Kolek planning to go pro
Just heard the latest for summer workouts for my HS boys while they play basketball5 in the gym at a time ok makes sensebring your own ball makes sense as wellno sharing of the ball and each player will be on their own basket makes sense for nowMust wear a mask while working out Sorry but that makes no sense to me I will be waiting for the first lawsuit against a school district for a kids death due to breathing complications
I didn't get the sarcasm, obviously, and I didn't feel any need to look at your posting or membership history. So I also owe you an apology.We obviously disagree politically, but I'm glad we agree that We Are Marquette!
While I agree the mask requirement is silly, no one is going to die from wearing one. There is no real definition of what is and what is not a mask. Seems to be anything that covers the face. Even a single piece of cloth.
https://www.cnn.com/2020/05/29/health/cdc-director-coronavirus-early-spread-us-bn/index.htmlI am sure there will be other sources to report on this, but this is the first summary for now. "We were never blind when it came to surveillance for coronavirus 19," Redfield said."The reality is the surveillance systems that CDC had developed over the years for respiratory viral diseases, particularly the influenza-like illness, really did give us eyes on this disease as it began to emerge," Redfield said. "Independent of testing, we had pretty good eyes on whether there was any new respiratory influenza-like illness occurring in our country."This statement by Redfield really makes me angry, particularly in light of their action to stop the WA flu study from testing samples. I won't even get into the who knew what, when can of worms this introduces for the broader govt. You just can't have it both ways. 'sure we knew it was spreading' covers your procedural ass but makes the federal response/denials even more maddening.
Trump announced today that the U.S. is ending its relationship with WHO. And he left without taking questions as well as not speaking about Minnesota.
Community spread was likely happening in the US in late January. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6922e1.htm?s_cid=mm6922e1_wAnecdotally, 2 stories. 1) i was completely laid out for 2 days at the end of January. Slept for almost 48 hours straight, only other symptom was the worst joint pain I've ever experienced. Wife frequently travels through Detroit, was in Westchester county, NY 2 weeks prior, and we were in Vegas 10 days earlier. Im scheduled for an antibody screen in two weeks, will be fascinated to see what my results are.2) a family from the kids' school had a family member in from Seattle over Christmas and for a few weeks in January. He was sick the whole time he was in Madison. Soon after, that family got sick, illness spread through the school, and at the same time, the youth hockey program.Back to news: Bloomberg had an article about superspreaders today, and how that can explain the spikes in South Korea amd other places. Its an opinion piece written by a non-medical person, so take it FWIW.https://www.bloomberg.com/amp/opinion/articles/2020-05-28/superspreader-events-might-actually-help-control-covid-19?__twitter_impression=true
By the way Scott Gottleib said in an interview you shouldn’t trust one test. However two positives would be somewhat conclusive. Conversely I guess a negative result is more accurate/trustworthy.
Anecdotally, the strain of flu this year was particularly rough.
Honestly, it depends on what test you get. Originally I had often commented on some tests having up to 20% false positives. I've heard some are now even worse with false positive rates approaching 50%. That means there is a roughly 1/4 chance you would test positive twice by the worst tests out there and still be negative. I've said this a lot, but if you get these tests, try to find out what test you got. The test used in NY seems to be one of the more accurate ones.
Yep. Below is an article that describes a Mayo Clinic study which tested nineteen of the Antibody tests. Only the four that had received an Emergency Use Authorization from FDA got an A+ rating. Most were so-so, and a few failed. (I’m not sure what the standards were for a given grade.)IMHO, the best strategy for now is to ask if you can get a test that has an EUA.https://abcnews.go.com/US/mayo-clinic-doctors-find-covid-19-antibody-tests/story?id=70803740
Why has the FDA approved so many sub par tests
Community spread was likely happening in the US in late January. https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6922e1.htm?s_cid=mm6922e1_wAnecdotally, 2 stories. 1) i was completely laid out for 2 days at the end of January. Slept for almost 48 hours straight, only other symptom was the worst joint pain I've ever experienced. Wife frequently travels through Detroit, was in Westchester county, NY 2 weeks prior, and we were in Vegas 10 days earlier. Im scheduled for an antibody screen in two weeks, will be fascinated to see what my results are.
https://www.france24.com/en/20200530-coronavirus-hopes-and-fears-centre-on-immunitySome interesting theories being mulled over regarding T-cells.