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" Holy Shit", Terrifying Lung Failure From COVID-19... Even In Young Patients!

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" Holy Shit", Terrifying Lung Failure From COVID-19... Even In Young Patients!

" Holy Shit", Terrifying Lung Failure From COVID-19... Even In Young Patients!

As of Friday, Louisiana was reporting 479 confirmed cases of COVID-19, one of the highest numbers in the country. Ten people had died. The majority of cases are in New Orleans, which now has one confirmed case for every 1,000 residents. New Orleans had held Mardi Gras celebrations just two weeks before its first patient, with more than a million revelers on its streets.



I spoke to a respiratory therapist there, whose job is to ensure that patients are breathing well. He works in a medium-sized city hospital’s intensive care unit. (We are withholding his name and employer, as he fears retaliation.) Before the virus came to New Orleans, his days were pretty relaxed, nebulizing patients with asthma, adjusting oxygen tubes that run through the nose or, in the most severe cases, setting up and managing ventilators. His patients were usually older, with chronic health conditions and bad lungs.

Since last week, he’s been running ventilators for the sickest COVID-19 patients. Many are relatively young, in their 40s and 50s, and have minimal, if any, preexisting conditions in their charts. He is overwhelmed, stunned by the manifestation of the infection, both its speed and intensity. The ICU where he works has essentially become a coronavirus unit. He estimates that his hospital has admitted dozens of confirmed or presumptive coronavirus patients. About a third have ended up on ventilators.

His hospital had not prepared for this volume before the virus first appeared. One physician had tried to raise alarms, asking about negative pressure rooms and ventilators. Most staff concluded that he was overreacting. “They thought the media was overhyping it,” the respiratory therapist told me. “In retrospect, he was right to be concerned.”


He spoke to me by phone on Thursday about why, exactly, he has been so alarmed. His account has been condensed and edited for clarity.

“Reading about it in the news, I knew it was going to be bad, but we deal with the flu every year so I was thinking: Well, it’s probably not that much worse than the flu. But seeing patients with COVID-19 completely changed my perspective, and it’s a lot more frightening.”

This is knocking out what should be perfectly fit, healthy people.

“I have patients in their early 40s and, yeah, I was kind of shocked. I’m seeing people who look relatively healthy with a minimal health history, and they are completely wiped out, like they’ve been hit by a truck. This is knocking out what should be perfectly fit, healthy people. Patients will be on minimal support, on a little bit of oxygen, and then all of a sudden, they go into complete respiratory arrest, shut down and can’t breathe at all.

They suddenly become unresponsive or go into respiratory failure.

“We have an observation unit in the hospital, and we have been admitting patients that had tested positive or are presumptive positive — these are patients that had been in contact with people who were positive. We go and check vitals on patients every four hours, and some are on a continuous cardiac monitor, so we see that their heart rate has a sudden increase or decrease, or someone goes in and sees that the patient is struggling to breathe or is unresponsive. That seems to be what happens to a lot of these patients: They suddenly become unresponsive or go into respiratory failure.”

The lung is filled with so much fluid, displacing where the air would normally be.

“It’s called acute respiratory distress syndrome, ARDS. That means the lungs are filled with fluid. And it’s notable for the way the X-ray looks: The entire lung is basically whited out from fluid. Patients with ARDS are extremely difficult to oxygenate. It has a really high mortality rate, about 40%. The way to manage it is to put a patient on a ventilator. The additional pressure helps the oxygen go into the bloodstream.

“Normally, ARDS is something that happens over time as the lungs get more and more inflamed. But with this virus, it seems like it happens overnight. When you’re healthy, your lung is made up of little balloons. Like a tree is made out of a bunch of little leaves, the lung is made of little air sacs that are called the alveoli. When you breathe in, all of those little air sacs inflate, and they have capillaries in the walls, little blood vessels. The oxygen gets from the air in the lung into the blood so it can be carried around the body.

“Typically with ARDS, the lungs become inflamed. It’s like inflammation anywhere: If you have a burn on your arm, the skin around it turns red from additional blood flow. The body is sending it additional nutrients to heal. The problem is, when that happens in your lungs, fluid and extra blood starts going to the lungs. Viruses can injure cells in the walls of the alveoli, so the fluid leaks into the alveoli. A telltale sign of ARDS in an X-ray is what’s called ‘ground glass opacity,’ like an old-fashioned ground glass privacy window in a shower. And lungs look that way because fluid is white on an X-ray, so the lung looks like white ground glass, or sometimes pure white, because the lung is filled with so much fluid, displacing where the air would normally be.




A screenshot of chest radiographs of a man suspected to have COVID-19. (Obtained by ProPublica via the Radiological Society of North America, cited in the paper “Severe Acute Respiratory Disease in a Huanan Seafood Market Worker: Images of an Early Casualty” by Lijuan Qian, Jie Yu and Heshui Shi.)

This severity ... is usually more typical of someone who has a near drowning experience ... or people who inhale caustic gas.

“In my experience, this severity of ARDS is usually more typical of someone who has a near drowning experience — they have a bunch of dirty water in their lungs — or people who inhale caustic gas. Especially for it to have such an acute onset like that. I’ve never seen a microorganism or an infectious process cause such acute damage to the lungs so rapidly. That was what really shocked me.”

You’ll try to rip the breathing tube out because you feel it is choking you ...

“It first struck me how different it was when I saw my first coronavirus patient go bad. I was like, Holy shit, this is not the flu. Watching this relatively young guy, gasping for air, pink frothy secretions coming out of his tube and out of his mouth. The ventilator should have been doing the work of breathing but he was still gasping for air, moving his mouth, moving his body, struggling. We had to restrain him. With all the coronavirus patients, we’ve had to restrain them. They really hyperventilate, really struggle to breathe. When you’re in that mindstate of struggling to breathe and delirious with fever, you don’t know when someone is trying to help you, so you’ll try to rip the breathing tube out because you feel it is choking you, but you are drowning.



“When someone has an infection, I’m used to seeing the normal colors you’d associate with it: greens and yellows. The coronavirus patients with ARDS have been having a lot of secretions that are actually pink because they’re filled with blood cells that are leaking into their airways. They are essentially drowning in their own blood and fluids because their lungs are so full. So we’re constantly having to suction out the secretions every time we go into their rooms.”

I do not want to catch this.

“Before this, we were all joking. It’s grim humor. If you are exposed to the virus and test positive and go on quarantine, you get paid. We were all joking: I want to get the coronavirus because then I get a paid vacation from work. And once I saw these patients with it, I was like, Holy shit, I do not want to catch this and I don’t want anyone I know to catch this.

“I worked a long stretch of days last week, and I watched it go from this novelty to a serious issue. We had one or two patients at our hospital, and then five to 10 patients, and then 20 patients. Every day, the intensity kept ratcheting up. More patients, and the patients themselves are starting to get sicker and sicker. When it first started, we all had tons of equipment, tons of supplies, and as we started getting more patients, we started to run out. They had to ration supplies. At first we were trying to use one mask per patient. Then it was just: You get one mask for positive patients, another mask for everyone else. And now it’s just: You get one mask.

“I work 12-hour shifts. Right now, we are running about four times the number of ventilators than we normally have going. We have such a large volume of patients, but it’s really hard to find enough people to fill all the shifts. The caregiver-to-patient ratio has gone down, and you can’t spend as much time with each patient, you can’t adjust the vent settings as aggressively because you’re not going into the room as often. And we’re also trying to avoid going into the room as much as possible to reduce infection risk of staff and to conserve personal protective equipment.”


Even if you survive ... it can also do long-lasting damage.

“But we are trying to wean down the settings on the ventilator as much as possible, because you don’t want someone to be on the ventilator longer than they need to be. Your risk of mortality increases every day that you spend on a ventilator. The high pressures from high vent settings is pushing air into the lung and can overinflate those little balloons. They can pop. It can destroy the alveoli. Even if you survive ARDS, although some damage can heal, it can also do long-lasting damage to the lungs. They can get filled up with scar tissue. ARDS can lead to cognitive decline. Some people’s muscles waste away, and it takes them a long time to recover once they come off the ventilator.

“There is a very real possibility that we might run out of ICU beds and at that point I don’t know what happens if patients get sick and need to be intubated and put on a ventilator. Is that person going to die because we don’t have the equipment to keep them alive? What if it goes on for months and dozens of people die because we don’t have the ventilators?

“Hopefully we don’t get there, but if you only have one ventilator, and you have two patients, you’re going to have to go with the one who has a higher likelihood of surviving. And I’m afraid we’ll get to that point. I’ve heard that’s happening in Italy.”
 
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31 year old Olympic gold medalist details experience with coronavirus, says he's 'exhausted' by any activity
Retired South African swimmer Cameron van der Burgh won an Olympic gold in 2012


Retired South African swimmer and Olympic gold medalist Cameron van der Burgh contracted the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) earlier this month. Over the weekend, van der Burgh opened up about his experience with the coronavirus in a series of statements on his Twitter account. https://twitter.com/Cameronvdburgh/status/1241825208647983105
Van der Burgh, 31, said COVID-19 is "by far the worst virus" that he's ever endured.
"I have been struggling with COVID-19 for 14 days today," van der Burgh tweeted. "By far the worst virus I have ever endured despite being a healthy individual with strong lungs (no smoking/sport) and living a healthy lifestyle and being young (least at risk demographic)."
Van der Burgh won gold medal in the 100-meter breaststroke at the 2012 Olympics in London. The South African swimmer announced his retirement from the sport in December 2018.
"Although the most severe symptoms (extreme fever) have eased, I am still struggling with serious fatigue and a residual cough that I can't shake," van der Burgh added. "Any physical activity like walking leaves me exhausted for hours.
"The loss in body conditioning has been immense and can only feel for the athletes that contract Covid-19 as they will suffer a great loss of current conditioning through the last training cycle. Infection closer to competition being the worst."
As of right now, the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo are still scheduled to begin July 24, but the coronavirus has put the Summer Games into question. On Sunday, International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach announced that the organization will make a final decision on the 2020 Olympics within the next four weeks.
Canada and Australia's governing bodies have already stated that their athletes won't be competing in the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo if the Games are still going to be held.

https://www.cbssports.com/olympics/...ronavirus-says-hes-exhausted-by-any-activity/
https://nypost.com/2020/03/22/olymp...ttle-with-coronavirus-worst-ive-ever-endured/
 
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COVID-19 is primarily affecting the elderly may be greatly exaggerated....Not Just Seniors: French Doctors Report 50% Of ICU Patients Under 60 Years Old, Netherlands Under 50


It's beginning to look like someone's lying ( China & and also "MainstreamMedia" ) as both French and Dutch medical professionals are reporting that half of coronavirus ICU patients are under the age of 60 and 50-years-old respectively.



"MORE THAN 50% OF THE 300 #COVIDー19 CASES IN CRITICAL CONDITION IN FRANCE ARE UNDER 60," tweeted The Atlantic's Rachel Donadio on Saturday.


Rachel Donadio
✔
@RachelDonadio
CX: FRANCE NOW PUSHING EPIDEMIC LEVEL. All restos, cafés, non-essential stores closed. MORE THAN 50% OF THE 300 #COVIDー19 CASES IN CRITICAL CONDITION IN FRANCE ARE UNDER 60; France has 4,500 cases, which doubled in the past 72 hours, said head of French health service. Replaces:
https://twitter.com/RachelDonadio/s...patients-under-60-years-old-netherlands-under

Meanwhile in the Netherlands, over half are reportedly under 50 years old.

"Today there are between forty and fifty corona patients in critical condition on Dutch intensive care units. “More than half of those patients are under fifty years old. There are also young people. "" That says chairman of the Dutch Association for Intensive Care (NVIC) Diederik Gommers, in an interview with this site." -AD.nl



Steve Lookner
@lookner
https://twitter.com/lookner/status/...patients-under-60-years-old-netherlands-under

21h
Over half of the coronavirus patients in intensive care in the Netherlands are under 50 years old


On Saturday, AD documented the case of a 16-year-old boy with no disclosed underlying conditions who wound up in the ICU after complaining of nausea and headaches. He is currently on ventilation in a medically-induced coma.





https://www.ad.nl/dossier-coronavir...patients-under-60-years-old-netherlands-under


"As long as he can't breathe properly himself, they keep him artificially asleep," said his 24-yaer-old brother Babor.







The reports suggest that COVID-19 is more than just a "boomer remover" - a phrase made popular by younger generations who think they're invincible.

Considering that US hospitals are projected to be completely full come mid-May, the implications of the coronavirus impacting more than just the elderly are significant.


The new reports of younger ICU patients echo unconfirmed accounts from Italian doctors:



In which case, reports that COVID-19 is primarily affecting the elderly may be greatly exaggerated.
 

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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/coronavirus-patient-1.5502501

Here another 25 year old Canadian got the covid-19 report by CBC news


Recovering COVID-19 patient describes what it was like ito have the virus

David Anzarouth is going public to persuade others to take the novel coronavirus seriously


Bobby Hristova · CBC News · Posted: Mar 20, 2020 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: 4 hours ago

David Anzarouth, 25, hopes that by coming forward and sharing his experience with COVID-19, he can provide a 'cautionary tale' to persuade people to take the coronavirus seriously and practise social distancing. (Submitted by David Anzarouth)


David Anzarouth knew it could happen to anyone but never thought it would happen to him.

The fit 25-year-old living in Toronto didn't worry about taking his vacation to South Beach in Miami, Fla., in early March.

But 10 days later, he found himself sitting in an isolated emergency room at Toronto General Hospital, wearing a mask and feeling "the most incredible pain that I've ever experienced" as he was tested for COVID-1
9.


A day later, the former McMaster University student learned he was infected with the virus that has led to massive disruptions in Canada and around the world as governments scramble to limit its impact.

"I can't put into words how different this feels than anything I've ever experienced before," Anzarouth told CBC News.

Partying with thousands and sharing accommodation

He arrived in Miami on March 5 with his friend to take part in the Winter Party festival. It wasn't his first time there. Anzarouth knew what to expect — a week full of lasers, lights, music and dancing.

At the time, COVID-19 cases in Canada had just started appearing.

"It was definitely on everybody's mind but … at the time, we thought, 'Let's not lose all this money,' I myself have been needing a vacation, so I said 'Let's go,'" Anzarouth said.


After a week of nightlife among thousands of people, travelling with a group of about 20 and sharing a hotel room with three others, including a friend from Toronto, Anzarouth flew back on March 11.


That's when things started to change. He said he felt "drugged" as if he was "completely out of it" during his Air Canada flight, AC1977, directly to Toronto Pearson Airport.

"At that point, [airport staff] were only asking if I went to China within the last 14 days or Italy," Anzarouth said.

"They weren't doing any sort of medical checks. They weren't doing anything further."

Anzarouth went straight to his apartment on Yonge Street, where he lives alone.

Then, one of his friends sent a message in their group chat saying he was ill. It prompted Anzarouth to email his boss at Toronto's TD Bank North Tower and ask to work from home. He says his supervisor obliged.

'The most incredible pain I've ever experienced'

The next evening on March 12, the virus hit him full force.


"The minute I woke up, I was drenched in a pool of sweat. I was shaking. I was so cold. My head was pounding. It was something like I've never experienced before," Anzarouth said.

"It was the most incredible pain I've ever experienced ... My body felt like I had been flattened."

He didn't know what was wrong, but whatever it was had left Anzarouth debilitated and bedridden until Saturday evening, two days later.

Still, he couldn't stomach a slice of toast or hold himself up in the shower.

"There were points where I thought I might need to call 911 and to get picked up and to go to a hospital," Anzarouth said.



Anzarouth says despite exercising more than four times a week and eating healthily, COVID-19 hit him with symptoms that felt unlike anything he's ever experienced before.
That night, his mouth and throat began to feel parched, and he struggled to breathe as
he lay in bed, sleeping for no longer than 30 minutes at a time.


The next morning, Sunday, March 15, Anzarouth started to get answers. An email viewed by CBC News shows the organizers from the Winter Party festival discovered multiple attendees had tested positive for COVID-19 and alerted other guests. The organizers verified the email.

"At that point I thought, 'I need to do something now,'" he said.

Quickly isolated in hospital

That night, he put on a mask he picked up from the airport and called an Uber to take him to Toronto General Hospital.

He said he was out of the waiting area within 25 minutes and placed in a holding room while staff cleaned a different empty room for him to stay in.

After that, Anzarouth said two doctors and a nurse spoke to him from behind a closed door. When they tested him for various strains of influenza and X-rayed his chest for pneumonia, each was covered in a full gown from head-to-toe.

"The final swab for COVID-19 was an incredibly painful swab they stick far up one of your nostrils," Anzarouth said.


He left the hospital that night, not touching anything and returning to his apartment.

Less than 24 hours later, the doctor called back — Anzarouth had COVID-19.

"There's no one to blame … I understand that I put myself into a place where I risked my health," he said.

A document viewed by CBC News shows the University Health Network asked Anzarouth's employer to have him work from home. TD Bank also told CBC News it is "aware of a positive COVID-19 test of a TD colleague" who "self-isolated upon return from travel and did not come to work."

'This is something that's going to take all of us to fix'

Four days after learning he is infected, Anzarouth is still recovering.

He's taken some acetaminophen to help dull the symptoms, but there is no treatment yet for COVID-19. His body has to recover on its own. His friend, meanwhile, hasn't experienced any symptoms at all.


On Thursday evening, Anzarouth shared his story on social media.

While COVID-19 can manifest differently in different people, and some have reported much milder symptoms than Anzarouth, he is hoping his story will catch the attention of those who still don't take the virus seriously and underline the importance of social distancing practices, such as avoiding unnecessary travel and staying two metres away from others.

"It could happen to anyone," he said.


"This is something that's going to affect all of us. This is something that's going to take all of us to fix."


PS. FYI: Some Previously recovered covid-19 patients found to have lung damage ( 20% lung damage).
 
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What it's REALLY like to catch coronavirus: First British victim, 25, describes how 'worst disease he ever had' left him sweating, shivering, and struggling to breathe as his eyes burned and bones ached ... I ache all over, my head is thumping, my eyes are burning, my throat is constricted.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8075633/First-British-victim-25-describes-coronavirus.html

Connor Reed, a 25-year-old expat from Llandudno in North Wales, has worked in a school in Wuhan, China, for almost a year. In November he became the first British man to catch the coronavirus. From coughs and aches to burning up and spending the night in hospital, here’s how he beat the illness that is sweeping the globe.

Day 1 — Monday November 25: I have a cold. I’m sneezing and my eyes are a bit bleary. It isn’t bad enough to keep me off work. I arrived in this country to teach English as a foreign language — but now I’m a manager at a school in Wuhan, the city in central China where I have lived for the past seven months.

I speak Mandarin well, and the job is interesting. My cold shouldn’t be very contagious, so I have no qualms about going to work. And I live alone, so I’m not likely to give it to anyone. There hasn’t been anything in the news here about viruses. I have no cause for concern. It’s just a sniffle.


Day 2: I have a sore throat. Remembering what my mum used to do when I was a child, I mix myself a mug of honey in hot water. It does the trick.

Day 3: I don’t smoke and I hardly ever drink. But it’s important to me to get over this cold quickly, so that I can stay healthy for work. For medicinal purposes only, I put a splash of whisky in my honey drink. I think it’s called a ‘hot toddy’.

Day 4: I slept like a baby last night. Chinese whisky is evidently a cure for all known ailments. I have another hot toddy in the evening.

Day 5: I’m over my cold. It really wasn’t anything.

Day 7: I spoke too soon. I feel dreadful. This is no longer just a cold. I ache all over, my head is thumping, my eyes are burning, my throat is constricted. The cold has travelled down to my chest and I have a hacking cough.

This is flu, and it’s going to take more than a mug of hot honey, with or without the magic whisky ingredient, to make me feel better.

The symptoms hit me this afternoon like a train and, unless there’s an overnight miracle, I will not be going to work tomorrow. It’s not just that I feel so ill — I really don’t want to give this flu to any of my colleagues.




Day 8: I won’t be in work today. I’ve warned them I’ll probably be off all week. Even my bones are aching. It’s hard to imagine I’m going to get over this soon.

Even getting out of bed hurts. I am propped up on pillows, watching TV and trying not to cough too much because it is painful.

Day 9: Even the kitten hanging around my apartment seems to be feeling under the weather. It isn’t its usual lively self, and when I put down food it doesn’t want to eat. I don’t blame it – I’ve lost my appetite too.

Day 10: I’m still running a temperature. I’ve finished the quarter-bottle of whisky, and I don’t feel well enough to go out and get any more. It doesn’t matter: I don’t think hot toddies were making much difference.

Day 11: Suddenly, I’m feeling better, physically at least. The flu has lifted. But the poor kitten has died. I don’t know whether it had what I’ve got, or whether cats can even get human flu. I feel miserable.

Day 12: I’ve had a relapse. Just as I thought the flu was getting better, it has come back with a vengeance. My breathing is laboured. Just getting up and going to the bathroom leaves me panting and exhausted. I’m sweating, burning up, dizzy and shivering. The television is on but I can’t make sense of it. This is a nightmare.

By the afternoon, I feel like I am suffocating. I have never been this ill in my life. I can’t take more than sips of air and, when I breathe out, my lungs sound like a paper bag being crumpled up. This isn’t right. I need to see a doctor. But if I call the emergency services, I’ll have to pay for the ambulance call-out myself. That’s going to cost a fortune. I’m ill, but I don’t think I’m dying — am I?


Surely I can survive a taxi journey. I decide to go to Zhongnan University Hospital because there are plenty of foreign doctors there, studying. It isn’t rational but, in my feverish state, I want to see a British doctor. My Mandarin is pretty good, so I have no language problem when I call the taxi. It’s a 20-minute ride. As soon as I get there, a doctor diagnoses pneumonia. So that’s why my lungs are making that noise. I am sent for a battery of tests lasting six hours.

Day 13: I arrived back at my apartment late yesterday evening. The doctor prescribed antibiotics for the pneumonia but I’m reluctant to take them — I’m worried that my body will become resistant to the drugs and, if I ever get really ill and need them, they won’t work. I prefer to beat this with traditional remedies if I can.

It helps, simply knowing that this is pneumonia. I’m only 25 and generally healthy: I tell myself there’s no reason for alarm. I have some Tiger Balm. It’s like Vick’s vapour rub on steroids. I pour some into a bowl of hot water and sit with a towel over my head, inhaling the fumes. I’m going ‘old school’. And I’ve still got the antibiotics in reserve if I need them.

Day 14: Boil a kettle. Add Tiger Balm. Towel over head. Breathe for an hour. Repeat

Day 15: All the days are now blurring into one.

Day 16: I phone my mother in Australia. There was no point in calling her before now — she’d only worry and try to jump on a plane. That wouldn’t work: it takes an age to get a visitor’s visa to China. I’m glad to hear her voice, even if I can’t do much more than croak, ‘Mum, I feel so ill.’

Day 17: I am feeling slightly better, but I don’t want to get my hopes up yet. I’ve been here before.

Day 18: My lungs no longer sound like bundles of broken twigs.

Day 19: I am well enough to stagger out of doors to get more Tiger Balm. My nose has cleared enough to smell what my neighbours are cooking, and I think I might have an appetite for the first time in nearly two weeks.

Day 22: I was hoping to be back at work today but no such luck. The pneumonia has gone — but now I ache as if I’ve been run over by a steamroller. My sinuses are agony, and my eardrums feel ready to pop. I know I shouldn’t but I’m massaging my inner ear with cotton buds, trying to take the pain away.

Day 24: Hallelujah! I think I’m better. Who knew flu could be as horrible as that, though?

Day 36: A tip-off from a friend sends me hurrying to the shops. Apparently, the Chinese officials are concerned about a new virus that is taking hold in the city. There are rumours about a curfew or travel restrictions. I know what this will mean — panic buying in the shops. I need to stock up on essentials before everyone else does.

Day 37: The rumours were right. Everyone is being told to stay indoors. From what I’ve heard, the virus is like a nasty dose of flu that can cause pneumonia. Well, that sounds familiar.

Day 52: A notification from the hospital informs me that I was infected with the Wuhan coronavirus. I suppose I should be pleased that I can’t catch it again — I’m immune now.

However, I must still wear my face mask like everyone else if I leave the apartment, or risk arrest. The Chinese authorities are being very thorough about trying to contain the virus.

Day 67: The whole world has now heard about coronavirus. I’ve told a few friends about it, via Facebook, and somehow the news got out to the media.

My local paper back in Llandudno, North Wales, has been in touch with me. Maybe I caught the coronavirus at the fish market.

It’s a great place to get food on a budget, a part of the real Wuhan that ordinary Chinese people use every day, and I regularly do my shopping there.

Since the outbreak became international news, I’ve seen hysterical reports (especially in the U.S. media) that exotic meats such as bat and even koala are on sale at the fish market. I’ve never seen that.

The only slightly weird sight I’ve seen is the whole pig and lamb carcasses for sale, with their heads on.

Day 72 — Tuesday, February 4: It seems the newspapers think it’s terrific that I tried to cure myself with hot toddies.

I attempt to explain that I had no idea at the time what was wrong with me — but that isn’t what they want to hear.

The headline in the New York Post says, ‘UK teacher claims he beat coronavirus with hot whisky and honey.’

I wish it had been that easy.
 
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The coronavirus just killed a 29-year-old doctor who postponed his wedding to fight the disease
https://www.businessinsider.com/cor...g-yinhua-delayed-wedding-fight-disease-2020-2

A young Chinese doctor who postponed his wedding to help battle the coronavirus died from the disease on Thursday, China's official Xinhua news agency said.

Peng Yinhua, 29, was treating patients at the center of the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan's Jiangxia district. Peng was admitted to the hospital after contracting the virus on January 25.

A statement from the hospital obtained by The Guardian said Peng was sent to Jinyintan Hospital in Wuhan for emergency treatment when his condition dramatically worsened. He died on Thursday night.

Peng planned to marry his partner, who has not been named in reports, during the Lunar New Year holiday, but they agreed to delay the ceremony so that Peng could help treat people with the coronavirus, Chinese state media said. Peng never even had the chance to send his wedding invitations, which remain in his office drawer, Xinhua said, according to Agence France-Presse.

Chinese citizens have mourned his death on the social-media platform Weibo, lauding the doctor as a hero.
 

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New coronavirus may have caused meningitis
https://www3.nhk.or.jp/nhkworld/en/news/20200308_07/

Doctors at a hospital in Yamanashi Prefecture west of Tokyo, say the new coronavirus is likely to have caused meningitis in a male patient in his 20s.


The man had a fever on February 27 and visited different medical institutions on February 28 and March 2, but was not tested for the coronavirus.

The man was found collapsed in his home on Friday and was transported to hospital where he tested positive for the coronavirus.

He is now in intensive care with a fever, pneumonia and meningitis.

Doctors at the hospital say it is extremely rare for the new coronavirus to trigger meningitis.
 

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these folks probably have weak immune systems
A 31 year old retired Olymipics gold medal swimmer have weak immune system? See post#2
Maybe you catch it and come back and post it here and tell everyone that it nothing.... It just a flu! Younger people have nothing to worry about... It only kill or affected baby boomers more . Bottomline are you willing to take the chance to prove that you are right by catching it and not staying home or not doing social distance.
 

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A 31 year old retired Olymipics gold medal swimmer have weak immune system? See post#2
Maybe you catch it and come back and post it here and tell everyone that it nothing.... It just a flu! Younger people have nothing to worry about... It only kill or affected baby boomers more . Bottomline are you willing to take the chance to prove that you are right by catching it and not staying home or not doing social distance.
Flu Cases Spike To 15 Million In U.S.: Flu Report In Wisconsin

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/me...ion-in-u-s-flu-report-in-wisconsin/ar-BBZneKR
 

PornAddict

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See below first tweeter video link and click it:

Quoth the Raven on Twitter:
"This is a terrifying video chart "
~~~~> https://twitter.com/QTRResearch/status/1230977793854443526?ref_src=twsrc^tfw <~~~ click on 1 minutes video chart.
Maybe when you click it you will understand why all cities, and countries are shutting down. And telling everyone to stay the fuck home.



Ro ( Rnaught) & Exponentially growth with asymmetrical symptons plays a major role in covid-19.


@CDCgov
Feb 25

https://twitter.com/CDCgov/status/1...alth/coronavirus-us-american-cases/index.html




Now is the time for US businesses, hospitals, and communities to begin preparing for the possible spread of #COVID19. CDC continues to work with business, education & healthcare sectors, encouraging employers to be prepared. Learn more: https://bit.ly/2w3HujZ.



Case mortality for seasonal flu is 0.1%




Covid-19 case mortality according to WHO 0.7% - 3.4% but it estimated case mortality for Italy is lot higher then 3.4% and when the hospital system is overwhelmed then the death rate beginning to raised to 8% or more see below graph from italy
.





Death rate for this graph in Italy approaches almost 9%, because the Hospital is overwhelmied then patients start to die.




If you not convinced that go out a catch it and post your covid-19 symptoms here. Maybe you are the lucky one only have just a minor flu or minor cold symptoms . I not taking any chances and I like my lungs.


Well, now we know.
The COVID-19 is a virus with a strangely long incubation period coupled with being highly transmissible and just deadly enough (3% to 5% death rate) to cause fear within the population. This novel virus is not going to go away for a while; it will most likely ( hope not) stick to the global populace like glue for the rest of the year, and like the Spanish Flu which was active for around two years, the longer it circulates the more deaths accumulate.


The main reason given for shutting down everything , is to “flatten the curve”, so the numbers don’t spike and overwhelm hospitals. If you’re a serious casualty, you can go to a hospital. But, frankly, they can do nothing for you, except put you on a ventilator, and hope that gives you time to recover. It’s said there are about 150,000 in the US, and you may need it for five or six days.

Lot of people underestimate exponential growth of this covid-19 virus.


PS. Hopefully you now understand why Italy, France, U.K., Canada , India, New York( USA) are shutting down. In the beginning of the outbreak repeat-brainwashed misinformation or maybe underestimate by mainstream media, saying it only the flu and more people die every year of the flu and covid-19 is overhyped.
 
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PornAddict

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these folks probably have weak immune systems

Yes, Young People Are Falling Seriously Ill From Covid-19
In the U.S., 705 of first 2,500 cases range in age from 20 to 44.


https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...ng-people-is-it-dangerous-data-show-it-can-be



PS Hopefully you now realized maybe it better to error in the side of caution and stock up and stay the fuck home then taking a chance that you don't want to catch this may result health damage to your valuable lung.

PPS. It not worth the risk, stay fuck home, chill & Netflix or play Xbox, hobbies, clean up the basement or attics that you been putting it off, or jerk of to porn :decision:
 
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MONTREAL
COVID-19 sufferer issues warning to young people from his hospital bed

Daniel J. Rowe
Digital reporter
@DanielJRowe42 Contact
Published Monday, March 23, 2020 6:09PM EDT
Last Updated Tuesday, March 24, 2020 11:30AM EDT


MONTREAL -- John Lotin is the CEO of a CPR training facility in South Orange, New Jersey.

Lotin contracted the COVID-19 virus when an individual came in to take an a computer-based certification exam at the facility, and Lotin went to check the person's identification login information.

“I noticed the that the individual was sweating and coughing,” he said. “I asked if they were okay and he said he had a cold.”
Lotin said the staff at his office was diligent with wiping down the computers, chairs and components after each candidate.

“I sanitized my hands and wiped down the pens and clipboards,” he said. “I didn’t touch my face, my eyes, nose or mouth. Unfortunately, that was not enough. It’s airborne and we all were in a closed office space without a mask and that was how I was exposed to the virus.”

Lotin’s been at the hospital since Mar. 15 receiving oxygen, and he posted a pair of videos on his Facebook page showing the very real pain that the coronavirus causes.

Lotin said the staff at his office was diligent with wiping down the computers, chairs and components after each candidate.

“I sanitized my hands and wiped down the pens and clipboards,” he said. “I didn’t touch my face, my eyes, nose or mouth. Unfortunately, that was not enough. It’s airborne and we all were in a closed office space without a mask and that was how I was exposed to the virus.”

Lotin’s been at the hospital since Mar. 15 receiving oxygen, and he posted a pair of videos on his Facebook page showing the very real pain that the coronavirus causes.



https://montreal.ctvnews.ca/covid-1...-young-people-from-his-hospital-bed-1.4864930
 

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I’m 26. Coronavirus Sent Me to the Hospital.
Millennials: If you can’t stay at home for others, do it for yourselves.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/23/opinion/coronavirus-young-people.html
By Fiona Lowenstein
Fiona Lowenstein is a writer, producer and yoga teacher.

I’m 26. I don’t have any prior autoimmune or respiratory conditions. I work out six times a week, and abstain from cigarettes. I thought my role in the current health crisis would be as an ally to the elderly and compromised. Then, I was hospitalized for Covid-19.

On Friday, March 13, only a few hours after deciding I would begin to socially distance for the well-being of others, I developed a fever and headache. I tried not to assume the worst, but just in case, my partner and I decided to sleep in separate bedrooms. By the next morning, I had a cough. On Sunday, I started to feel better and my fever was gone. I felt thankful that even if this was coronavirus, I’d most likely be able to ride it out at home, as I’d heard people like myself had little to worry about. I began planning the work I’d catch up on the next day, and the much-needed shower I’d take.

That night I woke up in the middle of the night with chills, vomiting, and shortness of breath. By Monday, I could barely speak more than a few words without feeling like I was gasping for air. I couldn’t walk to the bathroom without panting as if I’d run a mile. On Monday evening, I tried to eat, but found I couldn’t get enough oxygen while doing so. Any task that was at all anxiety-producing — even resetting my MyChart password to communicate with my doctor — left me desperate for oxygen.

There were many reasons that I didn’t want to go to the hospital. When I’d called 311 earlier in the weekend to inquire about a test, I was told people with Covid-19 symptoms must stay home. I’d read this same advice elsewhere, and wanted to do everything possible to prevent spreading the virus if I had it. I also was wary of taking doctors’ attention and hospital resources away from more vulnerable populations who might need them. Finally, I feared that if this wasn’t Covid-19, going to the hospital could expose me to the virus. Ultimately, even with my serious trouble breathing, a part of me believed I would be fine, since I was young and otherwise healthy.

While I was shocked at the development of my symptoms and my ultimate hospitalization, the doctors and nurses were not at all surprised. After I was admitted, I was told that there was a 30-year-old in the next room who was also otherwise healthy, but who had also experienced serious trouble breathing. The hospital staff told me that more and more patients my age were showing up at the E.R. I am thankful to my partner for calling the hospital when my breathing worsened, and to the doctor who insisted we come in. As soon as I received an oxygen tube, I began to feel slight relief. I was lucky to get to the hospital early in the crisis, and receive very attentive care.

There are many reasons to take Covid-19 seriously if you are a millennial. As one of the largest generations in the United States, we can have an enormous influence on the course of this pandemic. Since it’s hypothesized that many infected millennials won’t exhibit symptoms, our social distancing is crucial to the health of more vulnerable populations and can have a huge impact on flattening the curve. Unfortunately, much of our generation — and some of those younger than us —** is not taking this public health crisis seriously enough. We’re continuing to gather in groups, travel internationally, and see quarantine as an extended spring break. As a generation with a supposed commitment to social justice, we should be stepping up in our role as allies to more vulnerable populations. Yet, somehow the message of staying home still isn’t permeating our ageism and ableism.

Millennials, if you can’t be good allies, at least stay home to protect yourselves. Our invulnerability to this disease is a myth — one I have experienced firsthand. Countries in Europe and Asia are reporting younger and younger patients. The New York Times reported this week that nearly 40 percent of hospitalized Covid patients in the U.S. are under 54 years old. What’s worse is that when medical professionals have been forced to make choices about who lives and who dies in other countries, our generation is often chosen to receive treatment. So not only are we risking our own health, our presence in hospitals diminishes the care other groups may receive.

We’re also a generation that tends to opt out of buying health insurance, as it’s expensive and many of us — myself included — work gig economy jobs that don’t provide benefits. We often live in crowded apartments with roommates, which means our ability to mitigate risks is lower, and we must rely on and trust each other. We’re also more likely to live with our parents than other generations, and thus may risk spreading the virus to loved ones with less chance of surviving it.

Millennials are reported to care deeply about wellness and social justice. I know, because I run a popular events series about the intersection of the two topics. I wish individuals weren’t facing such a high burden of responsibility, but in the absence of early and appropriate action from our government, we have no other choice. Now is the time to walk the talk. There is much about our society that we are inheriting that we can’t control. Let’s try to make an impact where we can.
 

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Jon Passantino
@passantino
Breaking: A child under the age of 18 has died of coronavirus in Los Angeles, public health officials announce, in what is believed to be the first child death from the virus in the US.

“A devastating reminder that COVID-19 infects people of all ages,” LA health official says.

https://twitter.com/passantino/status/1242540756209774592
 

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Grocery store worker in his 40s is Ontario’s youngest COVID-19 victim as death toll hits 15
https://www.thestar.com/politics/pr...-reports-a-25-per-cent-increase-in-cases.html
Rob Ferguson
By Rob FergusonQueen's Park Bureau

A man in his 40s who worked at a Real Canadian Superstore in Oshawa has become the youngest victim of COVID-19 in Ontario as the province’s death toll increased to 15 Thursday, health officials say.

That was a jump of six fatalities in a 24-hour period that saw another 170 cases of the new coronavirus confirmed, a sharp rise of 25 per cent to 858.

Across Canada, there were 3,579 cases and 35 deaths with dry cough, fever and chills being among the most-reported symptoms.


Ontario’s chief medical officer of health said he would not be surprised to see the number of new cases in this province start rising by 200 or more daily.

That’s because thousands and thousands of Ontarians who have returned from March break and other travel abroad may be “incubating” the virus circulating in global vacation spots and airports, Dr. David Williams said.


“We are in this upswing,” he told a regular daily briefing at Queen’s Park, urging people to stay at home if they can and stay at least two metres away from others when out and about.

The unidentified worker from the Gibb St. Superstore is one of two COVID-19 deaths below the age of 70 to date, said Williams. The other was a Halton Region man in his 50s region who had underlying health conditions.


Superstore management revealed Monday that the worker, who had no recent travel history, had tested positive but not been in the store for seven days.

The store moved to reassure concerned shoppers on its Facebook page, noting the premises were given a thorough cleaning and assured by Durham Region public health officials “the risk to our customers is very low.”

At least 12 of Ontario’s new cases have been admitted to hospital, including a woman in her 20s from Toronto who had close contact with a person who had tested positive, and a London-area man also in his 20s.

There are now an estimated 50 Ontarians in hospital with the virus, up from 20 last week at this time. Twenty-nine of the patients now hospitalized are in intensive care, with 20 on ventilators.

But plenty of capacity remains in Ontario hospitals, officials said. Still, Health Minister Christine Elliott defended moves by some hospitals to delay some cancer and other surgeries to reserve space for an expected wave of COVID-19 patients.

“I’m sure it’s distressing,” she said. “But we absolutely need to create capacity.”

In Ottawa, chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam said authorities are getting a better handle on the impacts of COVID-19 on the health-care system.

About six per cent of cases are being hospitalized, 2.6 per cent becoming critically ill and one per cent fatal.

“The fact that Canada’s fatality rate is at one per cent indicates that the health-care system is not currently overwhelmed,” she said.

“But these fatalities could be further reduced by preventing the illness in our most vulnerable population,” she added.

“Many of the deaths in Canada have been linked to outbreaks in long-term care facilities.”

By Thursday, some 158,000 people had been tested, up 58,000 from Monday, Tam said.

 

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Healthy 39-year-old woman dies waiting for coronavirus test results

By Lee Brown

March 22, 2020 | 1:09pm | Updated

A healthy 39-year-old social worker died days after initially turning down a coronavirus test because she was told she was “low-risk,” her boyfriend said in a heartbreaking Facebook post.

Josh Anderson says he found girlfriend Natasha Ott dead in her apartment in New Orleans on Friday as she still awaited news on whether her sickness and fever were actually COVID-19.

He said Ott — who helped people who are HIV-positive — had first told him on March 10 that she had a “respiratory cold” and “tiny fever.”

“They sent her home, but didn’t test her — she was told she was low-risk,” he wrote, calling his partner “a profoundly kind, passionate, funny and loving 39-year-old woman in good health.”

Her own clinic only had five test kits available, he said, adding she told him, “I declined to take one so someone else could.”

After her condition deteriorated, she finally got tested on March 16 — almost a week after first falling sick — but was told the results would take at least five days, with a further delay meaning they are still not ready, he said.

Anderson detailed Ott’s worsening mood and health, as well as her attempts to reassure him that she would be fine if she just drank whiskey.

He finally “found her dead in her kitchen” at 8 p.m. Friday while checking up because she had failed to respond to texts or calls.

“For those of you not fortunate enough to have known her — know this: it’s an immeasurable loss,” he wrote.

“And seeing a woman I knew to be so full of life lying on the floor lifeless was devastating. I was afraid to touch her. I held her anyway,” he said.

He warned that the “government is ill-prepared for this pandemic in a way that has and will cost lives,” while urging people to “cherish your loved ones like you could lose them.”

“The time for joking about Covid-19 is over,” he wrote.

https://nypost.com/2020/03/22/39-year-old-woman-dies-waiting-for-coronavirus-test-results/
 
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