I agree about the antibody testing Don. I guess the other is to know they meet guidelines to open at stages as was suggested and to know if there are spikes that can be caught and squelched.At this point I need to ask...other than actual diagnosis and to see who needs to be treated...what good is a regular test doing? Does it matter how many people test positive in a single moment any more? What I would think would be more useful is doing wide spread antibody tests to see how many people were actually infected and to gather evidence and information as to the severity and symptoms of the virus. The positive negative testing was important in the early stages of this...but as of now...yeah we already know it's bad.
Just curious as to thoughts on this from the Cadre.
And there's your positive thought for the dayDuring a leadership town hall yesterday they pointed out there are viruses we still don’t have a vaccine for after many years like HIV. So you know, that’s nice to think about.
at this point i feel it is needed for sure with people that are being hospitalized and have symptoms so they can be treated correctly and the staff treating them knows to keep themselves safer. beyond that i would agree that antibody testing seems like the way things should be heading right now.At this point I need to ask...other than actual diagnosis and to see who needs to be treated...what good is a regular test doing? Does it matter how many people test positive in a single moment any more? What I would think would be more useful is doing wide spread antibody tests to see how many people were actually infected and to gather evidence and information as to the severity and symptoms of the virus. The positive negative testing was important in the early stages of this...but as of now...yeah we already know it's bad.
Just curious as to thoughts on this from the Cadre.
But...there are vaccines for all sorts of Viral Infections such as:During a leadership town hall yesterday they pointed out there are viruses we still don’t have a vaccine for after many years like HIV. So you know, that’s nice to think about.
But this is only a snapshot at that moment. Not to mention it heavily relies on how many tests are being done. The last two weeks in Louisiana we have been averaging about 200-300 positive cases a day statewide. On Wed 800 positive cases were reported. On Thursday...600 positive cases. Also, that person who tests negative can leave the testing facility and five minutes later become infected. That person will likely not get tested again unless they become sick. So the positive rate at this stage in the game is BS.I still believe positive rate is the most important factor aside from contact tracing results.
This seems to be the real reason.For the mass public it's also a great fear tool.
This kind of proves my above point. I am sure this rate of infection in Utah is not the norm across the US and here in Louisiana it wouldn't surprise me if that rate is much higher.But our epidimiologist stated yesterday that for ever person confirmed with Corona they infect 1.1 other people. Which is actually pretty good. She said ideally that would be less than 1 and closer to zero. It's my understanding that other places the # is above 2 which is pretty scary.
That's what I keep telling my wife.....that and I'm down to one muffinAntibody testing is really the only way
We see in SE PA how protecting the high risk folks go. 85% of deaths in my county were in nursing homes. They've all been under lockdown since early-mid March. The problem is that workers still need to get in and out.I agree on the antibody testing.....I want one for myself.
I'm not so fixated on the running total of positives but focusing on the hospitalization numbers. We have 35 in the hospital and 8 on respirators state wide. I would like to see things open up here while protecting the high risk folks. While I don't want anyone to get sick, most who get sick are asystematic or non life threatening.
Unfortunately...I think this is the norm for nursing homes Chris. It's VERY, VERY sad!An overwhelming percentage of those infected in our county and 60% of our modest death rate has been attributed to nursing home And congregate living situations. I don’t know about your local nursing and post acute care facilities but I know ours are owned by cheap/greedy doctors and staffed predominantly by Minimally trained, barely qualified individuals. Many of whose so cowardly They abandoned their patients as soon as the word began to spread that patients were getting sick. One home where the largest outbreak occurred had ONE staffer show up for the morning shift.
since we know REAL nurses are capable of taking care of our elderly, maybe it’s time our nursing homes stop getting away with the barely care they’ve gotten away with for the last 20+ years.
Of course, everything I’ve described is what I’ve seen and know happens in my area. I would love to think this is not the norm and nursing homes are better managed in other areas.