The coronavirus
Comments
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mace1229 said:mfc2006 said:Halifax2TheMax said:The My Pillow guy is addressing the press in the rose garden. WTF?The other funny thing when I googled My Pillow I scrolled through the top 10 results. Only the conservative news outlets mentioned him making medical equipment and the Liberal ones focused on him getting a free informercial. I really don’t get it, we are in need of equipment so we put someone down whos willing to make it?
If I was a conservative CEO I’d think twice about helping out seeing how Mike was thrown under the bus for doing that.0 -
My daily positivity boost
Italy's new cases yesterday were the least since St. Patrick's day. They have been trending down on new cases for 5 days. It could be an indication that they are entering the back-side of that sharp curve and could get a handle on things before too long.
Fauci says that data is indicating that social distancing is working in the USA. We are going to see some tough days through April and will get a bit hairy. But it will be 'better' than it could have been. If things progress we could get a handle on this by May. With a coherent and extensive testing/tracking/containment program, I could see various segments of business opening up in sections of the country in June (which is what Trump may have been alluding to with his June 1st date).
And we are another day closer to an approved vaccine.
So hang in there everyone. Stay safe. Try not to focus on the negative and feed into your anxiety.0 -
rgambs said:mace1229 said:mfc2006 said:Halifax2TheMax said:The My Pillow guy is addressing the press in the rose garden. WTF?The other funny thing when I googled My Pillow I scrolled through the top 10 results. Only the conservative news outlets mentioned him making medical equipment and the Liberal ones focused on him getting a free informercial. I really don’t get it, we are in need of equipment so we put someone down whos willing to make it?
If I was a conservative CEO I’d think twice about helping out seeing how Mike was thrown under the bus for doing that.
....it's almost as if there was a favor or advantage expected in return for something.....
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stuckinline said:
besides settling the above-mentioned lawsuit for claiming pillows cure insomnia, sleep apnea, fibromyalgia, and multiple sclerosisMyPillow class action lawsuit challenged the appropriateness of the marketing, packaging and sale of MyPillow products, including health claims about the product, BOGO promotions, and the use of third party endorsements and logos.
Also, he's a former crack-head
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/20/how-mypillow-founder-went-from-crack-addict-to-self-made-millionaire.html
it's well known here in MN this guy is POS0 -
rgambs said:mace1229 said:mfc2006 said:Halifax2TheMax said:The My Pillow guy is addressing the press in the rose garden. WTF?The other funny thing when I googled My Pillow I scrolled through the top 10 results. Only the conservative news outlets mentioned him making medical equipment and the Liberal ones focused on him getting a free informercial. I really don’t get it, we are in need of equipment so we put someone down whos willing to make it?
If I was a conservative CEO I’d think twice about helping out seeing how Mike was thrown under the bus for doing that.0 -
F Me In The Brain said:Also, the idiot in charge keeps throwing gas on the fire by doing everything except show good leadership. I'm rooting for the damn fool. Act like a leader, please, and I will be happy to give you the credit you seek.
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you know that dude fucks those pillows, right??"You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry." - Lincoln
"Well, you tell him that I don't talk to suckas."0 -
i hear the designer and manufacturer of the Trumpy Bear is speaking at the next one."You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry." - Lincoln
"Well, you tell him that I don't talk to suckas."0 -
MayDay10 said:My daily positivity boost
Italy's new cases yesterday were the least since St. Patrick's day. They have been trending down on new cases for 5 days. It could be an indication that they are entering the back-side of that sharp curve and could get a handle on things before too long.
Fauci says that data is indicating that social distancing is working in the USA. We are going to see some tough days through April and will get a bit hairy. But it will be 'better' than it could have been. If things progress we could get a handle on this by May. With a coherent and extensive testing/tracking/containment program, I could see various segments of business opening up in sections of the country in June (which is what Trump may have been alluding to with his June 1st date).
And we are another day closer to an approved vaccine.
So hang in there everyone. Stay safe. Try not to focus on the negative and feed into your anxiety.
Thanks for the positivity piece. Always nice to see little glimmers of hope.
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rgambs said:gimmesometruth27 said:i am on a conference call with leading orthopaedic surgeons across the world. they are sharing their experiences now. there is one from italy, south korea, argentina, and a few from the us. the guy from italy said that they stopped all elective surgeries on 3/1/2020 and they were not able to get a handle on it even after stopping that early. he said that he has lost 4 people close to him, including a 56 year old colleague. he said that it is a "horrible, horrible death" and reinforced the fact that this is very serious and that americans should continue to distance and take it seriously. scary stuff. i was in a 9 hour surgery yesterday and have to cover cases on wed and thursday. i am really getting concerned.
there is a ton of blood splatter and fluid splatter in orthopedics. you knock one of the plastic bags that captures the used arthroscopy fluid on your legs, you are gonna change gowns. soiled gloves, i mean seriously soiled gloves with dry blood need to be changed because you can't grip the equipment with dried blood caked on to your gloves. You get someone bleeding without a tourniquet and you get blood on your mask, you need to change it. i used to scrub before i went into sales. a lot of it looks like waste, and a lot of disposable things like anchors fail and get wasted. I used to change masks after every case. when you scrub you can get blood drops on your bouffant, glasses, and masks. we used to call that "getting blessed", and it is damn nasty. The masks get moist inside when you wear them for a few hours and it is a gross feeling, so we used to change them frequently. now that there is a shortage, some facilities are telling staff to use the same mask for an entire week. that is just naaasty."You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry." - Lincoln
"Well, you tell him that I don't talk to suckas."0 -
https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Exclusive-Captain-of-aircraft-carrier-with-15167883.php
damn ..jesus greets me looks just like me ....0 -
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gimmesometruth27 said:the doctor from south korea just said on this call that they are implementing social distancing as their new normal going forward. wow.0
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Here is one of those well known people who's gotten it:
"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
gimmesometruth27 said:rgambs said:gimmesometruth27 said:i am on a conference call with leading orthopaedic surgeons across the world. they are sharing their experiences now. there is one from italy, south korea, argentina, and a few from the us. the guy from italy said that they stopped all elective surgeries on 3/1/2020 and they were not able to get a handle on it even after stopping that early. he said that he has lost 4 people close to him, including a 56 year old colleague. he said that it is a "horrible, horrible death" and reinforced the fact that this is very serious and that americans should continue to distance and take it seriously. scary stuff. i was in a 9 hour surgery yesterday and have to cover cases on wed and thursday. i am really getting concerned.
there is a ton of blood splatter and fluid splatter in orthopedics. you knock one of the plastic bags that captures the used arthroscopy fluid on your legs, you are gonna change gowns. soiled gloves, i mean seriously soiled gloves with dry blood need to be changed because you can't grip the equipment with dried blood caked on to your gloves. You get someone bleeding without a tourniquet and you get blood on your mask, you need to change it. i used to scrub before i went into sales. a lot of it looks like waste, and a lot of disposable things like anchors fail and get wasted. I used to change masks after every case. when you scrub you can get blood drops on your bouffant, glasses, and masks. we used to call that "getting blessed", and it is damn nasty. The masks get moist inside when you wear them for a few hours and it is a gross feeling, so we used to change them frequently. now that there is a shortage, some facilities are telling staff to use the same mask for an entire week. that is just naaasty.
Then otherwise, just the sheer volume in joint replacements is staggering. I would personally wear 8-10 masks, 4-6 pairs of booties/boot covers, 2-4 hats, 6-10 pairs nitrile gloves, and upwards of 15 pairs of sterile gloves in a day of joint replacements.Monkey Driven, Call this Living?0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:Here is one of those well known people who's gotten it:I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0
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Make it stop!
The number of coronavirus deaths in New Jersey surged to 267 on Tuesday with the largest single-day increase in deaths as the outbreak continues to widen with 18,696 total coronavirus cases statewide.
Gov. Phil Murphy said there were 69 new deaths including a Passaic County firefighter.
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
mcgruff10 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Here is one of those well known people who's gotten it:
His brother Andrew talks about it here at 46 min "He's strong... not as strong as he thinks"https://youtu.be/uIhRM9pnH40
"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
rgambs said:gimmesometruth27 said:rgambs said:gimmesometruth27 said:i am on a conference call with leading orthopaedic surgeons across the world. they are sharing their experiences now. there is one from italy, south korea, argentina, and a few from the us. the guy from italy said that they stopped all elective surgeries on 3/1/2020 and they were not able to get a handle on it even after stopping that early. he said that he has lost 4 people close to him, including a 56 year old colleague. he said that it is a "horrible, horrible death" and reinforced the fact that this is very serious and that americans should continue to distance and take it seriously. scary stuff. i was in a 9 hour surgery yesterday and have to cover cases on wed and thursday. i am really getting concerned.
there is a ton of blood splatter and fluid splatter in orthopedics. you knock one of the plastic bags that captures the used arthroscopy fluid on your legs, you are gonna change gowns. soiled gloves, i mean seriously soiled gloves with dry blood need to be changed because you can't grip the equipment with dried blood caked on to your gloves. You get someone bleeding without a tourniquet and you get blood on your mask, you need to change it. i used to scrub before i went into sales. a lot of it looks like waste, and a lot of disposable things like anchors fail and get wasted. I used to change masks after every case. when you scrub you can get blood drops on your bouffant, glasses, and masks. we used to call that "getting blessed", and it is damn nasty. The masks get moist inside when you wear them for a few hours and it is a gross feeling, so we used to change them frequently. now that there is a shortage, some facilities are telling staff to use the same mask for an entire week. that is just naaasty.
Then otherwise, just the sheer volume in joint replacements is staggering. I would personally wear 8-10 masks, 4-6 pairs of booties/boot covers, 2-4 hats, 6-10 pairs nitrile gloves, and upwards of 15 pairs of sterile gloves in a day of joint replacements.
oh yeah, the load on SPD with ortho is staggering. i shit you not, they had 40 trays open for this big case we did yesterday. only 4 of them were mine, but they wanted to have everything there because they were not sure what they were going to be able to fix, what they could salvage, or what they were going to end up doing in the end. they would pop trays to get a single item out of them. i felt so bad for the scrub who had to tray to manage 3 double decker tables. but having to reprocess all of that from a single case is staggering. granted, it was a case that went 8.5 hours, but still as you said you can't have specific trays for everyone. especially when your surgical plan changes in the middle of the case. imagine being the person in decontam and all of that stuff comes rolling in. that would suck."You can tell the greatness of a man by what makes him angry." - Lincoln
"Well, you tell him that I don't talk to suckas."0
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