Real and imagined.
Category Archives: Health
Data And Numbers
Where are we really with the virus?
Note that (as is often the case with healthcare statistics) different countries are keeping books differently, making it difficult to compare. I continue to believe that the fatality rate will ultimately end up being far below one percent.
[Update early afternoon]
A lot of links from Instapundit. Things are looking better than the models. One I found of interest is that if we can believe Chinese data, four out of five cases are asymptomatic.
Fingernails
They harbor the virus; keep them short. Makes sense, though it will affect women’s fashion considerably.
The News Media
No other institution has failed the public worse. Which is pretty sad, considering the competition.
[Update mid afternoon]
The media lied, people died. And this was driven purely by Trump derangement. If he said something might be useful, it couldn’t possibly be.
[Update a few minutes later]
Great. It may be that the virus can spread through normal breathing. I don’t know; seems like it would be spreading much faster if that was the case. But we continue to suffer from a lack of data.
The Toilet-Paper Shortage
It’s not about hoarding.
That makes sense. It would imply that places who specialize in supplying businesses, like Smart and Final in LA, would have plenty.
[Update a while later]
It’s disrupting the locavore supply chain as well.
We’re now seeing the fragility of our civilizational infrastructure. It needs to be more robust and resilient.
A Fit Of Sanity
San Francisco (!) has reversed its plastic-bag ban, and instead (finally) banned reusable bags.
Hopefully this won’t be temporary; it was always stupid.
[Update a few minutes later]
Katherine was prescient (as was I).
The Latest Attempts At A Cure
They don’t target the virus; they target the hosts.
Let’s hope it works.
[Update a few minutes later]
And now we have a new vaccine that seems to build antibodies in mice.
As always, faster, please.
[Update a couple minutes later]
Cutting through the fog about the potential cures.
I think that 95% of the media resistance to the idea that hydroxychloraquine would be effective is because Trump said it could be.
[Update a few more minutes later]
More vaccines on the way. Fortunately, as the article points out, this bug is relatively easy to target, more so than the flu. It’s just too bad that we didn’t have a head start on it.
Innovation, Privacy, And Nature
How the pandemic will change our views of them.
Well, This Is Crazy
An railroad engineer tried to ram the hospital ship in LA harbor with the train.
Blue Origin
Is the pandemic going to delay its next test flight?
It seems fairly low risk to me, at least to Texas, given how far out in the boonies it is. The main issue is the risk of flying there, I’d think. Maybe they should do a road trip.
[Update a few minutes later]
Meanwhile, if you want to fly on Starship, SpaceX has released a Users Guide. I’ll have to check it out.