https://edition.cnn.com/2020/05/26/world/elderly-care-homes-coronavirus-intl/index.html
By February 25,
the World Health Organization said the virus had already killed
thousands in China and was spreading through northern Italy, but at the
time there were just 13 confirmed cases and no deaths in the UK. While
the government ordered hospitals to prepare for an influx of patients,
its advice to some of the country's most vulnerable people -- elderly
residents of care or nursing homes -- was that they were "very unlikely" to be infected.
That
guidance would remain in place over the next two-and-a-half weeks, as
the number of coronavirus cases in the UK exploded. By the time the
advice was withdrawn on March 13 and replaced with new guidance, there were 594 confirmed cases, and it was too late.
Data published on LTCcovid shows that more than half of all coronavirus deaths
in nations including Belgium, France, Ireland, Canada and Norway
occurred in care homes or among care home residents in all settings. In
the US, data collated by the Kaiser Family Foundation (KFF)
from 35 states and included in the LSE report showed that care home
residents accounted for 30,130, or at least 34.6%, of the more than
87,000 coronavirus deaths recorded as of May 15. Care home residents
are also overrepresented in some countries with relatively few deaths,
accounting for 26 out of the first 99 deaths documented in Australia,
or more than a quarter of all fatalities through May 18.
Sweden
has repeatedly defended its controversial decision to remain relatively
permissive in its restrictions on movement, but Health Minister Lena
Hallengren admitted a "big failure" to protect the elderly and said care
homes were now of the utmost importance, according to Swedish media.
There had been 1,661 coronavirus deaths among care home residents out
of 3,395 total coronavirus deaths in Sweden by May 14, or 49%, according
to LTCcovid's report.
Hong Kong says it has not had a single
infection in a care home, and only four deaths and just over 1,000 cases
in total. In Singapore, just two of 18 deaths have taken place among
care home residents.
"There's been
a lot of focus in hospitals and focus on community transmission, but
not in care homes. And I think that reflects the low status that the
care sector has in many countries," said Comas-Herrera.
The
authors of the JAMA report on Seattle write that: "Although many prefer
not to think about nursing homes, they are a critical safety net for
frail older adults and part of the fabric of our society."
Wuhan batwoman has even nastier viruses in her lab, waiting to be unleashed on the world
ReplyDeletehttps://www.thesun.co.uk/news/11708447/china-bat-woman-warns-more-coronavirus-pandemics/
that is your high quality source? cant you find something more serious?
ReplyDeletewhat, do you think it was an imposter speaking in the video? or did they simply change the translattion, when she was only giving her recipe for cheesecake?
ReplyDeletehere , she says the same thing on Bloomberg, which must be glatt kosher, since he's a democrat!
ReplyDeletehttps://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-05-25/china-s-bat-woman-warns-coronavirus-is-just-tip-of-the-iceberg
DT, it's quite strange that you doubt the source here. This is literally an interview with Bat Woman. It's her own words.
ReplyDeleteMore than that, it's the same moneygrubbing dogma they always profess, so why doubt when she says it again: There are lots of viruses out there in the wild animals, there will be a pandemic some day because of zoonotic spillover, so fund my lab$$$$ because we will take samples of all these viruses and prevent future pandemics and save you and the whole world.
This is their standard propaganda to get money for their research. Peter Daszak says the same nonsense. They provide no rationale or evidence on how they prevent a pandemic, just as they did not prevent this one.
There is nothing to justify the risks they take with their research doing "stamp collection" of bat viruses. None. Nada.
And even worse than this is the risk they take with their genetic engineering of these viruses which they collect. Go ahead and tell me they don't do that because they published this work since 2016. It is no secret except that they wish to cover it up and deflect from it at this point (for obvious reasons)
ReplyDeletei have a problem with the credibility of the "newspaper" if almost any other source was cited it would be a different story
ReplyDeleteno the two articles do not say the same thing
ReplyDeleteWhy bicker about what the articles say? There is a video of her being interviewed in his original citation.
ReplyDeleteyou mean the 30 seconds of her speaking in Chinese?
ReplyDeleteApparently your language skills are superior to mine because I have no idea what she said or whether the subtitles were accurate
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.ndtv.com/world-news/chinas-bat-woman-warns-coronavirus-is-just-tip-of-the-iceberg-2235163%3famp=1&akamai-rum=off
ReplyDelete(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/GP0ZLTriHno Learn somthing new todayabsolute proofs of the Holy bible codes
ReplyDeleteI suppose you got some excuse for newsweek too
ReplyDeletehttps://www.newsweek.com/china-batwoman-coronavirus-tip-iceberg-1506427
did they syndicate it from the Sun? Or was it Rav Kamenetsky?
I cant see the text but the headline is the same
ReplyDeleteaside from the headline what is your point?
Shi Zhengli, the deputy director of the Wuhan Institute of Virology, who has been dubbed "bat woman" due to her team's work on SARS-like coronaviruses in these animals, made the remarks on Monday in an interview with Chinese state TV station CGTN. The coronavirus that causes COVID-19 is believed to have originated in bats, with another animal thought to have acted as an intermediary host.
ReplyDeleteShi said her team's 15 years of work on these pathogens has shown other coronaviruses could pose a threat to humans. "The unknown viruses that we have discovered are actually just the tip of the iceberg," Shi said, according to a translation by CGTN. "If we want to protect humans from viruses or avoid a second outbreak of new infectious diseases, we must go in advance to learn of these unknown viruses carried by wild animals in nature and then give early warnings.
The point being it's dangerous research she is doing, and may find an even more deadly virus in her work.
ReplyDeleteI cited Newsweek
ReplyDelete