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5 votes
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Iran faces catastrophic death toll from coronavirus
9 votes -
US FDA turns to Twitter to help track testing supply shortages
4 votes -
As the coronavirus pandemic takes hold, we are making decisions without reliable data
5 votes -
Coronavirus COVID-19 cases spiked across Asia after a mass gathering in Malaysia. This is how it caught the countries by surprise
7 votes -
"I'm not an epidemiologist, but..." - When Twitter engagement decides who's in charge of distributing public health information
3 votes -
Florida: Drive-thru COVID-19 testing gets off to rocky start
4 votes -
How to see germs spread
2 votes -
Denmark is helping those who can't work due to coronavirus – why isn't the UK?
4 votes -
EU warns of pro-Kremlin disinformation campaign on coronavirus
14 votes -
Trump 'offers large sums' for exclusive access to coronavirus vaccine
36 votes -
Social distancing: This is not a snow day
13 votes -
How soap kills the coronavirus
9 votes -
Japanese flu drug 'clearly effective' in treating coronavirus, says China
8 votes -
Ohio Department of Health will order polls closed Tuesday as health emergency
7 votes -
How testing for Covid-19 works
6 votes -
The nation is shutting down. For Walmart, it’s time to step up
5 votes -
US virus plan anticipates 18-month pandemic and widespread shortages: The 100-page federal plan laid out a grim prognosis and outlined a response that would activate agencies across the government
22 votes -
Testing shortages force extreme shift in strategy by Sacremento health officials
3 votes -
Governor mandates all resorts, restaurants, and bars in Nevada must close for thirty days to prevent the spread of coronavirus
5 votes -
US and Canada preparing to suspend non-essential travel between the two countries
11 votes -
New England Journal of Medicine study shows SARS-CoV-2 is stable for several hours to days in aerosols and on surfaces
8 votes -
An interactive web-based dashboard to track COVID-19 in real time
8 votes -
How to practice social distancing
4 votes -
Daily coronavirus-related chat, questions, and minor updates - March 17
This thread is posted daily, and is intended as a place for more-casual discussion of the coronavirus and questions/updates that may not warrant their own dedicated topics. Tell us about what the...
This thread is posted daily, and is intended as a place for more-casual discussion of the coronavirus and questions/updates that may not warrant their own dedicated topics. Tell us about what the situation is like where you live!
15 votes -
Belgium enters full lockdown, starting Wednesday
15 votes -
Coronavirus forces cruise ships to drop anchor in surprising places around the world
5 votes -
Outbreak - Simplified simulations of a disease outbreak with tweakable parameters (like transmission and mortality rates) to show how epidemics can unfold
5 votes -
San Francisco mayor calls for calm — panic at grocery stores and pot dispensaries ensues
6 votes -
California Legislature suspends session in response to coronavirus outbreak
6 votes -
France announces complete lockdown for fifteen days
18 votes -
Norway's prime minister will hold a separate press conference for children to answer their questions about the coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
Your thoughts regarding the media coverage?
I skim-read multiple news aggregators daily, and for weeks now, every single day, 75% or more of the news is specifically about Covid-19. By comparison, it is worth reminding younger readers that...
I skim-read multiple news aggregators daily, and for weeks now, every single day, 75% or more of the news is specifically about Covid-19.
By comparison, it is worth reminding younger readers that we didn't even know about the Spanish Flu until ~30 years ago. During WWI, we (humans) suffered the deadliest pandemic of the modern era, and it took 60-70 years before anyone even noticed.
If you didn't grow up before the Spanish Flu became common knowledge, that may be a hard thing to grasp ... but during the late-80s and into the '90s, there was this slow, years-long trickle of news from medical researchers, historians and (FFS) archeologists (?!!?) about how there might actually have been a massive global pandemic during WWI that no one knew about.
Today in Wikipedia, there is just one little tidbit about how various things like (intentional) under-reporting and co-mingling of flu deaths with war casualties, led to it being nicknamed "the forgotten pandemic" ... which doesn't really capture that sense of "Holy Fuck"-ness when you discover that up to 100 million people died of the flu one year, and no one even noticed.
Okay ... at any rate .... you get my point. In 1919, the news intentionally under-reported it worldwide (except in Spain ... hence the name), in part to help prevent panic.
Today, the news media coverage is just incredible. Nothing on Earth happens any more, except Covid-19. A few thousand people die (I'm sorry, but yeah, more people die in car accidents), and the Media loses its mind.
OTOH, honestly, it's mostly been pretty good, accurate, up-to-the-second coverage (as best I can tell), really driving home the message of "we know it sounds lame, but wash your hands, dammit ... a lot", and etc.
So ... thoughts? This constant in-your-face media coverage ... good or bad? How much is media causing the panic vs just reporting on it?
17 votes -
White House takes new line after dire report on death toll: Federal guidelines warned against gatherings of more than ten people as a report predicted high fatalities in the USwithout drastic action
9 votes -
Why fighting the coronavirus depends on you
6 votes -
Silver lining to this pandemic?
I'm wondering if there could be a silver lining to this coronavirus pandemic, at least for the current generations. Maybe everyone will be more careful in the future about spreading infectious...
I'm wondering if there could be a silver lining to this coronavirus pandemic, at least for the current generations.
Maybe everyone will be more careful in the future about spreading infectious diseases by practicing better hygiene e.g. coughing in the elbow, washing hands more often, considering staying home etc. And maybe the number of people accepting vaccines will increase? I'm willing to make a bet on that one: a modest increase. I'm also hoping we can shame all the hoarders after this is over and have a better understanding of how society functions via cooperation which might lead to more self awareness. This is not going to be the last pandemic let alone epidemic, so I also hope that more governments will be better prepared for future biological natural disasters, like how Taiwan and S Korea seem to be dealing with this rather well because of their previous history with SARS.
What does everyone else think? I don't expect this to last too long, maybe a decade or two, but that would still be a good thing.
18 votes -
A report from the hospital front, from a reliable source
3 votes -
Do you think the measures being taken to stop the virus will/are be(ing) effective? If not, which measures do you think would work best?
Admittedly this depends on the measures being taken, which vary wildly from country/state to country, so you should probably specify where are these measures being taken to a national or state...
Admittedly this depends on the measures being taken, which vary wildly from country/state to country, so you should probably specify where are these measures being taken to a national or state level depending in the location.
12 votes -
If the measures we're taking to fight the coronavirus work, they'll look like we were overreacting. But the alternative is worse
14 votes -
A detailed factsheet on the Coronavirus from our world in data
5 votes -
Experimental coronavirus vaccine test opens with first doses to four volunteers
8 votes -
Bay Area authorities place strictest order in country: ‘Shelter in place,’ only essential businesses open in six counties
19 votes -
Canada to bar entry to most travellers who are not citizens or permanent residents, with exceptions for US citizens
14 votes -
What's the coronavirus like where you are?
The last thread on this was from February 29, and a lot has changed since then. What are things like currently where you are?
27 votes -
Coronavirus victims in Italy will be denied access to intensive care if they are aged 80 or more or in poor health should pressure on beds increase
8 votes -
The UK backs away from “herd immunity” coronavirus proposal amid blowback
7 votes -
'Herd immunity': Why Britain is actually letting the coronavirus spread
15 votes -
Managing your anxiety in times of hysteria (satire)
4 votes -
New York City officials tell the UN that the coronavirus has spread widely throughout the city
11 votes -
Not enough face masks are made in America to deal with coronavirus
7 votes