wizards8507
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Mostly the mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced business closures from the governors.What government actions are you specifically referring to?
Mostly the mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced business closures from the governors.What government actions are you specifically referring to?
One of my friends is a writer in Boston, he wrote this piece about helping the industry. One tip is to buy gift cards to favorite spots for use later when it's over.
Lawyers of IE, help me out. Why aren't we seeing any legal filings against any of this bullshit? First Amendment, Second Amendment, Fifth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, etc.
Lawyers of IE, help me out. Why aren't we seeing any legal filings against any of this bullshit? First Amendment, Second Amendment, Fifth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, etc.
Mostly the mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced business closures from the governors.
What government actions are you specifically referring to?
I think you are looking at this from a different lense than me. I would think far greater legal action could be taken by employees, who become infected (possibly dying, and possibly infecting their loved ones) by going into work when a lot of companies aren't following the CDC guidelines. A lot of businesses deem themselves essential. Which a lot of them aren't. The stay at home order in my state is very vague and leaves a lot open to interpretation. It is very vague and has an an out for almost any business.
I'm personally very surprised we haven't seen First Amendment lawsuits over them closing churches.
I'm personally very surprised we haven't seen First Amendment lawsuits over them closing churches.
Lawyers of IE, help me out. Why aren't we seeing any legal filings against any of this bullshit? First Amendment, Second Amendment, Fifth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, etc.
Mostly the mandatory stay-at-home orders and forced business closures from the governors.
I just read that there have been 40,000,000 cases, 330,000 hospitalizations and 44,000 deaths in the US this year from the flu.
I know that this is different but wow, those are big numbers.
I just read that there have been 40,000,000 cases, 330,000 hospitalizations and 44,000 deaths in the US this year from the flu.
I know that this is different but wow, those are big numbers.
What methods are used to estimate the number of influenza-associated hospitalizations in the U.S.?
Laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated hospitalization rates are obtained from the Influenza Hospitalization Surveillance Network (FluSurv-NET), a collaboration between CDC, the Emerging Infections Program Network, and selected state and local health departments in 13 geographically distributed areas in the United States that conduct population-based surveillance. The network includes hospitals that serve roughly 9% of the U.S. population. The reported numbers of hospitalizations are used to calculate hospitalization rates and the rates are adjusted to correct for under-detection of influenza. This adjustment is done by using the percent of persons hospitalized with respiratory illness who were tested for influenza and the average sensitivity of influenza tests used in the participating FluSurv-NET hospitals. The data on influenza testing can lag up to two years after the end of the season, so for more recent seasons, testing data from prior seasons is used (1).
Adjusted rates are applied to the U.S. population by age group to estimate the total number of influenza-associated hospitalizations.
What methods are used to estimate the number of influenza-associated deaths in the U.S.?
The methods to estimate the annual number of influenza-associated deaths have been described in detail elsewhere (1-2). The model uses a ratio of deaths-to-hospitalizations in order to estimate the total influenza-associated deaths from the estimated number of influenza-associated hospitalizations.
We first look at how many in-hospital deaths were observed in FluSurv-NET. The in-hospital deaths are adjusted for under-detection of influenza using methods similar to those described above for hospitalizations using data on the frequency and sensitivity of influenza testing. Second, because not all deaths related to influenza occur in the hospital, we use death certificate data to estimate how likely deaths are to occur outside the hospital. We look at death certificates that have pneumonia or influenza causes (P&I), other respiratory and circulatory causes (R&C), or other non-respiratory, non-circulatory causes of death, because deaths related to influenza may not have influenza listed as a cause of death. We use information on the causes of death from FluSurv-NET to determine the mixture of P&I, R&C, and other coded deaths to include in our investigation of death certificate data. Finally, once we estimate the proportion of influenza-associated deaths that occurred outside of the hospital, we can estimate the deaths-to-hospitalization ratio.
Data needed to estimate influenza-associated deaths may lag for up to two years after the season ends. When this is not yet available for the season being estimated, we adjust based on values observed in prior seasons (e.g., the 2010-2011 season through the 2016-2017 season) and update the estimates when more current data become available.
So what's your point? That the flu with it's vaccines and FDA-approved OTC medications has a death rate of .0011% this year?
I just read that there have been 40,000,000 cases, 330,000 hospitalizations and 44,000 deaths in the US this year from the flu.
I know that this is different but wow, those are big numbers.
I think I said this earlier, but one of the things that we have to do is fire up our ethics committee in order to put together our triage plan. I hope it doesn't get to that point, but triaging the use of resources involves placing some sort of "value" on the individuals who need it. I have seen special needs being one of the weighting factors previously in place, not here, but I think there was a recent story in the SB Tribune about Indiana's policy.
If you have not already done so, reach out to the hospitals in your area to find out if they have a triage policy, and how they come to their value determination. If special needs is a part of their equation, you need to know that so you can choose a hospital that does not factor that in (if you ever have that need, hopefully not). If they don't or can't tell you what their policy is, reach out to whoever your local disability-rights center is. They may have that info available, or they can help provide some leverage in getting access to that info.
They probably exist but treating religious gatherings and non-religious gatherings identically complies with existing SC precedent on religious freedom.
EDIT: I suppose you could be talking about peaceable assembly. The SC has given states latitude in emergencies for quarantines. Not having looked at them in any detail: the state would probably have to establish the existence of a danger, that the measures were narrowly tailored to address it with minimal infringement, and that the prohibition was temporary.
Bundesliga is back on May 2nd.
And you still have some media members still saying we won't see sports in 2020.
Lawyers of IE, help me out. Why aren't we seeing any legal filings against any of this bullshit? First Amendment, Second Amendment, Fifth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment, etc.
Assuming but,... I think some were never in tune to the massive nature of the flu is basically his point.
I always knew that thousands die each year. But those numbers are really bad. Worse than 1968 Honk Kong flu.
And the Taiwan flu of 1986 was the sickest I've ever been. Brutal two weeks.
What methods are used to estimate the number of influenza-associated deaths in the U.S.?
The methods to estimate the annual number of influenza-associated deaths have been described in detail elsewhere (1-2). The model uses a ratio of deaths-to-hospitalizations in order to estimate the total influenza-associated deaths from the estimated number of influenza-associated hospitalizations.
We first look at how many in-hospital deaths were observed in FluSurv-NET. The in-hospital deaths are adjusted for under-detection of influenza using methods similar to those described above for hospitalizations using data on the frequency and sensitivity of influenza testing. Second, because not all deaths related to influenza occur in the hospital, we use death certificate data to estimate how likely deaths are to occur outside the hospital. We look at death certificates that have pneumonia or influenza causes (P&I), other respiratory and circulatory causes (R&C), or other non-respiratory, non-circulatory causes of death, because deaths related to influenza may not have influenza listed as a cause of death. We use information on the causes of death from FluSurv-NET to determine the mixture of P&I, R&C, and other coded deaths to include in our investigation of death certificate data. Finally, once we estimate the proportion of influenza-associated deaths that occurred outside of the hospital, we can estimate the deaths-to-hospitalization ratio.
Data needed to estimate influenza-associated deaths may lag for up to two years after the season ends. When this is not yet available for the season being estimated, we adjust based on values observed in prior seasons (e.g., the 2010-2011 season through the 2016-2017 season) and update the estimates when more current data become available.
Don't forget to give Wiz the IE billing rate.
This is where I'm at. Personally I'm fine going to work. We're deemed essential. I'm in an office and the rest of my staff in this building is working from home so my risk is very low, but I have wondered if any employee does get infected and infects others what may happen.
I think you are looking at this from a different lense than me. I would think far greater legal action could be taken by employees, who become infected (possibly dying, and possibly infecting their loved ones) by going into work when a lot of companies aren't following the CDC guidelines. A lot of businesses deem themselves essential. Which a lot of them aren't. The stay at home order in my state is very vague and leaves a lot open to interpretation. It is very vague and has an an out for almost any business.
Hats off to Cali too, redeploying ventilators to some other states. I did not hear NY as being one of the states (AZ, DE), so perhaps they (NY) now feel they are covered.
Why would NY donate when they’re epicenter of the nation. Someone said the state has more cases than every country except 3 maybe 4 nationally. Help me understand.
I saw this. The whole thing screams hoax....
Is a Kern County real, because I’m betting that post is fake
I did some googling on it, and it smells of trolls big time. The amount of dumb out there is probably about the same level of trolls these days, so who knows.
So many ways to respond to that.
She died btw. Found the gofundme, her family and friends on facebook. Seems a lot of work to ferret out a moron.
Don't forget to give Wiz the IE billing rate.
This is where I'm at. Personally I'm fine going to work. We're deemed essential. I'm in an office and the rest of my staff in this building is working from home so my risk is very low, but I have wondered if any employee does get infected and infects others what may happen.