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SMc wrote:You sure its just not just a regular road block? Not uncommon on that stretch of road
daring dragoon wrote:hear a talk about a fine of $20000.00 (twenty thousand) if they catch you making cook by beach or river. is this true? is it during covid also or from now on going forward?
redmanjp wrote:Even if they do they could have suffered or still suffering from 'long covid' bro. Which could include lung or heart damage among other things.
On the flip side even young healthy active ppl who had this are struggling to take a breath months after anytime they simply walk up a flight of stairs.
It ain't all about the death rate. Which by the way would have been orders of magnitude higher if it wasn't for public health measures.
redmanjp wrote:Even if they do they could have suffered or still suffering from 'long covid' bro. Which could include lung or heart damage among other things.
On the flip side even young healthy active ppl who had this are struggling to take a breath months after anytime they simply walk up a flight of stairs.
It ain't all about the death rate. Which by the way would have been orders of magnitude higher if it wasn't for public health measures.
drchaos wrote:redmanjp wrote:Even if they do they could have suffered or still suffering from 'long covid' bro. Which could include lung or heart damage among other things.
On the flip side even young healthy active ppl who had this are struggling to take a breath months after anytime they simply walk up a flight of stairs.
It ain't all about the death rate. Which by the way would have been orders of magnitude higher if it wasn't for public health measures.
Unless you have any data to back this up then I call BS
What's the percentage of people developing this new disease you just made up?
Loads of people take a while to recover from any pneumonia .... this is nothing new. If we look at flu pneumonias people can take up to 6 months to recover their almost full lung potential. This is nothing new its been going on since the dawn of time.
Most of yall sheeple just regurgitating what yall hear from MSNBC and Deyalsingh.
ruffneck_12 wrote:They intend to have another pandemic.
They word their news carefully. This first one was just to test our compliance.
The second will be the real deal, and will Eff us in the A.
The only way we can stop it is to show them that we realise what is going on at least.
Please don't eat the chain up
Not editing this reply, quote me on this in 1-3 years.
Dohplaydat wrote:ruffneck_12 wrote:They intend to have another pandemic.
They word their news carefully. This first one was just to test our compliance.
The second will be the real deal, and will Eff us in the A.
The only way we can stop it is to show them that we realise what is going on at least.
Please don't eat the chain up
Not editing this reply, quote me on this in 1-3 years.
Alright I'll play a long.......who is 'they' and why would 'they' want another pandemic?
Dohplaydat wrote:ruffneck_12 wrote:They intend to have another pandemic.
They word their news carefully. This first one was just to test our compliance.
The second will be the real deal, and will Eff us in the A.
The only way we can stop it is to show them that we realise what is going on at least.
Please don't eat the chain up
Not editing this reply, quote me on this in 1-3 years.
Alright I'll play a long.......who is 'they' and why would 'they' want another pandemic?
Dohplaydat wrote:ruffneck_12 wrote:They intend to have another pandemic.
They word their news carefully. This first one was just to test our compliance.
The second will be the real deal, and will Eff us in the A.
The only way we can stop it is to show them that we realise what is going on at least.
Please don't eat the chain up
Not editing this reply, quote me on this in 1-3 years.
Alright I'll play a long.......who is 'they' and why would 'they' want another pandemic?
redakkmooz58 wrote:drchaos wrote:
Unless you have any data to back this up then I call BS
What's the percentage of people developing this new disease you just made up?
Loads of people take a while to recover from any pneumonia .... this is nothing new. If we look at flu pneumonias people can take up to 6 months to recover their almost full lung potential. This is nothing new its been going on since the dawn of time.
Most of yall sheeple just regurgitating what yall hear from MSNBC and Deyalsingh.
buh who d ass care wat u tink or wat u call? u iza nobody trolly pusher at mt hope who feel iz internet docta. srs who care wat u tink compared to 99% of d million scientist n real doctors round d world? yur mudda relllll fool u wid all yur life tellin everybody how "meh son so brite" yuh jr sec jockah nobody
Ben_spanna wrote:Chaguaramas on the boardwalk was packed this weekend gone as usual, total lack of social distancing, CDA normally likes to flex up as being the controller down there... where are they now?
drchaos wrote:redakkmooz58 wrote:drchaos wrote:
Unless you have any data to back this up then I call BS
What's the percentage of people developing this new disease you just made up?
Loads of people take a while to recover from any pneumonia .... this is nothing new. If we look at flu pneumonias people can take up to 6 months to recover their almost full lung potential. This is nothing new its been going on since the dawn of time.
Most of yall sheeple just regurgitating what yall hear from MSNBC and Deyalsingh.
buh who d ass care wat u tink or wat u call? u iza nobody trolly pusher at mt hope who feel iz internet docta. srs who care wat u tink compared to 99% of d million scientist n real doctors round d world? yur mudda relllll fool u wid all yur life tellin everybody how "meh son so brite" yuh jr sec jockah nobody
So haul your DETOUR logic and stuff it up your msnbc regurgitating gullet and present some actual data/clinical studies to back up your claim that people dropping dead from some sheit you made up called " LONG COVID ".
February 19, 2021
Sequelae in Adults at 6 Months After COVID-19 Infection
Jennifer K. Logue, BS1; Nicholas M. Franko, BS1; Denise J. McCulloch, MD, MPH1; et alDylan McDonald, BA1; Ariana Magedson, BS1; Caitlin R. Wolf, BS1; Helen Y. Chu, MD, MPH1
Author Affiliations
JAMA Netw Open. 2021;4(2):e210830. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.0830
COVID-19 Resource Center
Introduction
Many individuals experience persistent symptoms and a decline in health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) illness.1 Existing studies have focused on hospitalized individuals 30 to 90 days after illness onset2-4 and have reported symptoms up to 110 days after illness.3 Longer-term sequelae in outpatients have not been well characterized.
Methods
A longitudinal prospective cohort of adults with laboratory-confirmed severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection was enrolled at the University of Washington with a concurrent cohort of healthy patients in a control group (eAppendix in the Supplement). Electronic informed consent was obtained, and the study was approved by the University of Washington human participants institutional review board. This study followed the Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) reporting guideline. COVID-19 symptom data were obtained at the time of acute illness or retrospectively recounted at a 30-day enrollment visit. A total of 234 participants with COVID-19 were contacted between August and November 2020 to complete a single follow-up questionnaire between 3 and 9 months after illness onset. We did not perform statistical tests for this descriptive analysis because of the small numbers in each subgroup. Data analysis was conducted in R version 4.0.2 (R Project for Statistical Computing).
Results
A total of 177 of 234 participants (75.6%; mean [range] age, 48.0 [18-94] years; 101 [57.1%] women) with COVID-19 completed the survey. Overall, 11 (6.2%) were asymptomatic, 150 (84.7%) were outpatients with mild illness, and 16 (9.0%) had moderate or severe disease requiring hospitalization (Table). Hypertension was the most common comorbidity (23 [13.0%]). The follow-up survey was completed a median (range) of 169 (31-300) days after illness onset among participants with COVID-19 (Figure, A) and 87 (71-144) days after enrollment among 21 patients in the control group. Among participants with COVID-19, persistent symptoms were reported by 17 of 64 patients (26.6%) aged 18 to 39 years, 25 of 83 patients (30.1%) aged 40 to 64 years, and 13 of 30 patients (43.3%) aged 65 years and older. Overall, 49 of 150 outpatients (32.7%), 5 of 16 hospitalized patients (31.3%), and 1 of 21 healthy participants (4.8%) in the control group reported at least 1 persistent symptom. Of 31 patients with hypertension or diabetes, 11 (35.5%) experienced ongoing symptoms.
The most common persistent symptoms were fatigue (24 of 177 patients [13.6%]) and loss of sense of smell or taste (24 patients [13.6%]) (Figure, B). Overall, 23 patients (13.0%) reported other symptoms, including brain fog (4 [2.3%]). A total of 51 outpatients and hospitalized patients (30.7%) reported worse HRQoL compared with baseline vs 4 healthy participants and asymptomatic patients (12.5%); 14 patients (7.9%) reported negative impacts on at least 1 activity of daily living (ADL), the most common being household chores.
Discussion
In this cohort of individuals with COVID-19 who were followed up for as long as 9 months after illness, approximately 30% reported persistent symptoms. A unique aspect of our cohort is the high proportion of outpatients with mild disease. Persistent symptoms were reported by one-third of outpatients in our study, consistent with a previously reported study,4 in which 36% of outpatients had not returned to baseline health by 14 to 21 days following infection. However, this has not been previously described 9 months after infection.
Consistent with existing literature, fatigue was the most commonly reported symptom.2-4 This occurred in 14% of individuals in this study, lower than the 53% to 71%2-4 reported in cohorts of hospitalized patients, likely reflecting the lower acuity of illness in our cohort. Furthermore, impairment in HRQoL has previously been reported among hospitalized patients who have recovered from COVID-19; we found 29% of outpatients reported worsened HRQoL.5
Notably, 14 participants, including 9 nonhospitalized individuals, reported negative impacts on ADLs after infection. With 57.8 million cases worldwide, even a small incidence of long-term debility could have enormous health and economic consequences.6
Study limitations include a small sample size, single study location, potential bias from self-reported symptoms during illness episode, and loss to follow-up of 57 participants. To our knowledge, this study presents the longest follow-up symptom assessment after COVID-19 infection. Our research indicates that the health consequences of COVID-19 extend far beyond acute infection, even among those who experience mild illness. Comprehensive long-term investigation will be necessary to fully understand the impact of this evolving viral pathogen.
Article Information
Accepted for Publication: January 16, 2021.
Published: February 19, 2021. doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.0830
MaxPower wrote:Having a really big problem with the North, West and East ppl coming into South.
Plenty crime and littering.
Phone Surgeon wrote:i went to a funeral the other day by waterloo
had 4 burnings/funerals at the same time
waterloo is a pretty big place so people were spaced out in groups of 10 or 20
the funeral i went to, the person who died had 16 children so just direct kids alone is a big group, plus grandchildren, in laws etc
but again, everyone wearing mask, spaced out properly
police come escorting another funeral, police roll up and start to announce about health ordinance, only 20 people allowed at burning site ( 3 funerals going on already eh, they were the 4th)
and aggressively threatening people and telling them to go to to the car park (apparently car park have no covid)
then they escort in the funeral they brought, police driver come out and give that funeral driver a bounce, ask him how things,
they eh hassle that funeral group at all which had more than 100 people, seems they were running everyone else to make room for them.
Redress10 wrote:Phone Surgeon wrote:i went to a funeral the other day by waterloo
had 4 burnings/funerals at the same time
waterloo is a pretty big place so people were spaced out in groups of 10 or 20
the funeral i went to, the person who died had 16 children so just direct kids alone is a big group, plus grandchildren, in laws etc
but again, everyone wearing mask, spaced out properly
police come escorting another funeral, police roll up and start to announce about health ordinance, only 20 people allowed at burning site ( 3 funerals going on already eh, they were the 4th)
and aggressively threatening people and telling them to go to to the car park (apparently car park have no covid)
then they escort in the funeral they brought, police driver come out and give that funeral driver a bounce, ask him how things,
they eh hassle that funeral group at all which had more than 100 people, seems they were running everyone else to make room for them.
What you all think abt public cremation? Is that environmentally friendly? How hindus make out in countries that don't allow public cremations? Especially countries in the west?
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