do we know that it's the same in this way?Not sure I read that line correctly ... yes, vaccine-induced immunity is reportedly better in several aspects than one acquired through actual infection¹. How "good" the immunity is (and how long it'll probably last) is effectively measured in the form of the titre levels². Also, by that time, the actual vaccines - or, in the case of infection-acquired immunity, virtually all free-ranging viruses - have vanished from the body, so in any case, it's our same ol' immune system that's producing the antibodies, and slowly lowering the production rate over time. I suppose one can theorize that some heretofore unknown mechanism might cause that "unlearning" process to suddenly differ between post-vaxx and post-haxx cases, but it doesn't seem very likely to me ...
From the pile of information one might rather not want to have (yet) ...Spoiler: no pustulent pustules but still ... show
The title and summary are stellar examples of needlessly obscure technicaleseGotta admit that I probably wouldn't have noticed it, either, if not for the (German) layman's version (https://www.faz.net/aktuell/gesellschaft/gesundheit/coronavirus/saeugetiere-nehmen-im-notfall-sauerstoff-ueber-darm-auf-17343371.html) in the quality press ...
From the pile of information one might rather not want to have (yet) ...Spoiler: no pustulent pustules but still ... show
Neat article! I think? I'm pleased to find out that they're using oxygen-rich liquid for research, not gas.
I want to ask if it's possible to breathe exclusively using this method, but that veers off the topic of COVID-19
I want to ask if it's possible to breathe exclusively using this method, but that veers off the topic of COVID-19How so? I agree that methods that require a circuit of perfluorocarbon are unlikely to be more mass-deployable than conventional O2 supply, breathing apparatuses, or even direct oxygenization of the blood (ECMO (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extracorporeal_membrane_oxygenation)), and thus will not prove the end of the pandemic, but.
On the advice of our public health team, Victoria will move to circuit breaker restrictions from 11:59pm tonight. These settings will remain in place until 11:59pm on 3 June – but if we can end that sooner, we will.
As we've seen here, and across Australia, this kind of short, sharp action is effective in stopping this thing in its tracks.
Our public health experts’ prime concern: just how fast the B1.617.1 variant is moving.
Overseas, they haven’t been able to track how quickly this version of the virus can move. Here in Victoria, though, we’re seeing not only how quick it is – but how contagious it is too.
Our contract tracers are identifying and locking down first ring, second ring and third ring contacts within 24 hours. That’s faster than ever. And yet this variant is still moving faster.
The time between catching the virus and passing it on is tighter than ever. The ‘serial interval’ – how long it takes between the onset of symptoms in the first and secondary case – is in many cases just over a day.
And in just 24 hours, the number of cases has doubled.
It means that although these cases are all connected, this variant of the virus is making people more infectious, more quickly.
We’ve seen other countries come up against these variants and lose. Badly. Places like Taiwan that have gone from no or very low cases to skyrocketing numbers in the space of just days and weeks – and now are struggling to get it under control.
We also know our nation’s vaccine rollout has been slower than we’d hoped. And if more people were vaccinated, we might be facing a different set of circumstances. Sadly, were not.
If we make the wrong choice now, if we wait too long, if we hesitate too much, this thing will get away from us. And lives will be at risk.
It’s why from 11:59pm tonight, there will be five reasons to leave home:
Food and supplies. Authorised work. Care and caregiving. Exercise, for up to two hours and with one other person. And getting vaccinated.
Exercise and shopping will be limited to five kilometres from home. If there’s no shops in your 5km radius, you can travel to the ones closest to you. Shopping is also limited to one person per day, per household.
Face masks will also need to be worn inside and outdoors – everywhere except your own home.
Private and public gatherings will not be permitted, although visiting your intimate partner continues to be okay. Single person bubbles will also be allowed.
Childcare and kinder will remain open, but schools will need to close other than for the children of authorised workers and vulnerable kids.
Shops like supermarkets, food stores, bottle shops, banks, petrol stations and pharmacies will also remain open. Cafes and restaurants will be able to offer take-away only. Gyms, hairdressers, community facilities and entertainment venues will all close. Non-essential retail may only open for click and collect.
Hotels and accommodation can only stay open to support guests already staying onsite. No new bookings can be made – unless it’s for one a permitted purpose, like authorised work.
Advice on who can open, and who can’t, will be made available online ahead of directions coming into place – as will the full list of authorised workers and workplaces.
It’s clear – more than ever – this virus isn’t going away. And vaccines are the only way we’ll ever get back to normal.
Without full vaccination, this virus will just keep mutating – and just keep making its way back in.
To that end, from tomorrow and dependent upon supply from the Federal Government, all Victorians over the age of 40 will be eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.
My message to those Victorians: if you’re eligible, get vaccinated. Make your plan today.
If someone you love is eligible, make a plan together.
Do it for yourself. Your family. Your friends. Your community. Whatever your motivation – please do it.
Because vaccination is our only real ticket out of this pandemic.[/size]
Woah... I hope you stock up well for this lockdown
I'm still kind of nervous about it all, though. Especially with the relatively low amount of people fully vaccinated.Germany is at about 50% partly, 25% fully vaccinated¹, plus steadily falling incidences (http://corona.riki.de). Nonetheless, the fed parliament has extended (https://www.tagesschau.de/inland/bundestag-epidemische-lage-101.html) the "state of an epidemic of national importance" (which allows for faster federal countermeasures) until the end of September, and some places (like the city of Cologne) are keeping some above-legal-minimum mandatory-masks, no-alcohol etc. regulations in place.
I might even start double-masking again just to be Extra Safe now that people can walk around the store I work in. :')))... would your employer happen to appreciate some regional avantgarde fashion (http://romanticallyapocalyptic.com/info)? O:-)
(for context: I live in Ontario)
... would your employer happen to appreciate some regional avantgarde fashion (http://romanticallyapocalyptic.com/info)? O:-)
Speaking of ongoing research, apparently some of the pharma companies are busy trying to come up with a flu+CoViD combo vaccine, rumour being that it promises to be more effective than vaccinating against those separately. If CoViD vaccination would really happen to turn out to need yearly booster shots, same as flu vaccination, we'd stand a chance that in the long run, We The Humans will deal with CoViD in essentially the same way as we did with the flu before - vaccination drives every year, always seeing a certain number of cases and deaths happening nonetheless, but.FWIW, the WHO seems to be talking about repeat vaccination in yearly intervals for the vulnerable ones, and yearly or every two years for everyone else, now.
Finland is back to 300+ daily cases, but public events are still allowed albeit with some tules and restrictions. The rationale is that the oldest and otherwise most vulnerable are vaccinated and therefore the strain on health care isn’t going to be as overwhelming as was feared in the beginning.
A "people's movement" against vaccinating children, posing under the name "We save the children", with "no intended coincidence" with the big charity "Save the Children".
Vaccinations are progressing, but a "corona passport" is only being carefully considered. Apparently it's unfair if vaccination is required to allow some things, so it's a lot better to not allow anyone. Frankly it's starting to feel the society is being held hostage by people who refuse to take the shots. We wouldn't be fully vaccinated yet even without anybody refusing, but the anti-vaxx contingent is getting a larger and larger proportion of the entire unvaccinated population.Ugh, tell me about it. The vaccination rate among adults in the region I live in is among the highest in Europe (88% fully vaccinated, 91% at least one dose), and the vaccination campaign for those aged 12 to 17 is going pretty well, yet the number of infections and hospitalisations keeps going up rapidly. The vaccination rate in the rest of the country, on the other hand, is quite a bit lower, and a full 30% lower in the capital (possibly the lowest in Western Europe).
I hate people.
NZ has just entered a snap complete lockdown as at tonight, for a (likely delta variant) case in the community. While that seems draconian for a single case, we have the example of Australia to persuade our government to "go hard, go early" and order direct to Level 4, for the whole country. This one was not isolated to Auckland because we just had a major rugby match over the weekend, with people from all over NZ flying in to Auckland to attend. Yee haaa
For all our technology we are still not too far removed from bloodletting and burying cats in the graveyard at midnight.Where else are you supposed to bury cats?
I think it's midnight that is supposed to be the strange part.It was an old folk remedy for warts.Spoiler: Technicality I happen to be aware of show
Have you got any good ones?For our similar efforts? Not really, they officially go as "niedrigschwellige Impfangebote" (low-threshold vaccination offers) and the nicknames need only a minuscule dose of originality to raise above that. Also, srs bsnss with our stalling vaccination rates (~60% now, ~5% outright unwilling, need to get to the remaining ~35% to reach a level sufficient to prevent another wave or vax getting made mandatory).
Knowing someone like Róisín is a cure for misanthropy.This is true.
Knowing someone like Róisín is a cure for misanthropy.
Knowing someone like Róisín is a cure for misanthropy.
Unfortunately some of the Eastern states seem to be catching onto the idea that superspreader ‘protests’ are all about ‘freedumb’ rather than irresponsible self-indulgence. Makes life hard for those of us who just want to get out of lockdown sooner.
These boosters you mentioned, ohnosir and midwestmutt, are they your second or third shots?(Initial "full" immunity can be obtained with two shots (BioNTech, Moderna, ...), one shot (Johnson&Johnson), or in some nations, infection plus "second" shot with a "two shots" vaccine, so one's (first) booster shot can be the second or the third jab. And I'm not ruling out that some places might even consider a cured infection alone a full immunization, which would make the booster the first syringe the patient has ever seen.)
The doctor wants me to have the third (booster) shot because I am immunocompromised from chemo.So far, German regulations give the nod to booster shots (usually at the six-months-past mark) for immunocompromised people, those aged 70+, and a couple other conditions (that I don't remember offhand). However, the federal minister of health has now brought up a suggestion to effectively hand out boosters to every (willing) adult.
A Sydney demonstrator carried a “kill the bill” sign, despite there being no such bill in NSW
I did get some amusement from this...Chances are he'd happily reply "I meant Gates, of course" ...Quote from: The GuardianA Sydney demonstrator carried a “kill the bill” sign, despite there being no such bill in NSW
Wishing you guys good luck with that would be deeply misunderstanding how viruses work.Or how tests for them work, actually. The "passing grade" for an Ag test here is that it shall flag 75+% of samples with a Ct of 25 or less ("very high virus load") as positive. Back in November, the Paul Ehrlich Institute published a survey of Ag tests sold in Germany (https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.05.11.21257016v1) ... apparently there are some that will never ever give a positive result ...
At least we are both vaxxed, and I have had my booster shot, being immunocompromised. Star is due to have his booster next week.Best of luck getting your antibody levels up (and my booster's due in a couple days, too, thanks to making the appointment back when there was a strict "6+ months later" rule ... it's down to 3+ months (recommendation) / 4+ weeks (legal minimum) now - specifically because that's how fast the antibody levels in healthy recipients cease to provide satisfying protection against infection with omicron.)
And yesterday we had a young fool who got his positive diagnosis and proceeded to celebrate by spending the night going to several nightclubs, including the very popular ‘Loverboy’. What a murderously stupid thing to do. I gather he is one of those private school types who think the law doesn’t apply to them, and can pay the fine no problems, but the offence of knowingly spreading disease can also carry jail time, which I devoutly hope some court will enforce this time.... police is tasked not only with prosecution (of crimes past), but also prevention. Any information where biome-for-brains does his exhaling now?
I went to get some pathology tests today, ahead of a medical appointment for which the doctor needs to see beforehand the results of blood tests and a biopsy, for non-covid-related medical problems, and discovered that the testing service has been unexpectedly closed down between yesterday when I made the appointment for the tests and this morning when I turned up for them. [...] Hope I don’t have to miss the specialist’s appointment for which I have waited six months. Aaarrrgggh!I take it that there was no information posted at the (closed) door, nor to be had by calling them again (from an answering machine, if need be)? Even if the entire staff had to go to COVID quarantine from one day to the next, I'd hope that they could call someone and have him tape a list of alternative labs at the entrance ...
One might have hoped so, but the scribbled note taped over the hours on the door gives incorrect info, including that they are open today, and their phone rings out without even going to an answering machine. The alternate service they have in the past suggested just has a message on their phone saying that they are closed indefinitely. This is beginning to be a bit of a worry.... are the required tests unusual enough that the specialist's front desk might want to weigh in and try to dig up more addresses, now that there seem two local labs gone MIA?
I guess we will be cancelling the NY party we were supposed to have. It shouldn't be too hard: two of the guests have already declined because they have covid...
the government has changed the regulations so that medical staff who have been exposed have to keep working after being tested unless or until they get a definite positive result. I suppose the whole idea is herd immunity, since Omicron is supposed to be less severe than other variants even if more contagious, and catching it is supposed to confer immunity to other strains.Why would you hand this regulation only to medical personnel, then?
(And yes, being more infectious and less lethal in the short term is a requirement for a new strain to be able to supplant the old one(s) in an ongoing epidemic.)Unless you're talking about a strain that kills very quickly, at most within a few days, being less lethal isn't a requirement to supplant a different strain. I'm not sure about alpha, but, while omicron seems to be less lethal than what came before it, delta is (unfortunately) more lethal. What alpha, delta, and omicron all have in common is that they are/were more infectious than the strain they supplanted. Alpha supplanted the original SARS-CoV-2 strain because it was more infectious, delta supplanted alpha because it was more infectious, omicron supplanted delta because it is more infectious (situation in Western Europe).
I plan to get up early tomorrow and hit the supermarket to stock up on a week's worth of food (and wine).
Why is some chunk of my head saying "A week's not enough!" ?Because it takes 10-14 days to get rid of an infection in the best case, so that's the yardstick for the length of the quarantine handed to people who cannot prove (with a test ...) that they're in fact not infected.
Unless you're talking about a strain that kills very quickly, at most within a few days, being less lethal isn't a requirement to supplant a different strain.... yeeaaaah, that addition might've been put in writing with infectious diseases other than COVID-19 in mind ...
Because it takes 10-14 days to get rid of an infection in the best case, so that's the yardstick for the length of the quarantine handed to people who cannot prove (with a test ...) that they're in fact not infected.
But I think the part of my head reacting like that is actually the bit that's been expecting The End Of The World As We Know It for about, oh, fifty years now.Can I interest
JoB, I regret to tell you that I can't read that site!... yeeeaaahh I'm afraid that Germany's Federal Organization for [the Support of] Self-Protection was not very interested in internationalization/translations. :3
Covid infection figures in Australia are getting worse, which is scary, and in the wake of the recent fuss about a probably non-vaccinated Serbian tennis player, who had been given a special exemption to come to Australia to play in the Australian Open by one branch of the government and then chucked out and deported by the federal government when the PM needed to brandish his toughness, it all gets very confusing. Especially since the PM has said that the reason for deporting Djokovic is in case he becomes an anti-vaccination icon.
and then chucked out and deported by the federal government when the PM needed to brandish his toughnessDunno whether I'd want to believe that that was his entire motivation. The federal government has stated that there never was any exemption in the legalese allowing unvaccinated people to be permitted in, and it has been said that the PM was at liberty to make a final ruling, even in the spirit of said legalese if he so chooses, rather than merely revisiting lower levels' decisions and correct whatever mistakes he finds there.
Personally I think that insisting that staff in nursing homes, hospitals and such be vaccinated is a good idea. Politics, bloody politics.It is a good idea as long as you can get enough staff with that additional qualification, and there are enough people who think that that can be done that several nations already made that mandatory (France) or are very likely to follow suit (Germany).
Dunno whether I'd want to believe that that was his entire motivation. The federal government has stated that there never was any exemption in the legalese allowing unvaccinated people to be permitted in, and it has been said that the PM was at liberty to make a final ruling, even in the spirit of said legalese if he so chooses, rather than merely revisiting lower levels' decisions and correct whatever mistakes he finds there.OK, two corrections, lest someone beats me to it:
I have to say that I'd like to hear the first judge explain his reasoning, though. By allowing Djokovic to remain, in my opinion, he either stated that the feds' statement "no exemptions" was a falsehood, or that the causa Djokovic was somehow above that law (possible IMHO, but sure merits an explanation). Which one was it, your honor ... ?
I just tested positive. No surprise, I’ve been terribly ill for days (feeling like a bad case of flu, not like I was actually about to die). This is the first in out family, which is a bit of a feat considering how both boys have been to school and the elder worked as a security guard for a hypermarket over the summer. So anyways I feel like crab.
Finland’s approach to the pandemic is (again?) a mess. Some of officials are calling for downgrading Covid into a normal infectious disease (as opposed to specific pandemic / public threat status) while others are demanding fourth shots for everyone asap. Finland is currently giving fourth vaccines to the very elderly, but no decisions as to when everyone else will be getting it have been made.
Incidentally (or probably there is a connection, hmmm 🤔) emergency care is in shambles in many areas of the country. There is a shortage of nurses in particular, and ward closures over the summer have resulted in emergency rooms choking with patients coming in but not getting to actual wards for further care. So let’s hope I don’t get so badly that I would need to go in, because sitting around for 10 hours with other sick people is likely to cause more harm than good for anyone.
Very unfortunately true; some time ago, and apparently not covid.both are showing as off limits too me. any idea what that means? I also can't seem to PM :'( feck. rest peacefully Róisín...
See many posts in these two threads:
https://ssssforum.com/index.php?topic=1092.15
https://ssssforum.com/index.php?topic=1028.45
Whoops, you're showing as a super-newbie, and those threads are both in the Personal section. I don't offhand remember the requirements for getting access to that, but I think you need to have enough posts to be out of the super-newbie class.yeah. lost my kid cause of the pandemic & wasn't here for a while cause of that.
Whoops, you're showing as a super-newbie, and those threads are both in the Personal section. I don't offhand remember the requirements for getting access to that, but I think you need to have enough posts to be out of the super-newbie class.A look at the member list suggests that progress from "Super-Newbie" to "Newbie" happens with one's 10th post. (While our forum help page (still) says it happens with the 1st.) Not sure whether that'll be enough to unlock those particular boards, though ... "Safe-Zone Citizen" is still at 100 posts ...