Most of not almost all of the Notre Dame students were wearing masks.Wear a mask to not be a socially inconsiderate douche...and anything after that should be personal gravy
It’s definitely clear the SEC, ACC, Big 12 made the smartest decision starting their seasons when they did. Covid was low and got most of their season in already. So financially they are in decent shape vs big 10 starting up right when 2nd wave of Covid startedOne thing is for sure, if any conferences do decide to cancel the remainder of the season, the B1G will be the first in line. If tOSU happens to get a 3rd game cancelled, that'll be the end for sure.
Amazing one post could pack in so much misinformation.Treatments and medicine have improved considerably. My 71 year old mom just had it. Spent a couple days in the hospital. Received medication/oxygen and was almost 100% recovered in a week. She has several underlying conditions. Step dad has had 2 major heart attacks and also has lung issues from 50 years of smoking. He got it, received medication but stayed home, and was over it in less than a week. The vast majority of people will be fine- our society needs to learn how to live again without being terrified. This is a virus that will be with us for the rest of our lives.... may as well learn to deal with it.
Agree 100%. The B1G really messed up when they pumped the brakes at the wrong time.It’s definitely clear the SEC, ACC, Big 12 made the smartest decision starting their seasons when they did. Covid was low and got most of their season in already. So financially they are in decent shape vs big 10 starting up right when 2nd wave of Covid started
So my mom and step dad having the virus and recovering is mis information? Should I post their medical records for you to view? STFUAmazing one post could pack in so much misinformation.
My wife is a nurse, and a good friend is an ER doc in Omaha. While I, and they do as well, fully agree with you that folks are recovering/treatment is so much improved but that still isn't the point right now. The point is not overwhelming the hospital systems and preventing access to beds and treatments for folks with other issues. My wife's hospital is already back to April Covid bed use and they are having to stop most surgeries because they don't have enough beds. They will still do life threatening ones of course but other things get put off. Things like chemotherapy become much more difficult and dangerous in an overflowing hospital for immunocompromised people. If this was just a normal yearly issue at normal levels I would totally agree, let it run it's course like the flu. But when it overwhelms the whole system it causes trickle down issues. The doctors and nurses are more than burnt out by this point as well. This is also about doing our part for those people.Treatments and medicine have improved considerably. My 71 year old mom just had it. Spent a couple days in the hospital. Received medication/oxygen and was almost 100% recovered in a week. She has several underlying conditions. Step dad has had 2 major heart attacks and also has lung issues from 50 years of smoking. He got it, received medication but stayed home, and was over it in less than a week. The vast majority of people will be fine- our society needs to learn how to live again without being terrified. This is a virus that will be with us for the rest of our lives.... may as well learn to deal with it.
Completely understand your point of view and appreciate the well thought out response.My wife is a nurse, and a good friend is an ER doc in Omaha. While I, and they do as well, fully agree with you that folks are recovering/treatment is so much improved but that still isn't the point right now. The point is not overwhelming the hospital systems and preventing access to beds and treatments for folks with other issues. My wife's hospital is already back to April Covid bed use and they are having to stop most surgeries. They will still do life threatening ones of course but other things get put off. Things like chemotherapy become much more difficult and dangerous in an overflowing hospital for immunocompromised people. If this was just a normal yearly issue at normal levels I would totally agree, let it run it's course like the flu. But when it overwhelms the whole system it causes trickle down issues. The doctors and nurses are more than burnt out by this point as well. This is also about doing our part for those people.
Treatments and medicine have improved considerably. My 71 year old mom just had it. Spent a couple days in the hospital. Received medication/oxygen and was almost 100% recovered in a week. She has several underlying conditions. Step dad has had 2 major heart attacks and also has lung issues from 50 years of smoking. He got it, received medication but stayed home, and was over it in less than a week. The vast majority of people will be fine- our society needs to learn how to live again without being terrified. This is a virus that will be with us for the rest of our lives.... may as well learn to deal with it.
Can confirm. Wife and I both work in the hospitals. Things weren't too terrible in March/April when the original lockdown occurred. It was necessary in places like NYC at the time, but now is our crunch time. Elective surgeries are being put on hold, as many of you know, these aren't live saving surgeries, but they are needed for quality of life. We're so much better at treating COVID, this is true, but that doesn't solve the problem of needing hospital beds/staff/supplies. I don't like getting political in these threads, but now is the time for stimulus money for citizens and small businesses - and unfortunately we need to crackdown on bars, restaurants and social gatherings. I think you would be hard pressed to find a Doc, Nurse, RT, CNA, Phlebotomist, PT, OT, Etc that would disagree with me on that. I honestly think we can continue with football, basketball - without crowds. Just need to crackdown on places where uncontrolled spread is happening and bridge the gap to spring/vaccine. Just my 2 cents.My wife is a nurse, and a good friend is an ER doc in Omaha. While I, and they do as well, fully agree with you that folks are recovering/treatment is so much improved but that still isn't the point right now. The point is not overwhelming the hospital systems and preventing access to beds and treatments for folks with other issues. My wife's hospital is already back to April Covid bed use and they are having to stop most surgeries because they don't have enough beds. They will still do life threatening ones of course but other things get put off. Things like chemotherapy become much more difficult and dangerous in an overflowing hospital for immunocompromised people. If this was just a normal yearly issue at normal levels I would totally agree, let it run it's course like the flu. But when it overwhelms the whole system it causes trickle down issues. The doctors and nurses are more than burnt out by this point as well. This is also about doing our part for those people.
First of all because you know two people who have recovered doesn't constitute scientific data. That's anecdotal, nothing more.So my mom and step dad having the virus and recovering is mis information? Should I post their medical records for you to view? STFU
Or the misinformation on improved treatments?
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/09/20/914374901/advances-in-icu-care-are-saving-more-patients-who-have-covid-19
What exactly was incorrect in my post?