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Coronavirus craziness. Not a doctor, but sort of old & wise, lol.
Yes it is not fun to get sick, less fun to be frightened about it. But we are far, far better off than when the Black Death, or even the flu epidemic of 1918 was around. And BTW my Mom was born in 1918, and my aunt never got it at all, despite nursing an entire tenement building full of the sick. They had nothing, not even penicillin.
Be smart, wash/sanitize your hands, and Please keep your hands away from your face, especially your eyes! See a doctor immediately if feeling unwell. And fergawdssake Stay Home if feeling ill!

AnneWimsey 9 Feb 26
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6 comments

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1

It's human nature to scoff at trouble when it's not happening around you. But I am very concerned about this virus. There is no treatment, no cure, and no resistance. If you live, you live. If you don't, you don't. Remember how Facebook went from a marginal website to dominate the world? I think this virus will spread just as virulently.

All the cases we have had so far in Canada have cleared up. I am not sure if we have developed a vaccine for it yet or not though.

@demifeministgal oh, I'm afraid you'll have more. No vaccine has been developed yet.

@BitFlipper Yes we have a high population of east asians in my province and in BC. I do believe we've had another confirmed case in Ontario. Plus, there's the business of those cruise people that are all infected coming back into the country. :/

3

Yes it's news, yes it contagious, and yes the news is blowing it out of proportion. There are 57 confirmed cases in the US, hundreds of thousands in China and 2700 deaths world wide. The death toll from this years flu (non covid-19) will be 4.2%(approx.).Covid -19 death rate is 3.12% in China and 0.01% outside of the Wuhan epicenter.
In short, yes be aware of it. But don't stop living your daily life..

I don't think the Press is blowing it out of proportion. I think the Press is minimizing it as they do for Trump's antics. Remember, there is nothing to impair this or stop this from spreading.

4

I have mixed feelings about the mass hysteria. It seems somewhat media fed and sensationalized but it is something to be concerned about.

An elderly gentleman got a bit in my 11 year olds face the other day about being sick at Meijer. She had puffy eyes because she had been crying about something. I thought it might have something to do with the Corona thing but didn't think till later alot of the rural folks around here think my kids are Asian.. Pissed me off and kinda creeped my out.

We really need to work on that "staying home" part as a society. Ive noticed some of the same people at work who are big on banning travel to china are the same ones that talk the most sh*t about people who call in and aren't "sick enough". Its amazing how ingrained the "work through it" culture is. You would think people would be past that in healthcare. (I work in longterm care of elderly). It seems almost as ingrained as it was in resuraunts. Neither of those situations make me feel good about what could happen if something slighly more contagious and deadly came along..

MsAl Level 8 Feb 26, 2020
2

Yes that is often the case, and your health advice is really good. Though it was a feature of the 1918 flu that many people had an immunity to it, because it was related to other, milder, flu viruses, and if you had contracted one of those in the previous decades, then you had a degree of immunity. Which is why it mainly killed people in the the under thirties age group, because they had less often been exposed to related viruses. Coronavirus however is said to be unrelated to any other, we may have encountered before, so that it will probably strike at random, with the old and weak being most at risk.

1

Good advice, but hey penicillin won't do anything for a virus - but do I know you are just pointing out how primitive medicine was back then, period.

And to Julie below - we also have disinformation at our fingertips that is too effective at spreading lies and FUD. It's available several times at a day from certain Twitter accounts and spreads down from there, plus through many other pores in society's thingskin.

2

Yep, we are lucky in this day and age. We have information at our fingertips and on the airwaves, plus all kinds of ways to keep ourselves sanitary. We can attend events virtually online, if we need to be isolated, and so much more.

I am lucky that when I was "quarantined" recently, I was able to remain inside my own home. I have the option of ordering food and medicine delivered to my door -- and when feeling better but still feeling the need to isolate myself from others, I was able to go through the Drive-Thru windows at the drug store and various fast food, since I wasn't up to preparing my own food. (McDonald's smoothies were about the only thing I could keep down for a couple of weeks.)

We are lucky in so many ways, but I do worry that the US Government might not be as "on top of things" as we might like. I wish I were more confident that the virus will be contained if/when it starts spreading further here in the U.S.

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