Ajax wrote:I think he was just managing expectations.
And trying to fend off massive, potentially wasteful and harmful off-label use of drugs that are currently essential to people with malaria and connective tissue diseases.
Moderator: Soñadora
Ajax wrote:I think he was just managing expectations.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:I think he was just managing expectations.
And trying to fend off massive, potentially wasteful and harmful off-label use of drugs that are currently essential to people with malaria and connective tissue diseases.
Ajax wrote:I spoke to my office mate today.
First, he is at work but feeling pretty afraid. For himself and his live-in mother in law, who has the ubiquitous "underlying conditions."
He says that plenty of people are still working simply because they don't want to use their vacation. This is just stupid, we are a large, global defense contractor with paid leave, not a dry-cleaning service. The Gov. of Maryland just announced that all non-essential businesses will be shut down, beginning at 5pm today. In his decree, there were some exemptions, specifically Paragraph E, section ii: Civilian contractors supporting defense and intelligence agencies.
Yes, that aptly describes my employer but the REALITY of the situation, is that we could function with a skeleton crew of 4 people indefinitely, instead of asking 166 people to come in every day. The company says that they will be drafting "hall passes" to hand out to employees to show police, should they be stopped and questioned about their activities.
Jamie wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:I think he was just managing expectations.
And trying to fend off massive, potentially wasteful and harmful off-label use of drugs that are currently essential to people with malaria and connective tissue diseases.
So, ah...you're under quarantine?
Ajax wrote:I spoke to my office mate today.
First, he is at work but feeling pretty afraid. For himself and his live-in mother in law, who has the ubiquitous "underlying conditions."
He says that plenty of people are still working simply because they don't want to use their vacation. This is just stupid, we are a large, global defense contractor with paid leave, not a dry-cleaning service. The Gov. of Maryland just announced that all non-essential businesses will be shut down, beginning at 5pm today. In his decree, there were some exemptions, specifically Paragraph E, section ii: Civilian contractors supporting defense and intelligence agencies.
Yes, that aptly describes my employer but the REALITY of the situation, is that we could function with a skeleton crew of 4 people indefinitely, instead of asking 166 people to come in every day. The company says that they will be drafting "hall passes" to hand out to employees to show police, should they be stopped and questioned about their activities.
Ajax wrote:Ouch. 6-10 weeks? You think it will be that long?
I shouldn't bitch. I have 8 weeks of leave and I can go back to work any time I want to... if I want to risk exposure.
LarryHoward wrote:Ajax wrote:Ouch. 6-10 weeks? You think it will be that long?
I shouldn't bitch. I have 8 weeks of leave and I can go back to work any time I want to... if I want to risk exposure.
Yeah, I do. Even if we get the testing Hogan promised, we are early in the cycle of this disease. We won’t know when we can start to return to normal for at least a few weeks.
As you may have heard, Newport-Bermuda race scheduled for 19 June got cancelled today due to CV-19. 19 June. Let that sink in.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Hey, All.
Kim, what extraordinarily miserable bad luck. I'll hold you in the light. Hope everyone else has been doing well.
Eric
We've all been speculating on what kind of TSA agent you had for your body cavity search. I hope she was a hot, Amazonian.
She had huge hands.
Benno von Humpback wrote:Jamie wrote:Benno von Humpback wrote:Ajax wrote:I think he was just managing expectations.
And trying to fend off massive, potentially wasteful and harmful off-label use of drugs that are currently essential to people with malaria and connective tissue diseases.
So, ah...you're under quarantine?
Yes. Day 8 and feeling well.
LarryHoward wrote:Ajax wrote:Ouch. 6-10 weeks? You think it will be that long?
I shouldn't bitch. I have 8 weeks of leave and I can go back to work any time I want to... if I want to risk exposure.
Yeah, I do. Even if we get the testing Hogan promised, we are early in the cycle of this disease. We won’t know when we can start to return to normal for at least a few weeks.
As you may have heard, Newport-Bermuda race scheduled for 19 June got cancelled today due to CV-19. 19 June. Let that sink in.
SemiSalt wrote:I did a quick and dirty calculation this morning. New cases per day in the US are increasing in the US 31% each day. In Italy, it's been 13% increase per day for most of March. So the isolation schemes do have a big effect.
LarryHoward wrote:SemiSalt wrote:I did a quick and dirty calculation this morning. New cases per day in the US are increasing in the US 31% each day. In Italy, it's been 13% increase per day for most of March. So the isolation schemes do have a big effect.
Without widespread testing, it's impossible to draw conclusions. One of my managers'daughter is in NYC (and has been laid off). She reports that they are being told they won;t be tested unless they are hospitalized. Just stay home.
kdh wrote:LarryHoward wrote:SemiSalt wrote:I did a quick and dirty calculation this morning. New cases per day in the US are increasing in the US 31% each day. In Italy, it's been 13% increase per day for most of March. So the isolation schemes do have a big effect.
Without widespread testing, it's impossible to draw conclusions. One of my managers'daughter is in NYC (and has been laid off). She reports that they are being told they won;t be tested unless they are hospitalized. Just stay home.
It is not impossible to draw conclusions without widespread testing. The testing is not perfect, but this doesn't make it useless. For one, we can look at a slowing of death rates as an indicator of our efforts having an effect. Deaths, I imagine, are being counted.
Semi has the right approach. The percent increase in infections or deaths is the statistic we should be tracking, regardless of when infections started. If journalists were any good at math they wouldn't be journalists, but their coverage sucks. "Big increase overnight" means nothing.
kdh wrote:LarryHoward wrote:SemiSalt wrote:I did a quick and dirty calculation this morning. New cases per day in the US are increasing in the US 31% each day. In Italy, it's been 13% increase per day for most of March. So the isolation schemes do have a big effect.
Without widespread testing, it's impossible to draw conclusions. One of my managers'daughter is in NYC (and has been laid off). She reports that they are being told they won;t be tested unless they are hospitalized. Just stay home.
It is not impossible to draw conclusions without widespread testing. The testing is not perfect, but this doesn't make it useless. For one, we can look at a slowing of death rates as an indicator of our efforts having an effect. Deaths, I imagine, are being counted.
Semi has the right approach. The percent increase in infections or deaths is the statistic we should be tracking, regardless of when infections started. If journalists were any good at math they wouldn't be journalists, but their coverage sucks. "Big increase overnight" means nothing.
kdh wrote:Here's a basic modeling perspective. The process which is: I get sick, make others sick, they do the same, and so on, describes exponential growth. On a log scale an exponential looks like a line. Here's a count of US COVID-19 cases on a log scale.
There are data problems associated with testing but it's less credible that testing availability is growing exponentially than the epidemic is.
For now, we're fucked. We need the line on the log scale to flatten.