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Nzoner's Game Room>***NON-POLITICAL COVID-19 Discussion Thread***
JakeF 10:28 PM 02-26-2020
A couple of reminders...

Originally Posted by Bwana:
Once again, don't come in this thread with some kind of political agenda, or you will be shown the door. If you want to go that route, there is a thread about this in DC.
Originally Posted by Dartgod:
People, there is a lot of good information in this thread, let's try to keep the petty bickering to a minimum.

We all have varying opinions about the impact of this, the numbers, etc. We will all never agree with each other. But we can all keep it civil.

Thanks!

Click here for the original OP:

Spoiler!

[Reply]
Bearcat 12:08 PM 07-04-2020
No non-essential travel to Mexico, they're starting to finally crack down on it..


https://www.cnn.com/2020/07/04/us/ar...der/index.html


...oh, but if you have reservations at Rocky Point, fine..

https://tucson.com/news/arizona_news...0a274f4dd.html
[Reply]
Bearcat 12:12 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by suzzer99:


This is the kind of stuff I'm worried about. If you told me it was just a 1 in 200 chance of death, but otherwise you'll recover 100% - somehow that wouldn't bother me as much.
Saw someone on FB saying they've had a similar experience... caught it in February, still dealing with respiratory issues and will feel exhausted at times. ~40yo and afaik know no known underlying conditions.
[Reply]
dirk digler 12:14 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by petegz28:
I am sure there are people out there in similar situations as her but I think we all need to understand the percentage of those in her situation. Until that post I have not heard of anyone having Covid for that long.
/r/COVID19positive/. There is a lot of people having long term issues
[Reply]
suzzer99 12:14 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by Pasta Giant Meatball:
What's the percentage on those that are in that bad if shape though. Fear mongering sack of shit media
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6924e2.htm

Originally Posted by :
Overall, 184,673 (14%) patients were hospitalized, 29,837 (2%) were admitted to an intensive care unit (ICU), and 71,116 (5%) died.
Anyone going into the ICU is going to have some lingering problems for an indeterminate amount of time. You don't just bounce back from that.

But there are also people who had mild symptoms who are having problems.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/joshuac.../#586599265979

Originally Posted by :
However, the rapid recovery has not been the experience of thousands - perhaps tens of thousands - of patients worldwide who’ve been classified as mild cases. Many struggle for months with lingering Covid-19 symptoms that can be debilitating. They exhibit shortness of breath, extreme fatigue, intermittent fevers, cough, concentration issues, chest pressure, headaches, and heart palpitations, among other symptoms. The literature has a name for them: “long-haulers.”

In the Netherlands, the Lung Foundation, together with the University of Maastricht and the CIRO group,* surveyed 1,622 Covid-19 patients who had reported a number of long-term effects from their illness. Ninety-one percent of the patients were not hospitalized, which indicates that the vast majority of the surveyed patients would fall under the category “mildly symptomatic.” The average age of the patients surveyed was 53.
Obviously it's really early to guess at the % of people with long term-damage. But it certainly sounds like something to be concerned about.

https://nos.nl/artikel/2337012-longf...erstelden.html

Originally Posted by :
Many corona patients still have serious health problems months after their healing. This is evident from a survey conducted by the Long Fund and the CIRO knowledge center among 1622 people with such complaints. More than 90 percent of the respondents say they have problems with simple daily activities.

91 percent of those questioned were not hospitalized and 43 percent were not diagnosed by a doctor. The average age of the respondents is 53 years. 85 percent say he or she was in good health before the infection. Now that is only 6 percent. Almost half say they can no longer exercise and more than 60 percent have trouble walking.
https://www.vox.com/2020/5/8/2125189...fects-symptoms

Originally Posted by :
The UK National Health Service assumes that of Covid-19 patients who have required hospitalization, 45 percent will need ongoing medical care, 4 percent will require inpatient rehabilitation, and 1 percent will permanently require acute care. Other preliminary evidence, as well as historical research on other coronaviruses like severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), suggests that for some people, a full recovery might still be years off. For others, there may be no returning to normal.
Originally Posted by :
One study from China found that this ground-glass appearance showed up in scans of 77 percent of Covid-19 patients. In another study out of China, published in Radiology, 66 of 70 hospitalized patients had some amount of lung damage in CT scans, and more than half had the kind of lesions that are likely to develop into scars. (A third study from China suggests this is not just for critically ill patients; its authors found that of 58 asymptomatic patients, 95 percent also had evidence of these ground-glass opacities in their lungs. More than a quarter of these individuals went on to develop symptoms within a few days.)
Originally Posted by :
Blood clots that form in or reach the brain can cause a stroke. Although strokes are more typically seen in older people, strokes are now being reported even in young Covid-19 patients. In Wuhan, China, about 5 percent of hospitalized Covid-19 patients had strokes, and a similar pattern was reported with SARS.

In younger people who have strokes, mortality rates are relatively low compared to those who are older, and many people recover. But studies show only between 42 and 53 percent are able to return to work.

Blood clots can also cut off circulation to part of the lungs, a condition known as a pulmonary embolism, which can be deadly. In France, two studies suggest that between 23 and 30 percent of people with severe Covid-19 are also having pulmonary embolisms.
Originally Posted by :
One study from Wuhan in January found 12 percent of Covid-19 patients had signs of cardiovascular damage. These patients had higher levels of troponin, a protein released in the blood by an injured heart muscle. Since then, other reports suggest the virus may directly cause acute myocarditis and heart failure. (Heart failure was also seen with MERS and is known to be correlated with even the seasonal flu.)

In March, another study looked at 416 hospitalized Covid-19 patients and found 19 percent showed signs of heart damage. University of Texas Health Science Center researchers warn that in survivors, Covid-19 may cause lingering cardiac damage, as well as making existing cardiovascular problems worse, further increasing the risk for heart attack and stroke.
Originally Posted by :
Covid-19 also seems to affect the central nervous system, with potentially long-lasting consequences. In one study from China, more than a third of 214 people hospitalized with confirmed Covid-19 had neurological symptoms, including dizziness, headaches, impaired consciousness, vision, taste/smell impairment, and nerve pain while they were ill. These symptoms were more common in patients with severe cases, where the incidence increased to 46.5 percent. Another study in France found neurologic features in 58 of 64 critically ill Covid-19 patients.

[Reply]
Eleazar 12:19 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by dirk digler:
/r/COVID19positive/. There is a lot of people having long term issues
How many is "a lot of people", out of the millions who have had it?
[Reply]
lewdog 12:26 PM 07-04-2020
It’s likely not that many but it’s too variable to determine why at this point. That’s the scary part. And it’s too early to know long term consequences.
[Reply]
suzzer99 12:28 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by Eleazar:
How many is "a lot of people", out of the millions who have had it?
https://www.gavi.org/vaccineswork/lo...fects-covid-19

Originally Posted by :
A research group at King’s College London, UK, developed a COVID-19 tracker app for people to record their symptoms daily, and estimated 200,000 have been reporting symptoms for the entire six weeks since the tracker was launched.

Many people had a pattern of symptoms, where their symptoms were heightened initially, nearly disappeared, then returned again with ferocity, along with a very wide range of symptoms.
Whatever the numbers are for people with real long term problems, it doesn't seem to be vanishingly small. It also doesn't seem to be as skewed to older or at/risk people as dying is.

I go hiking up a mountain like every other weekend. If I can't do that anymore and have any of the problems some of these people are describing, I know I'd go into a very black place where I'd probably just wish I was dead. That's the equation going on in my head anyway when I think about going back to my gym (which is completely packed, no masks). I went once at 5am and was still nervous about it. I just spent $1500 on weights and a bench/rack instead.
[Reply]
stumppy 12:49 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by Pasta Giant Meatball:
What's the percentage on those that are in that bad if shape though. Fear mongering sack of shit media
Yea, fuck the media. I can't believe the POS media is getting by with letting this person post to their twitter acct. :-)
[Reply]
tk13 02:42 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by Pasta Giant Meatball:
What's the percentage on those that are in that bad if shape though. Fear mongering sack of shit media
This is someone posting to their own personal twitter account. What the heck is wrong with you?

This is exactly what I mean. The media is underplaying this hard. There are a lot of people out there having complications, but everyone is so focused on deaths.

If they really wanted to try and scare the crap out of people, they'd be doing stories about all the people with neurological problems, stuck on kidney dialysis now, how many people who get this have hypoxia, etc. And there's not much rhyme or reason to it. Look at Rudy Gobert, he had it 3 months ago and he still can't smell.
[Reply]
sedated 03:05 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by tk13:
This is someone posting to their own personal twitter account. What the heck is wrong with you?

This is exactly what I mean. The media is underplaying this hard. There are a lot of people out there having complications, but everyone is so focused on deaths.

If they really wanted to try and scare the crap out of people, they'd be doing stories about all the people with neurological problems, stuck on kidney dialysis now, how many people who get this have hypoxia, etc. And there's not much rhyme or reason to it. Look at Rudy Gobert, he had it 3 months ago and he still can't smell.
Quiet down, media
[Reply]
loochy 04:11 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by tk13:
Look at Rudy Gobert, he had it 3 months ago and he still can't smell.
That's because of having to constantly smell his stinky ass French armpits, not because of corona.
[Reply]
F150 04:34 PM 07-04-2020
So, someone said Joplin is the epicenter of Corvid now. Whats up with that?
[Reply]
Bearcat 04:36 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by Eleazar:
How many is "a lot of people", out of the millions who have had it?
As long as we can quantify in millions, it'll make us all feel better.
[Reply]
dirk digler 04:56 PM 07-04-2020
For a slow reporting holiday weekend...ugh Florida reporting 11,458 cases. Only 113 shy of NY's record.
[Reply]
TLO 05:01 PM 07-04-2020
Originally Posted by F150:
So, someone said Joplin is the epicenter of Corvid now. Whats up with that?
Who's someone?
[Reply]
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