dudalb
Penultimate Amazing
Yup, that's why in the RN sailors with beards have to shave them off before going in to action
And why most fire departments don't allow beards.
Yup, that's why in the RN sailors with beards have to shave them off before going in to action
"Let Mikey do it"
I should add it didn't stop Trump from giving an hour long press conference bragging about how his decision to ban all Chinese nationals from China (as if Americans don't carry disease) has kept the country safe. And of course he added his usual BS that everyone complained but look how smart Trump was.... gag.
Happily the news media didn't fall for it and cover the BS live. They showed snippets then said they'd monitor it if there was anything else newsworthy.
And why most fire departments don't allow beards.
Yeah, as I said before, this has been the chatter on the TV for some time here in Japan regardless of what the official word has been. In fact, the official word hasn’t changed much like the WHO is insisting that there is no pandemic yet.
I have to wonder, seen all the ash-laden Catholics around today, if that tradition is an avenue for transmission? After all, you have one priest grinding his thumb into the forehead of each person in the congregation in turn.
I have to wonder, seen all the ash-laden Catholics around today, if that tradition is an avenue for transmission? After all, you have one priest grinding his thumb into the forehead of each person in the congregation in turn.
The Catholics have a long list of dangerous practices from refusing condoms until very recently, kissing rings, kissing statues' feet, the priest wiping the communion wine glass around the lip as if that disinfects it, the priest putting the communion wafer directly into people's mouths assuring he spreads germs from one mouth to the next....
I bet other folks have more we can add to the list.
Anyway, how “normal” is this for a virus to return after apparently being cured?
Meanwhile it seems that test kits in the US aren't reliable
Sheesh
We still don't know exactly how long the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 can survive on surfaces. But Stephen Morse, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University Medical Center, says what we know from other coronaviruses is that most household cleansers — such as bleach wipes or alcohol — will kill them.
Even wiping down surfaces with soap and water should do the trick, he says, because this coronavirus has a lipid envelope around it — like a coat that keeps the RNA inside the viral particle. And soap is a detergent that can break down lipids. "We use them to take grease and oil, which is a lipid, off our dishes," he notes.
If COVID-19 does start circulating in your community or there's someone sick at home, plan on cleaning surfaces that get touched frequently — such as kitchen counters and bathroom faucets — several times a day, says Dr. Trish Perl, chief of the infectious disease division at UT Southwestern Medical Center. That advice, she says, comes from studies on other diseases "where they've shown that if you do clean up the environment, you can actually decrease the amount of virus that is on hard surfaces significantly."
23:22
Philippines observes 'no contact' Ash Wednesday
The usual practice of rubbing ash on foreheads for Ash Wednesday was eschewed by the Philippines this year.
Leaders of the Philippine Catholic church instead recommended for ash to be sprinkled on people's heads to avoid physical contact as a precaution against the virus.
Ash Wednesday marks the beginning of Lent, the run-up to Easter.
I guess someone was thinking ahead...
And talks about bad timing for a TV series...
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1831804/
This is gonna be pushed back into 2021, at the least.
That a lot of people have nicknamed the Corona Virus "Captain Trips" will not help matters....
A woman working as a tour bus guide in Japan has tested positive for coronavirus for a second time, in what authorities say is the first such case.
The woman, in her 40s and a resident of Osaka in western Japan, tested positive on Wednesday after developing a sore throat and chest pains, the prefectural government said. She first tested positive on 29 January and was discharged from the hospital after recovering on 1 February, before testing negative on 6 February.
The health ministry confirmed the case was the first in Japan where a patient tested positive for coronavirus for a second time after being discharged from hospital, Japanese media said.
Though a first in Japan, cases of second positive tests have been reported in China. The outbreak has spread rapidly and widely, infecting about 80,000 people globally and killing nearly 2,800, the vast majority in mainland China.
“Once you have the infection, it could remain dormant and with minimal symptoms, and then you can get an exacerbation if it finds its way into the lungs,” said Professor Philip Tierno at New York University’s school of medicine.
He said much remained unknown about the virus: “I’m not certain that this is not bi-phasic, like anthrax,” he said, meaning the disease might appear to go away before recurring.
There is concern that the reason why South Korea has such high numbers is simply a reflection of the fact that they have had more extensive testing than a lot of other places.
Here's more information about that case in Osaka:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...ests-positive-for-coronavirus-for-second-time
This will really be a problem if it turns out to be bi-phasic. It means discharged patients could be spreading the disease again, or we might not even be sure about whether someone is cured of the virus.
Also, although I generally pooh-pooh the claims that this is man-made, it seems to me that the comparisons to anthrax might be the type of thing a bio-weapon is engineered to have...![]()
If you were designing a bioweapon the first thing you would do is limit its transmissibility, you don't want bioweapons infecting your troops. You don't want a weapon with a long asymptomatic incubation, that is mostly mild in its effects. A biphasic weapon would be especially bad as it could then recur in captured troops or areas requiring the occupying forces to divert resources and being a risk to occupying forces. Ebola might be a good weapon, minimal person to person transmission other than by direct contact, rapidly fatal, with a low case of asymptomatic shedding. Organism causing D&V that aren't fatal might also be good, norovirus has rapid onset and can be disabling and is very infectious. In addition most attempts at bio-engineering leave obvious evidence. There are the insertion sequences left behind if you insert genes. Viruses that are cultured for any length of time tend to become attenuated.
The idea this is a bio-weapon is just silly. It is not as if the emergence of yet another zoonotic coronavirus was not expected, really there is nothing about this outbreak that was not foreseen as being likely. I think it is worth remembering how unlikely the emergence of HIV was since it required genetic reassortment between a monkey and a chimpanzee virus then for that virus to infect a human and then be onwardly transmitted. But with billions of people and many years, unusual events do occur.