MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE
by Michael Wolraich
Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop
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MURDER, POLITICS, AND THE END OF THE JAZZ AGE by Michael Wolraich Order today at Barnes & Noble / Amazon / Books-A-Million / Bookshop |
(found retweeted by Andrew Sullivan; a reminder: he is a longtime AIDS survivor.)
Comments
it's certainly not just about being old nor in a nursing home. I hate to sound like a vampire, but don't some medical researchers need to check out some of her blood?!
She’s 108, Lived Through the Spanish Flu and Just Beat Covid-19
Sylvia Goldsholl, who lives in a New Jersey nursing home, is one of the country’s oldest survivors of the coronavirus. “She’s very feisty,” her nephew said.
by artappraiser on Sat, 05/16/2020 - 12:52am
if you follow the link to the story about the 108-yr.old man in NM, where there's the cross link to another story about him, it's interesting in that it supports the idea that going to the hospital is very dangerous..In that the 58-yr. old son got it first and gave it to his father. This was in March. His father was so sick he passed out, that's when he took him to the hospital, where they diagnosed pneumonia but wouldn't give a Covid test because he didn't have a fever! That was protocol at the time. They had little room, they put him in a hallway next to the quarantines. The son didn't like the look of things around there and took him home.
Both of them later got diagnosed by getting antibody tests through the Mayo clinic.
Going to a hospital even now, it's a crap shoot, especially ones that don't have a lot of trial and error experience treating this. They just don't know enough, they can cause harm as easily as they can help, especially if overwhelmed. He was lucky he wasn't diagnosed with it, mho! Probably why he's still alive.
This is part of the whole "flatten the curve" thing as far as I am concerned: the more time the medical profession has to learn about this disease before you get it, the better off you are. Cause right now it's a crap shoot. And if they test you, you go into one of *those* wards. Which of course they should do, but to protect staff and other patients. Probably doesn't help the patient one bit to be diagnosed, they treat the symptoms.
This biomarkers info. is great news, though, this is exactly the type of thing that helps them understand the disease better and what's happening with the deaths...
by artappraiser on Sat, 05/16/2020 - 1:18am