Coronavirus | PUNT ROAD END | Richmond Tigers Forum
  • IMPORTANT // Please look after your loved ones, yourself and be kind to others. If you are feeling that the world is too hard to handle there is always help - I implore you not to hesitate in contacting one of these wonderful organisations Lifeline and Beyond Blue ... and I'm sure reaching out to our PRE community we will find a way to help. T.

Coronavirus

AngryAnt

Tiger Legend
Nov 25, 2004
27,017
14,792
Continuing on, so the pattern seems to be you get sick, flu symptoms - you either get better in two weeks or you get worse in the second week. Then you become critical and chances of mortality go up to 4-5%, if you can't breathe and your immune system goes on the fritz then it's the ICU for you and 15% chance of mortality. If you go into severe immune response and organ failure then you are pretty much screwed.

Where I am in Indonesia now they are still claiming no cases, which I find very hard to believe given many people have returned from China and the large volume of travel from here and other countries in the region. Could be a failure to diagnose with poor testing, or a cover-up, or both. I'd expect to see cases here very soon given population density.
 

eZyT

Tiger Legend
Jun 28, 2019
21,434
25,775
'Wuhan flu' works for me. I don't care for our Chief Medical Officer's PC-ness.

Heres how my brain works,

the first thing I thought of when I read COVID-19

was a highlight reel of Trent Cotchin last successful premiership campaign.
 
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Baloo

Delisted Free Agent
Nov 8, 2005
44,113
18,925
A vaccine 'may be ready in 18 months'..according to WHO.
Look at the damage this virus has done in one month.

I'm currently under "split ops" at work. 50% in the office, 50% working from home. Not sure my marriage will cope with working from home if this drags on for months
 

LeeToRainesToRoach

Tiger Legend
Jun 4, 2006
33,186
11,546
Melbourne
44,852 cases
1,113 deaths (2.48%)
8,242 severe (18%)
4,536 recovered (10%)

Spread definitely declining in China, but the number of dead and seriously ill is chugging along. Measures appear to be working, but they won't want to release the pressure too early.

Edit - Following 2pm bump:

45,171 cases
1,115 deaths (2.47%)
8,216 severe (18%)
4,794 recovered (11%)
 
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eZyT

Tiger Legend
Jun 28, 2019
21,434
25,775
I'm currently under "split ops" at work. 50% in the office, 50% working from home. Not sure my marriage will cope with working from home if this drags on for months

Just get your wife to stash the '17 and '19 GF DVD's somewhere that you'lle never find them and you should be fine.

I actually reckon they should rebrand the 'Victory Packs' as 'Working from Home'
 

MD Jazz

Don't understand football? Talk to the hand.
Feb 3, 2017
13,329
13,713
Coronavirus emergency 'holds a very grave threat' for world - WHO

The WHO has certainly changed their tune from as little as 3 weeks ago. Been a long month..

Now given the official generic name of COVID-19.

In better news still only 15 cases reported in Australia which has been stable for many days now & no deaths.

You need to slow down with your disaster outlook, you're gonna need months of therapy soon if you don't stop with the negative vibes.

New cases are declining outside of Hubei, and have been since 2nd Feb.

Getting back to work will be slow and there are rigorous requirements being placed on the factories - below is a summary of requirements we received from one supplier. But they will be getting back to work, albeit slowly and in reduced numbers.


Local county is planning to let large scale factory to come back to work first,

……………... has sent the application for resuming work.

To resume the work, factories need to meet:

1/ One mask each worker each day

2/ Five days or more preparation medical disinfectant, book recording for each cleaning, twice a day.

3/ prepare Gun thermometer for each 100 worker, book record twice a day for each worker.

4/ written Plan as for how to have lunch in canteen.

5/ written Plan as for how to isolate each working position as far as possible.

6/ Only local workers (no history to be out of city within two weeks) can come back to work. Each city has checking point, for people from other cities, if body temperate is not normal at checking point, they will be sent to hospital right away, if the temperature is normal, they need to be self-isolated at home or dormitory for at least two weeks (at checking point, they need to describe clearly where to be self-isolated, and local authority will check each day on them), and get certificate from local authority before to work.

7/ if one worker is found to be virus infected, then the whole workshop or factory’s people will be isolated for two weeks, that could be a disaster.
 

LeeToRainesToRoach

Tiger Legend
Jun 4, 2006
33,186
11,546
Melbourne
Well. It's not influenza. And it's not only in Wuhan. So, I'd like to say it's not completely wrong, but...

It kickstarted in Wuhan. Likewise, Ebola and Zika are place names. But the politically correct WHO has since made new rules to forbid this method of naming.

And if you don't develop the serious version, symptoms are like those of the 'flu. But we can simply call it 'Wuhan' to satisfy the pedants. Two syllables are easier than co-ro-na-vi-rus.
 

LeeToRainesToRoach

Tiger Legend
Jun 4, 2006
33,186
11,546
Melbourne
SARS, Bird Flu, MERS didn't have place names

They weren't front and centre in the news, either. Not like this one. Think MERS is ongoing. Even that is identified with a region (Middle East Respiratory Syndrome).

The three flu pandemics of last century were widely known as Spanish flu, Asian flu and Hong Kong flu but are now referred to as H1N1, H2N2 and H3N2. I'm happy to leave the latter jargon to researchers.
 
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TigerMasochist

Walks softly carries a big stick.
Jul 13, 2003
25,571
11,446
SARS, Bird Flu, MERS didn't have place names
But then there's Spanish flu n Indian swine flu, African swine fever and probably a heap of other major virus out breaks that were colloquially named after the region they started in. There's always an official scientific / medical term for these things, it's only recently that it has become inappropriate to identify by colloquial name for something that occurs.
 
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Sintiger

Tiger Legend
Aug 11, 2010
18,201
17,597
Camberwell
It kickstarted in Wuhan. Likewise, Ebola and Zika are place names. But the politically correct WHO has since made new rules to forbid this method of naming.

And if you don't develop the serious version, symptoms are like those of the 'flu. But we can simply call it 'Wuhan' to satisfy the pedants. Two syllables are easier than co-ro-na-vi-rus.
SARS was a coronavirus as was MERS and now this one.
coronavirus is a type of virus and they all get names. They have named this one.
It has got nothing to do with political correctness and it’s not a new rule.