As Governors like Greg Abbott of Texas begin to lift stay-at-home orders and we start to re-open business and go back to work, how can we tell if it’s going well…or not. Since many don’t trust the media, or politicians, and assume they’ll continue to focus on catastrophe, how can you make a prudent decision about the health of your own family?
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4 replies on “Re-Open for Business as Un-Usual: How Tell If It’s Going Well…or Not”
Personal experience with the outcome of people you actually know or know of that get the virus will be the driving force for each person’s risk assesment.
The standard of “as long as they don’t have gurneys in the hallways” in hospitals isn’t even the best standard. A few years ago, I developed cellulitis on the afternoon of July 4. I decided I’d rather go in before the evening’s festivities rather than after people were arriving with burns from fireworks and such. They stuck me on a bed in the hallway, and that’s where I stayed until they got to me with the antibiotics.
But beds in the hallways is apparently known as a busy holiday afternoon.
From Powerline: CORONAVIRUS IN ONE STATE – April 30, 2020
“99.24% of MN Covid-19 deaths are from long term care facilities and from people with underlying health problems.”
— MDH Infectious Disease Director Kris Ehresmann on April 29
Just more fodder on why we need to open up in Minnesota as we have flattened the curve! And we now know how to manage this —- quarantine the vulnerable!
I beg, as a miserable neighbor to Cambridge and Somerville, MA, that you address the palpable issue that society will reopen but only with facemask Sharia, and the $1,000 jizya for noncompliance. It’s already starting here with corrupt mayors and rigged city councils. What good is it if our society only reopens as much as Iran’s?