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Pinecone

Has No Life - Lives on TB

Oregon coronavirus: ‘Low risk but pay attention’
CORONAVIRUS

76 people monitored in Oregon, but no confirmed cases

by: Amy Frazier, KOIN 6 News Staff
Posted: Feb 26, 2020 / 11:20 AM PST / Updated: Feb 26, 2020 / 05:45 PM PST

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — The Oregon Health Authority continues to monitor 76 people in the state for coronavirus, but there are still no confirmed cases of it in Oregon.

OHA said they will post data on their website beginning March 3. Those being “monitored” don’t have symptoms but may have been exposed to it somehow. People “under investigation” are people with symptoms who were exposed somehow.

Multnomah County Public Health Officer Dr. Jennifer Vines and OHA Senior Health Advisor Emilio De Bess both said they are prepared for whatever happens.

“Ever since we started working on coronavirus planning we’ve had a framework for different scenarios,” Vines said, including a handful of cases or widespread cases. “We’ve been thinking through this really since mid-January when it became clear there was person-to-person spread in China.”

If there is a widespread outbreak, Vines said they may recommend closing schools and urging teleworking policies for businesses.
Multnomah

“But we also have to maintain basic infrastructure so people need health care we need to support our first responders and law enforcement,” she said.

DeBess said health officials will also ask people to help by staying home if they’re ill.

“We’re going to ask people like we do in terms of any pandemic or any situation that might happen,” he told KOIN 6 News. Have food and water at home in case “you were asked to quarantine, either because you’re sick or there’s a location where there’s a high amount of transmission.”

Vines said people should figure out what their employer’s sick policy is, what parents might do for child care and make sure your household is self-sufficient.

Quick health tips
Should you wear a mask? Vines said the CDC is not recommending people wear masks in public settings, which she attributes “to a lack of science on whether or not they actually work to protect people in those settings.”

But health care settings are completely different, she said. Masks should be offered and gloves are part of the recommendation for health care workers.

Other tips include staying away from sick people, washing your hands frequently — especially after being on public transit. Cover your coughs and sneezes and stay home if you’re sick.

DeBess said the US does not right now have a “sustained transmission” as other countries do.

“We’re still at a low risk, but we still need to pay attention, and pay attention means take the precautions we’ve been talking to you about for a long time.”

“The idea that we don’t know what to do or we’re not prepared is false,” Vines told KOIN 6 News.
“Many of us worked on H1N1. We have the skills and knowledge. We just have to figure out how we’re going to apply it in this setting with all the uncertainties around this virus and the uncertainties of if, when and how it may arrive in our community.”

Trump names Pence to lead US response to coronavirus threat
President Donald Trump says the U.S. is “very, very ready” for whatever the new coronavirus threat brings. He has put Vice President Mike Pence in charge of overseeing the nation’s response, working with the government’s top health authorities.

Trump has been pushing back against criticism that his administration isn’t doing enough to meet the coronavirus threat.

On Capitol Hill, lawmakers are calling for much more money than the $2.5 billion the White House has requested, and Trump indicated at a news conference that he’d be open to more spending.
Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer has asked for $8.5 billion.

Meanwhile, two new coronavirus cases have been reported in Americans who had traveled on the Diamond Princess cruise ship, health officials said Wednesday. The new cases bring the U.S. tally to 59.

On Tuesday, San Francisco Mayor London Breed declared a local emergency amid the global coronavirus outbreak.

There are still zero confirmed cases of the virus in San Francisco, but the mayor and Department of Public Health say this is the right step to take at this time.

Airline travel affected
The new virus is taking a broader toll on airline travel. Most airlines have already stopped flying to China, and now Delta Air Lines is sharply cutting back on flights between the U.S. and Seoul, South Korea, because of the outbreak.

Delta said Wednesday it will suspend flights between Minneapolis and Seoul beginning this weekend and lasting until at least April 30. The airline will also reduce the number of flights from Korea to Atlanta, Detroit and Seattle.


Delta, United and American have already suspended all flights to and from mainland China and Hong Kong for several more weeks.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Spot on, IMHO...

The average American voter has a 10 second attention span...

*IF* this really takes off, the economy tanks, and nothing is done to help people with healthcare costs that contract it ( I couldn't believe the guy who was charged almost 4 grand for a negative test )... Yes.

This virus COULD see America voting in a socialist government.

Tucker Carlson explained it on Monday's show but, of course, the clip has been pulled down by Youtube

The Black Swan
 

marsh

On TB every waking moment
Report from north Idaho...Walmart is getting hammered. No freeze dried stuff, very lite T.P. ,and the wife said it looks like the masses have awakened. Large holes in supply, and...AND... SIGNS that say not available due to.....SUPPLY ISSUES.

I HOPE YOU HAVE BEEN BUSY LITTLE SQUIRRELS.
Today I finished my grocery shopping for the next month (plus a bit extra.) After living in the remote mountains of N. CA for 30 years, I am used to shopping only twice a month with the big shop up front.

S of Sacramento, CA Target had huge holes in gator aide, TP and paper towels. I saw a man putting canned goods in his cart and another with bags of beans and flour. Everything else was normal. The supermarket had no shortages with large bags of pinto beans and rice. Water was stacked in the aisle. Beans in cans were on sale and there was plenty of gator aid. I saw one lady with a mask. The first that I have seen.

I think we are still riding point. Should stir this weekend with monthly checks coming in.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Today I finished my grocery shopping for the next month (plus a bit extra.) After living in the remote mountains of N. CA for 30 years, I am used to shopping only twice a month with the big shop up front.

S of Sacramento, CA Target had huge holes in gator aide, TP and paper towels. I saw a man putting canned goods in his cart and another with bags of beans and flour. Everything else was normal. The supermarket had no shortages with large bags of pinto beans and rice. Water was stacked in the aisle. Beans in cans were on sale and there was plenty of gator aid. I saw one lady with a mask. The first that I have seen.

I think we are still riding point. Should stir this weekend with monthly checks coming in.

Yes, I have been up to grocery shopping for the next month (plus a bit extra.) as well.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
This seems a little off topic at this stage of things, but I just read chapter 39 of Koontz's Eyes of Darkness. My book is a 1981 Pocketbooks issue and the virus mentioned in it is called Gorki-400 which was brought to the U.S. by a Russian defector and escaped the lab here on a panicked lab worker who'd had an accident. There was no mention of the Wuhan bio-lab in this copy of the book, which, by the way, was issued with the author being Leigh Nichols, one of Koonts' early pen names.
The Berkley edition from 1996 has it. I just checked it now; old friend of the family who used to visit all the time had eye surgery and thus she was unable to read for any length of time. She could have all the screen time she cared to, though. It was kind of funny; she'd send me her old Agatha Christie books and I'd send her Agatha Christie DVDs. So one day she sends this huge box full of her old Dean Koontz books. Eyes of Darkness was one of them.
 

Rucus Sunday

Veteran Member
Sheeple will be sheeple, never prepared, always high on Hopium. That said, we all remember bird flu, right? I do, very, very well. Panic in the wind (and here at TB2k). We spent hundreds on extra preps. Big fat nothingburger. But even so, if the official, unanimous position of fed gov at this point re the Corona virus is not saying, at a minimum, "Don't panic, do what you can to have as close to 2 weeks of food and water on hand, " then it is failing to take care of the sheeple ... in an election year. That's not what I'm hearing. It's almost like they got up from the blackjack table and decided the roulette table looks more interesting. Well, if you're gonna go all in during an election year, better hope you're right.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
China Economy‏ @CE_ChinaEconomy 52m52 minutes ago

EgyptAir said on Wednesday it would postpone resumption of flight to and from China for "technical restrictions. It called on passengers affected by cancellation of flights to contact relevant agency for refund or rescheduling.
 

jward

passin' thru





COVID19

@V2019N


#US #CA UC Davis Medical Center CEO “Upon admission, our team asked public health officials if this case could be #COVIDー19. We requested COVID-19 testing by
@CDCgov
since neither Sacramento Co. nor
@CAPublicHealth
is doing testing for coronavirus at this time."

COVID19
@V2019N
2h

Replying to
@V2019N
Since patient did not fit existing CDC criteria for COVID-19, test was not immediately administered by CDC. -patient arrived at UCD last Wednesday but only tested for the virus on Sun despite a request made by med center officials that they conduct a test when patient admitted.

“Today the CDC confirmed the patient’s test was positive." “This is not the first #COVIDー19 patient we have treated & because of the precautions we have had in place since this patient’s arrival, we believe there has been minimal potential for exposure here.

Nevertheless, a small number of medical center employees asked to stay home & monitor temperatures. Patient was transferred to UC Davis from “another Northern California hospital” on Wed Feb 19.

Patient had already been intubated (at previous hospital), was on a ventilator, and given droplet protection orders because of an undiagnosed and suspected viral condition,” the email said. https://davisenterprise.com/local-news/new

This is disastrous feet dragging by CDC. Medical first responders getting ignored. So hard not to believe there are orders from above to stall screening to minimize impact. #coronavirususa #CDC #TESTVIRUSNOW
 

end game

Veteran Member
Call me skeptical...

Two weeks ago they sold off, IIRC, 250 million worth of stock because they were having cash flow issues. 14 days later they announce they have a vaccine and their stock rises 16%. IMHO, it was just a ploy to recoup their losses and the vaccine will not pass the trial...
Take a look at their 10-Q


Seems to be a fair assessment on your part. No income in the field they claim to have an answer for. Here is the real sauce from the the 10-Q

To date, we have not generated any revenue from the sale of potential mRNA medicines. Our revenue has been primarily derived from strategic alliances with Merck, Vertex and AstraZeneca, and from contracts with government-sponsored and private organizations including DARPA, BARDA, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, to discover, develop, and commercialize potential mRNA medicines.
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Bloomberg‏Verified account @business 4m4 minutes ago

#Coronavirus latest: -2,801 deaths and over 82,000 cases globally -U.S. reports first case with no ties to known outbreak -Expert sees epidemic contained by end of April -Saudi Arabia halts religious visits -China leaders including Xi donate own money
 
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