reindeer 830 The estimates for death in the US ha
Post# of 123840
Hospitals are not seeing the rush of patients predicted – this was from California:
San Diego we have 1,307,402 people, that's not including the surrounding rural counties. As of today we have 1,112 tested pos, hospi 211, intensive care 85, deaths 17. We are not overwhelmed PERIOD
— Linda/Nan426 (@Nan426) April 4, 2020
Hospitals around the country are thankfully not seeing the surges predicted – here’s news from Texas:
I talk to my father’s nurse several times a week, before she leaves his house to work nights at a major DFW trauma center. She is getting hours cut and working on empty floors.
— Gregg A. Smith (@GreggASmith3) April 4, 2020
Here is news from Colorado:
Work at a hospital on Colorado front range and lots of staff are standing down waiting for the surge. Hours reduced, some furloughs, medical practices strained trying to make payroll.
— John E (@BD_Johnny) April 5, 2020
Here is news from Michigan:
Similar story from large hospital in MI. ER volume is way down. Hospital is so far shifting personnel and re-tooling areas, but so far volume isn't going up. This can't last.
— TheLegalBrain (@TheLegalBrain1) April 5, 2020
As the real results of the coronavirus begin to tabulate and more data becomes available, the picture is clear and more Americans are ready to go back to work to help build our great American economy back to where it belongs:
Calculate the #Coronavirus risk of death for a 35-year old American, non-smoker, average weight, no known underlying health problems, practicing social distancing, wearing a facemask, commuting to work alone. Why can't that person go back to work?
There are signs that this Easter week the coronavirus may have reached a peak and it may not be as severe as was predicted.
This is our Easter miracle. Miracles do happen.
https://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2020/04/pray...tent=daily