jimlloyd40
Autocross Champion
My job is literally serving the 1%. They can protect themselves or if they are in a nursing home they are already protected. No one is allowed inside.
Nursing homes are amongst the hardest hit with C19.
My job is literally serving the 1%. They can protect themselves or if they are in a nursing home they are already protected. No one is allowed inside.
This is true, but it depends on their protocol. I was at one today, I asked how were they doing with the COVID...they said NO ONE had it.Nursing homes are amongst the hardest hit with C19.
Thank you for service. It's true, our infection training was always wear gloves and if you suspect something, wear an N95. We had hazmat type suits for the really bad situations, but that was typically a bloated dead body found late in the summer.Yet you can't actually do the math or understand what it means. I'm a PA and spent 24 years in the military all over the world treating patients, but I'm sure paramedics get a lot of training and experience in infection disease too.
Over 65 is the vulnerable if you look at THE DATA.Who is the vulnerable? Is it a set age? Condition? What if you live with someone who is vulnerable?
You are still not qualified to crunch numbers or extrapolate any data from something that you don't know much about IMO.
The head down below?^
1 head
0 brains.
Not sure what that adds up to.
The head down below?
Ummm, no. It would not be population / deaths * 10. It should be number of infected (unknown) / deaths caused by Covid (we have a better grasp of this number but still not great IMO) * 10.