Gene DellaSala Has Coronavirus


If you haven’t seen this yet...our very best wishes and prayers to Gene and his family. 

https://www.audioholics.com/editorials/coronavirus-and-tvs
snapsc
Ya I like the warm fuzzy of us all gathering in six months for the after action review...

except it ain’t gonna be all of us....

and with friends, family and past co-workers in Italy... the overload of ICU is killing people with other malady as HC staff are forced to make brutal allocative decisions...add the ICU required % to your calculations and this virus is deadly way way beyond swine flu
Let’s see, in Massachusetts 101 people supposedly have it.....hmmm, population of the state 6.9 million, let’s do math.....101 divided by 6,900,000 = .0000146 people have it. Lolzzzzz
Run for the hills.......clear the store shelves of that sanitizer.....oh and toilet paper???? Will never grasp that one, sorry. 
By October 2009 an estimated 20,000 people had been hospitalized with Swine flu with over 1,000 deaths.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-flu-usa-obama/obama-declares-swine-flu-a-national-emergency-idUSTRE59N19E20091024

H1N1, declared a public health emergency earlier in the year, has killed more than 1,000 people in the United States and put more than 20,000 in the hospital since it emerged earlier this year, the CDC said. But health officials are quick to note that the actual number of cases cannot be measured.





tomic601
4,412 posts
03-12-2020 7:56pmand with friends, family and past co-workers in Italy... the overload of ICU is killing people with other malady as HC staff are forced to make brutal allocative decisions...

Are you purposely trying to misstate the reason for the high mortality rate in Italy???

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/why-deaths-from-coronavirus-are-so-high-in-italy/

One factor affecting the country’s death rate may be the age of its population—Italy has the oldest population in Europe, with about 23% of residents 65 or older, according to The New York Times. The median age in the country is 47.3, compared with 38.3 in the United States, the Times reported. Many of Italy’s deaths have been among people in their 80s, and 90s, a population known to be more susceptible to severe complications from COVID-19, according to The Local.
Given Italy’s older population, “you would expect their mortality rate to be higher on average, all else being held equal,” compared with a country with a younger population, Gordon told Live Science.