LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864} (lnxw48a1@nu.federati.net)'s status on Tuesday, 21-Jul-2020 17:29:17 UTC
LinuxWalt (@lnxw48a1) {3EB165E0-5BB1-45D2-9E7D-93B31821F864}I see a lot of trash-talking about the US response to the #COVID-19 pandemic. The truth is, our national response could have been quite a bit better—starting by being honest about masks (“Wearing masks is proven to provide some benefit during respiratory virus outbreaks, but they are not a perfect or complete solution. We also don’t even have enough N95 or surgical masks for the medical community, so non-medical people should make your own masks for now.”)—and by reacting more quickly to give emergency production orders for medicines, PPE, ventilator machines, etc. Foremost among federal failures is President #Trump’s refusal to wear a mask until very recently, and his encouragement of rebellion against health-related restrictions. We now have people saying mask-wearing is “stupid” and ineffective, and that it causes psychological problems, and I would guess that the overwhelming majority of those people are his supporters.
But having read the national emergency plan and portions of the Stafford Disaster Relief Act, I know that the primary responsibility is with the states. I even question whether the federal government is allowed to do some of the things that needed (and still need) doing. This is a large country, with around 330 million people in it. Most of the most effective measures need to be applied at the point of most need, not pushed down from the top.
Not that you want 50 states, the District of Columbia, and some territories competing for supplies in an emergency. But the states should have taken the lead early on with behavioral and business restrictions (the lockdowns, are but one example of how they might have handled it), instead of waiting until they had out-of-control outbreaks and then panicking.
And, yes, I agree with @guizzy ... the USA 🇺🇸 has a huge number of deaths from #2019-nCoV ( the old name for the disease caused by the #coronavirus #SARS-CoV-2 ). But when you weight that by population (as one should), the US is not the worst-affected country. We’re not the best, either. That honor goes to the People’s Republic of China 🇨🇳, with the world’s largest population and a few thousand reported deaths. (And their numbers are increasingly believed to have been manipulated; with reports that the outbreak 😷 started in November, and only in late December / early January did they take action ... and that they’ve had continuing smaller outbreaks since the time it was controlled in Hubei Province.)
1: It's not that serious. I'm not worried about #coronavirus, and I'm not going to wear a mask. 2 (often weeks later): I'm infected with #COVID-19, but I'll be fine. 3: (Person is hospitalized. Sometimes a socnet post or two by a relative will indicate how ill the person is.) 4 (also often weeks later): Please donate to the GoFundMe for the family of so and so, who died of coronavirus.
Yes, it is. We see these almost daily, but still some folks refuse to wear face coverings, wash their hands, and leave some distance between themselves and others. We all see the death announcements about friends and family members who had it and passed, even youthful and healthy 30 and 40 somethings, so why are people so stubbornly proceeding as though the whole thing is "a hoax"?
If scientists announced tomorrow that one could totally avoid #COVID-19 by eating lima beans (disgusting stuff!), by the next day, there would not be a store in the country that had them on their shelves. So why won't people do three simple steps to make #coronavirus infection less likely?
This one appears to be favorable toward using the malaria drug as a treatment for #COVID-19 ... suggests the drug should be given early in the treatment program.
Remember, this is a drug that is known to have dangerous side-effects. Some studies seem find positive results, but some seem to find negative results. Do not self-medicate.