COVID-19 on the global stage

the scariest news of the past week didn’t involve either epidemiology or economics; it was the travesty of an election in Wisconsin, where the Supreme Court required that in-person voting proceed despite the health risks and the fact that many who requested absentee ballots never got them. ..

Authoritarian rule may be just around the corner.

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And right now, in our hospital ERs and ICUs, the medical profession lices — an dies — as it saves lives..

Nicholas Kristof, Life and Death in the ‘Hot Zone’

Ms. Gifford recalled a patient who had come from an assisted-living center. “I’m really scared,” he told her. “I don’t want to have Covid. I’m in a facility and there are people dying there.”

I’ve chosen that snippet because it cuts so close to home (my own nursing facility) for me..

But more generally:

For health workers, intubation is nerve-racking because it causes the virus to spray out from the lungs into the air. In this case, the procedure was performed in a room on the edge of the hot zone with negative air pressure, so that the virus would remain in the room. A plastic box was placed over the patient’s head, and the nurse-anesthetist put her arms through holes in the box to perform the intubation.

And the doctors and nurses perform this nightmare procedure perhaps eight or more times in a day.. What an unimaginable, multiple proof of the strength of the Hippocratic Oath!! If you yearn for miracles, look no farther.

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Be at peace, have courage, fight the good fight, be in peace, : have compassion..ight the good fight, be at peace: have compassion..

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  1. Stephen Calhoun:

    Trade-offs. Local sociologies.

    Here on the east side of Cleveland the trip every ten days or so to the grocery store is, for me, frightening. I am not used to being frightened. Fright is underdeveloped. Yet, at the check out fear was evident in the clerk’s masked face. Masks revealing the eyes, pointing to them.

    The other thing is wondering about where people are going in their cars (on my walks.) This has replaced the tried-and-true query I pitch at suburban houses: “I wonder what those people do for a living?

    Charles, I have wandered into contemplating scale and simple biological praxis—right now.