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05-28-20 14:37 #17472
Posts: 5612Originally Posted by BigButtDetecto [View Original Post]
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05-28-20 13:26 #17471
Posts: 2344Originally Posted by Dogers69 [View Original Post]
On 31 January, the Italian government (as well as the United States Government) suspended all flights to and from China.
On 17 March, undersecretary at the Ministry of Health Sandra Zampa announced the purchase of many new ventilators as well as the importing of one and a half million masks from South Africa.
In order to deal with the numbers of COVID-19 patients, intensive care units were expanded, and new hospitals were created, especially in Lombardy. In Emilia-Romagna, professor Marco Ranieri developed a method to double the efficiency of ventilators in ICUs. The lack of a single protocol for hospitals was considered to be a problem.
Due to hospitals overcrowding with coronavirus patients, thousands of cancer patients experienced difficulties in getting access to treatment and transplants, with their lives put at even higher risk. Dozens of cancer hospital sections were indeed wither dedicated to host coronavirus wards, or closed after personnel got infected. According to a study, cancer patients represented 17% of coronavirus fatalities in Italy.
A letter published on the New England Journal of Medicine Catalyst Innovations in Care Delivery claimed that one of the reasons for the high death count in the area of Bergamo was hospital contamination.
Healthcare workers were also affected by coronavirus infections, with a higher percentage of the infected healthcare workers being women because of their predominance among nurses. This resulted in death in a considerable amount of cases, especially amongst general practitioners. By the end of March, more than 60 doctors in Italy had died with COVID-19, and the figure increased to 80 by 4 April and later 145 by 22 April.
So now, let's talk about Mexico:
Number and categorization of hospitalized cases were presented by the Secretariat of Health at the daily press conference (stable cases vs severe cases vs medical ventilation cases). That data showed steadily increasing amounts of hospitalizations and concern that the Mexican medical system was headed into disastrous territory. So the Mexican government did something predicable. After April 20 the Secretariat of Health stopped reporting this type of classification of hospitalized cases (as some hospitals began refusing admission of Covid patients).
On May 13, 2020, the Secretary of Economy Graciela Mrquez Coland announced the Plan for the return to the new normality (Plan para el regreso a la nueva normalidad in Spanish). The purpose of the plan is to progressively resume productive, social and educational activities that were halted during the phases of contingency in order to reopen the economy.
Phase 2 started on May 18th and is still scheduled to end on May 31st. Phase 2 was designed to prepare for the reopening of the country. Manufacturing of transportation equipment, mining, and construction industries are considered essential activities.
The starting date of Phase 3 has not yet been announced. For Phase 3 a "traffic light" coding system is to be implemented for the gradual reopening of the country. Consisting of four colors (green, yellow, orange, and red) that represent the severity of the pandemic in each state, the "traffic light" will be updated weekly and each color indicates which activities are safe to resume. Since Tijuana and Mexico City have been among Mexico's hardest hit areas, they likely will be in the last areas (states) to emerge from the shutdown.
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05-28-20 06:27 #17470
Posts: 227Originally Posted by Ctytek [View Original Post]
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05-28-20 05:44 #17469
Posts: 942I don't think so. Try again!
Originally Posted by DonCarlos1234 [View Original Post]
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05-28-20 04:42 #17468
Posts: 362Covid19 safety in Tijuana
Why can't they open a place like campo allegre in curacao? This is perfect to keep social distance.
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05-28-20 03:34 #17467
Posts: 1458The death rate is always dropping. That's the amount people who died per people who got infected. Theres definitely an unknown, unexplainable transition factor, like how it killed so many so quick in Italy. The doctors are now saying, like in Japan, the disease dies down a bit, in its ability to kill, and it's not herd immunity or pills. So if they want to they can open in a month if tijuana needs the month to catch up to nyc timeline which was hit 1st. After that, it can open, it's not woman under 40 who will die anyway, it's some of the middle aged men customers who will get it from flying to San Diego more than a bar. If you don't talk to any guys in the Bar, and they pump massive amount fresh air, it's not likely to get coronavirus. I'd even walk outside every 25 minutes to increase my chances of health.
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05-28-20 02:49 #17466
Posts: 3851Originally Posted by ChinaMan360 [View Original Post]
Unfortunately Sept is also when flu season starts(possible second wave?). IMO we will be lucky to be celebrating Christmas in Tijuana.
Tijuana will probably be open before then but there will still be a high risk just being there in an urban environment with minimal social distancing, crowded streets, street people without PPE.
It's a mess. It makes me so sad.
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05-28-20 02:38 #17465
Posts: 85Originally Posted by DramaFree11 [View Original Post]
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05-28-20 02:36 #17464
Posts: 85Originally Posted by Chator [View Original Post]
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05-27-20 04:31 #17463
Posts: 425Originally Posted by Chator [View Original Post]
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05-27-20 03:35 #17462
Posts: 2777Originally Posted by Chator [View Original Post]
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05-27-20 03:23 #17461
Posts: 52Originally Posted by ChinaMan360 [View Original Post]
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05-27-20 01:39 #17460
Posts: 85Originally Posted by RikyMichaels7 [View Original Post]
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05-27-20 01:02 #17459
Posts: 3192Originally Posted by RikyMichaels7 [View Original Post]
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05-26-20 23:55 #17458
Posts: 227Chicago Opening
Opening June 1 says waiter and working girl.