Sage Grouse
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'When I got on the bus for my first road game at Duke, I saw that every player was carrying textbooks or laptops. I coached in the SEC for 25 years, and I had never seen that before, not even once.' - David Cutcliffe to Duke alumni in Washington, DC, June 2013
The Brigham is getting the press, but they aren't even the only hospital in Boston with an outbreak. New England Baptist (located about a quarter mile away) is also dealing with some patient/staff infections. Tufts Med Center had one in the late spring. Baystate Health in Springfield and BI/Deaconess Plymouth both had outbreaks, one in July and one in September.
Boston Globe article, might be behind a paywall.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2020/09/...ing-infection/
I recall reading months back that the emphasis on surface transmission in the WHO guidance was very agenda driven. Particularly obvious on several conference calls as the WHO debated the guidance. Personally, I've tried to take comfort in rsvman's post regarding the matter from 3 months back. He reiterated that today. I'm still overly cautious as I've developed processes from early on that I continue to follow. But given that to date I haven't caught the virus, my brain is rewarding that caution.
New York City public schools started in-person learning today. Kids had the choice of hybrid (generally five out of ten days in school - 2 days one week, three days the next) or full remote. I think about 25% of our school opted for full remote. My kids start in-person later in the week, but we just got an e-mail from our elementary school principal that today went well. All families must attest each morning that the kid is healthy, there are limited kids per room, lunch at your desk, etc. Soon they will be using randomized testing of students and teachers using a Q-tip rather than digging deep in the nose - this requires students to opt-in, which is interesting.
My kids go to a largely upper middle class school with a principal who worked non-stop all summer to make this work, as well as a very engaged group of parents, so I am as comfortable as possible with this. I am willing to take a bit of risk as I have found that remote learning just doesn't work well for kids in their first few years of school. I have no idea how this will work in the rest of the city and decisions are made across the whole city, not just for our school. But New York will be a huge test case. I am hoping we at least last a few weeks so the kids can develop relationships with their teachers, as the only saving grace for remote learning in the spring was that it was 2/3 of the way into the year, so kids and teachers knew each other well.
Can't spork you, but thanks. That's what I thought, but it's more comforting to hear it from someone who actually knows what they are talking about.
It's a big aquatic center, where swimming events are held in normal times, and lots of fans, etc., so I think the risk is acceptable, if the facility manages the reservations and admissions competently (which remains to be seen).
To me, there is a lot of voodoo going on fighting surface transmission. Yes, it's a genuine concern..but when I see airline crews fogging entire cabins, the first thought that comes to mind is "great, so what if the guy sitting directly behind you, or next to you, happens to have The Corvid, how much good will that spraying do you?" Seems designed to get a very false sense of security. No wonder most people won't fly for the time being.
More on Chad Dorrill, now from the New York Times. This makes me very sad, and very frightened:
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/29/u...oTsAcZw0xUN3J8
"Amazing what a minute can do."
I agree completely with this thought. It's basically the same issue I have with the call for more testing. First, tests are not 100% accurate (it's possible to have a false negative, with most Covid tests). Second, someone may have tested negative yesterday and then is unknowingly exposed to someone with Covid today and then becomes infected (but think that they are negative based on yesterday's test result and goes about their daily activities, infecting other people). It seems to me that "testing" really only works if every person is tested every day (and can get instantaneous, accurate results on the spot and will then quarantine with a positive test result).
Every day the newspaper is filled with compelling stories, personal tragedies and enough drama to drain anyone's emotional reservoir. It's hard to predict what will hit you, what deserves at minimum a moment of quiet reflection. Chad Dorrill is now one of the names and faces that I will remember and associate with COVID-19. With last night's debate providing context, it's a bit infuriating that anyone would try to grandstand on this country's response to the pandemic. RIP Chad.
This one hits hard & super-close to home, literally (in the proper usage of that word). Although I do not know the Dorrills personally, they live in our development. I'm about 90% certain that one of my son's better friends from the junior/HS golf circuit was a teammate of Chad's on Ledford's high school basketball team. Just awful.
"Amazing what a minute can do."
The Guardian has an article comparing Duke, with its test-everyone approach, vs. UNC, who is only doing volumntary testing.
The headline says it all:
"Two universities welcomed students on campus. Only one tested for Covid-19"
But there's more:
Compared with UNC:Since the beginning of August, Duke has performed more than 58,000 Covid tests. Seventy-five have come back positive.
Since the pandemic began, 1,138 students and 72 employees have tested positive. The university has performed a total of 4,612 tests.
Sage Grouse
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'When I got on the bus for my first road game at Duke, I saw that every player was carrying textbooks or laptops. I coached in the SEC for 25 years, and I had never seen that before, not even once.' - David Cutcliffe to Duke alumni in Washington, DC, June 2013