First the NY governor complain that there aren't enough ventilators, then not enough hospital beds and now not enough test kits. What's next? not enough condoms?. You think they can just click the switch and produce a million test kits in one minutes? Tell the governors to make their own test kits.@Dancing Fire,
We are in the depths of this crisis. We don’t even have adequate testing and this President is still trying to create chaos.
First the NY governor complain that there aren't enough ventilators, then not enough hospital beds and now not enough test kits. What's next? not enough condoms?. You think they can just click the switch and produce a million test kits in one minutes? Tell the governors to make their own test kits.
First the NY governor complain that there aren't enough ventilators, then not enough hospital beds and now not enough test kits. What's next? not enough condoms?. You think they can just click the switch and produce a million test kits in one minutes? Tell the governors to make their own test kits.
First the NY governor complain that there aren't enough ventilators, then not enough hospital beds and now not enough test kits. What's next? not enough condoms?. You think they can just click the switch and produce a million test kits in one minutes? Tell the governors to make their own test kits.
So the state governor bears no responsibility at all?Buddy, why do you think FEMA was started. The federal government is there to help states in a crisis. Did you say that the states needed to respond to natural disasters with no help from the federal government? Katrina, Hurricane Sandy and the fires throughout the country. What is wrong with you?
OMG - you might loose all the Aussie coffee shops and baristas - that would mean you only have Starbucks - what a disaster that would be!!!!!
Buddy, why do you think FEMA was started. The federal government is there to help states in a crisis. Did you say that the states needed to respond to natural disasters with no help from the federal government? Katrina, Hurricane Sandy and the fires throughout the country. What is wrong with you?
At the time I took that to mean that if you needed a test you could get one not that testing was available to everyone or even everyone who wanted it. It had to be requested by DR and meet CDC guidelines for testing. I know some people wanted them but even being sick didn't get them. They didn't have likely exposure, or didn't have the right symptoms or they actually had the flu or something else that was making them sick.
When a communicable disease outbreak begins, the ideal response is for public health officials to begin testing for it early.
That leads to quick identification of cases, quick treatment for those people and immediate isolation to prevent spread. Early testing also helps to identify anyone who came into contact with infected people so they too can be quickly treated.
While we are obviously not in that ideal situation with COVID-19, testing remains critical.
It's crucial of course to help treat, isolate or hospitalize people who are infected. Testing also is important in the bigger public health picture on mitigation efforts, helping investigators characterize the prevalence, spread and contagiousness of the disease.
In comparison to China and South Korea, testing in the United States appears to have been insufficient for optimal early containment. And now we're seeing a rapid rise in hospitalizations that is overwhelming public health systems and clinical care systems.
These systems, lacking vital equipment to test and provide timely results and staff to address "positives," are now bracing for more and more critically ill patients in the coming days and weeks.
A big part of the problem is the inability to conduct "contact investigations." These investigations involve figuring out everyone an infected person may have been in contact with. This requires a lot of time and labor – two resources that just aren't available in a strained system. It's easy to see how quickly cases can spread without information from contact investigations.
Another important kind of test is one that determines if a person has already had COVID-19. When a person is infected with a novel virus such as SARS-CoV-2 (the scientific name for this specific coronavirus), the person's immune system has never "seen" that virus before. As the virus reproduces, it causes manifestations of disease – fever, cough and so on – and triggers an immune response.
The immune response is how the body fights the virus and protects itself. The immune system activates, produces and mobilizes a variety of protective cells and molecules that attack the "foreign" virus. The immune system will recognize the virus after that and protect the person by destroying it if it returns.
The key to that protection is the work of molecules called antibodies. When tests turn up the presence of disease-specific antibodies, it's considered evidence of past exposure and infection. While the no-longer-infected person is out of danger, the information about past infection status is extremely valuable.
Confirming that someone has had the disease and is now immune helps public health officials and others understand the level of immunity in a population. A high percentage of people with immunity adds to "herd immunity," which protects the larger community.
Knowing who has been infected also is important because people with immunity from COVID-19 can safely work in essential settings such as health care, public safety and the service industry. They also can work in "non-essential" settings with less need for extreme personal protection.
Furthermore, for clinical care, testing for seroconversion – the technical name for the process of going from non-infected to infected to immune – can identify people whose plasma contains COVID-19-specific antibodies.
This plasma could, theoretically, be used for infusions to treat the disease and prevent its severe complications. Use of such plasma, called convalescent plasma, is not new. In fact, it was a treatment approach during the 1918 flu pandemic.
The Food and Drug Administration is currently accepting requests from researchers who want to study the use of COVID-19 convalescent plasma.
When we look back at what will be the first wave of COVID-19 in the United States, testing data will help us develop a full picture of the epidemiology and course of this disease. The data can provide important puzzle pieces for stopping or slowing the disease in the future.
Editor's note: Because of the rapidly evolving events surrounding the coronavirus, the facts and advice presented in this story may have changed since publication. Visit Heart.org for the latest coverage, and check with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and local health officials for the most recent guidance.
If you have questions or comments about this story, please email [email protected].
This is the reason testing is crucial for all.
At that time it wasn't recognized how easily it might be spread by asymptomatic people.
I can't speak for information available to you, but the fact that there are a lot of asymptomatic, mostly younger people, who will spread COVID 19 was known internationally from the very beginning. The first cases we had in Germany in early January were all tracked, tested, isolated and well studied in a disease station. It was reported Europe-wide that most of them had no symptoms. The hospital published a study on them 6 weeks later. If I heard about it in early January, it's impossible the appropriate officials in the Us government didn't know about it.
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GOP Quietly Pushes Through Long-Sought Priorities As Pandemic Rages
Rolling back environmental regulations, imposing voter ID, banning abortion — it's all happening while the public is focused on the coronavirus.www.huffpost.com
Just referring to the timeline. ... The WHO was saying in mid-January that Covid was NOT spread human to human so I don't see how the international community would know about asymptomatic spread in early January. China probably did know which is why they were covering it up and feeding propaganda through the WHO.
I can only find sources that say the first known case in Germany was January 27th transmitted from a Chinese woman who only entered the country on the 16th. And that your health minister was also saying around the same time that he feared panic more than the virus. Granted Germany was already checking foreign travelers and once Covid was found they acted more quickly, it seem they did not know in early January what was coming. No country did, except one.
Just referring to the timeline. ... The WHO was saying in mid-January that Covid was NOT spread human to human so I don't see how the international community would know about asymptomatic spread in early January. China probably did know which is why they were covering it up and feeding propaganda through the WHO.
I can only find sources that say the first known case in Germany was January 27th transmitted from a Chinese woman who only entered the country on the 16th. And that your health minister was also saying around the same time that he feared panic more than the virus. Granted Germany was already checking foreign travelers and once Covid was found they acted more quickly, it seem they did not know in early January what was coming. No country did, except one.
Nothing!, NY Governor Cuomo agrees with me!! ...Buddy, why do you think FEMA was started. The federal government is there to help states in a crisis. Did you say that the states needed to respond to natural disasters with no help from the federal government? Katrina, Hurricane Sandy and the fires throughout the country. What is wrong with you?
Nobody knows when is the right time to reopen. Do you?WTH, GA is opening up business tomorrow!![]()
WTH, GA is opening up business tomorrow!
WTH, GA is opening up business tomorrow!![]()
Nobody knows when is the right time to reopen. Do you?
Even TRUMP says it is too soon. Wow. Wonders never cease.Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) on Tuesday expressed his concerns with Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp’s (R) decision to begin reopening businesses in the Peach State at the end of the month.
After tweeting that he backs South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster’s (R) announcement on Monday to begin reopening the state’s economy with “a focus on social distancing,” Graham then said he worries that Georgia is “going too fast too soon” and that what happens there will also affect his own state.
Lindsey Graham
✔@LindseyGrahamSC
· Apr 21, 2020
I support what South Carolina Governor @henrymcmaster announced yesterday -- a small reopening of our state's economy with a focus on social distancing.
I worry that our friends and neighbors in Georgia are going too fast too soon.
Lindsey Graham
✔@LindseyGrahamSC
We respect Georgia's right to determine its own fate, but we are all in this together.
What happens in Georgia will impact us in South Carolina.
1,359
1:01 PM - Apr 21, 2020
Kemp has received backlash from fellow Georgia politicians following his announcement on Monday to begin rolling back the state’s stay-at-home orders at the end of the month.
On Tuesday morning, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Bottoms said that Kemp (R) had not given her or other state leaders a heads-up prior to his announcement the day before.
Georgia Democrat and former Kemp gubernatorial rival Stacey Abrams said that the governor’s move to reopen the state is “trying to push a false opening of the economy” and will risk putting more lives in danger.