Off Topic Coronavirus

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He used to sit in the Lower Loft, very close to where 999s used to sit.
He is a real supporter and went fairly often

But I am told since his profile has risen he is now in South Africa Road near the directors box. I do not think it is a club thing or club decision other than that area is easier to marshall than an exposed seat in lower loft.

Typical he’d sit somewhere less open to a Bovril shower.
 
He used to sit in the Lower Loft, very close to where 999s used to sit.
He is a real supporter and went fairly often

But I am told since his profile has risen he is now in South Africa Road near the directors box. I do not think it is a club thing or club decision other than that area is easier to marshall than an exposed seat in lower loft.
Ahh he has moved to the posh padded seats.

A mate of mine has a ST in that area too which he occasionally lends to me when he can't go to games. I must have a look for Gove the next time I am there. Considering there are posts which partially block your view in the S.A. Rd stand, I would much prefer the view from the Lower Loft, despite the lack of padded seats and much tighter leg room.
 
Ahh he has moved to the posh padded seats.

A mate of mine has a ST in that area too which he occasionally lends to me when he can't go to games. I must have a look for Gove the next time I am there. Considering there are posts which partially block your view in the S.A. Rd stand, I would much prefer the view from the Lower Loft, despite the lack of padded seats and much tighter leg room.

Incredibly cramped in SA Rd. I sometimes end up there in the Cup games as Ellerslie is usually closed. Can't say I enjoy it although the view is decent
 
So she is being asked (bearing in mind her 'unclear' test result) to go in and give care to someone with a positive covid19 test and the most basic PPE. All her visits have now got 'do not resuscitate' on their files also. She and all her team have decided and refused to see these confirmed patients as the risk of infecting more becomes ever increasing by doing so.
Sorry I forgot to mention. The most alarming aspect of my story is that it appears to have been the first thing they asked for when he was admitted. Would he like to sign a DNR. Really?. I'd like to think that this part got lost in translation ie M in law was not a reliable witness simply because she was so distressed at the time. Hoeewever whatever the context what a thing to ask an 84 year old woman who is facing the loss of her husband without even a chance to say good bye.
 
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Sister in laws team have received an email regarding 2 patients returned home from hospital. Both still tested positive for covid19 on departure. The discharge note asks for a care team to go to each daily and for volunteers to shop for them. What a strange and bizarre situation.

Better than sending then to care homes, I suppose.
 
Ahh he has moved to the posh padded seats.

A mate of mine has a ST in that area too which he occasionally lends to me when he can't go to games. I must have a look for Gove the next time I am there. Considering there are posts which partially block your view in the S.A. Rd stand, I would much prefer the view from the Lower Loft, despite the lack of padded seats and much tighter leg room.
My boy and I sat with Nines in the Lower Loft family section once. The leg space was the best in the ground, and there were very few children.
 
Sorry I forgot to mention. The most alarming aspect of my story is that it appears to have been the first thing they asked for when he was admitted. Would he like to sign a DNR. Really?. I'd like to think that this part got lost in translation ie M in law was not a reliable witness simply because she was so distressed at the time. Hoeewever whatever the context what a thing to ask an 84 year old woman who is facing the loss of her husband without even a chance to say good bye.
It’s a horrible thing to say but it’s quite important to have the do not resuscitate conversation with your elderly relations before it gets to this stage, where no one can be expected to think straight. I had to do it with my mum a few years ago after she had recovered - 6-8 months- from massive heart surgery - she was very clear that she would not go through anything like that as an older or frailer person.
 
It’s a horrible thing to say but it’s quite important to have the do not resuscitate conversation with your elderly relations before it gets to this stage, where no one can be expected to think straight. I had to do it with my mum a few years ago after she had recovered - 6-8 months- from massive heart surgery - she was very clear that she would not go through anything like that as an older or frailer person.
Agree 100% but the impression given was that it was the first thing she was asked about once he had been admitted. Still, I suppose given the way health is a commodity to make money out of in this modern world I suppose we should be grateful we're not asked to sign over our estates to HMRC to pay the bills for our care over the years. Now there's a thought.
 
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watch out for fecal-oral transmission
now off to look up coprophilia


Coronavirus Infects Our Intestines and Can Damage the Heart, Report Says

Rectal swabs show virus persistence long after our nasopharyngeal systems are clear, studies show

Ruth Schuster
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Illustration of a villus in the intestine with a zoom-in to an electron microscopy image of coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 (dark circles) at the edge of an intestinal cell.Kvin Knoops / Raimond Ravell
The coronavirus can infect cells of the intestine and multiply there, says a team of Dutch researchers based on laboratory studies of cells in petri dishes, which indicates that intestinal issuance can potentially transmit infection. They also demonstrated that the virus, SARS-CoV-2, can multiply using intestinal cells, which strongly indicates the possibility of “fecal-oral” transmission.

Meanwhile, separate studies have shown that the coronavirus can also damage the heart. In some patients, the initial symptoms didn’t even necessarily involve labored breathing but cardiovascular problems.

Fecal-oral transmission is exactly what you think it is, and is generally caused by inadequate hygiene, not necessarily anilingus or coprophilia.

Fecal germs of any kind can get transmitted to the mouth by “the five Fs” – fingers, fields, fluids, flies, and food.
Fields can be watered with sewage, for instance, and the “flies” refers to any garbage-oriented aviating arthropod.

Previous studies had identified genetic material from the new coronavirus in stool, but had fallen short of demonstrating that the viral particles in feces were infectious. Now, by culturing human intestine cells in the lab, the researchers show that the virus can propagate in the cell culture, as they reported in Science (a publication of the American Association for the Advancement of Science).

SARS-CoV-2, which causes COVID-19, is an RNA virus, meaning its genetic material is a strand of RNA, not DNA. That RNA contains the genetic code for a number of proteins, including the one it uses to “dock” onto specific human cells that have a specific protein called ACE-2 on their exterior. When a virus locks onto a cell’s ACE-2, that triggers the target cell’s membrane to “swallow” the virus. Once inside the cell, the virus hijacks the cell’s mechanisms to produce more viral particles – the progeny. Eventually, the cell explodes from all the progeny inside, scattering the new viruses into our systems to infect more cells.

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Intestinal organoids, the right one infected with coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. The coronavirus is colored white, the organoids themselves are colored blue and green.Joep Beumer / copyright Hubrecht
The chief entry point for SARS-CoV-2 is our pulmonary system, the cells of which copiously express ACE-2. We can catch the coronavirus through our nose and mouth, and our eyes too. But the next question is where in our bodies the virus can infect and proliferate. Or, to put it another way: which cellular systems express that “docking protein” ACE-2.

The list of systems with ACE-2 turn out to include the pulmonary system, certain tissues in the kidneys, and the testicles, though not the ovaries – which may explain why the disease is deadlier for men than women. And, ACE-2 is also copiously expressed by our intestinal tissues.

Should men be worried about coronavirus because of their testicles? [/paste:font]
This in turn means that we can potentially infect a virologically naive person (or ferret) by sneezing or coughing on them, spitting at them, breathing hard in their direction within a reasonable distance – or through our intestinal issuance.

What’s more, it turns out that the testicles and our guts may continue to harbor the coronavirus after our nasopharyngeal systems sound the all-clear. “Viral RNA can be found in rectal swabs, even after nasopharyngeal testing has turned negative, implying gastrointestinal infection and a fecal-oral transmission route," the researchers say.

Their findings could explain why about a third of COVID-19 patients report gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea and discomfort, and the fact that the virus often can be detected in stool samples.

The viral particles don’t “survive” outside the body for long, and most of us don’t handle each other’s fresh feces. But it does beg the question – raised initially by Australian doctors – of whether flatulence can infect. It hasn’t been proved and farts definitely aren’t the cause of the massive spread of the coronavirus, but it can’t be ruled out yet.

To wrap this up: the presence of viral particles in raw sewage is already being used to gauge the spread in some areas without mass testing. Can you get the coronavirus from sewage? Almost certainly, but that isn’t the chief mechanism of infection – again at the least because most people don’t come into contact with other people’s raw waste. There have not been cases of water treatment staff becoming ill that way either, insofar as is known.

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Intestinal tissue in the lab infected with coronavirus SARS-CoV-2. The coronavirus is colored white, the organoids themselves are colored blue and green.Joep Beumer / copyright Hubrecht
Can you get the coronavirus from drinking water? Not if the water has been treated. Can you get it from a water body – pools, for instance? Again, those generally use treated water. The best advice remains to meticulously maintain social distancing, use a mask – especially if you think you might be infectious or have been exposed to the virus – and to wear not only a mask when in society but also pants.

As for the damage the virus causes to the heart, as Johns Hopkins medical center explains, that is highly patient-specific but it isn’t due to direct infection.

“Heart failure has been the cause of death in COVID-19 patients, even those without severe breathing problems such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS,” writes Dr. Erin Michos. Why does the heart fail? Could be any of a number of reasons, but they boil down to the extra stress that the coronavirus causes the body – including by massive stimulation of our own immune systems. Michos points out that flu may do that, too.
 
That's great news Kiwi. To achieve zero new cases is an indication of how your Government and people have responded so positively and definitively. :emoticon-0137-clapp

Taking their population density into account, the equivalent number the UK could use to benchmark itself is easy to find by multiplying 0 x 10.