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BCN and Northern metro area:
R0 at 0,95 for the past 3 weeks
CCB occupancy: 50%
Seroprevalence studies point at population immunity remaining under 10%
I found the stories that you referenced:...About the faulty tests, the company that produced them indicated that the faultiness had been more in the use or, rather, in the purchase: they were a model of test which had a sensitivity of only 30%, so they were not meant to be used as rapid tests.
It's been a problem in the US, too- particularly in march before the CDC allowed a COVID-19 post-mortem diagnosis when no test was done....no officially recognized by the government, and including the deaths reported by funeral homes, which almost double those included in the global data that see internationally reported for Spain.
That's also been an issue in the US. We get reports from our nursing homes that multiple staff members are testing positive but the test results reported up through our State Health Departments don't report occupation, so there's no metric to tell us how many healthcare workers were exposed on the job. There was a CDC report that estimated that over 9,000 healthcare workers had tested positive but that report came out 3 weeks ago before we reached our peak (and there has been nothing- nothing! - from the CDC since then....In any case, like in the rest of Western Europe, the carnage has been among the elderly in residential care, but the medical staff has beeb hit harder over here: around 20%, they constitute a good part of the more recent new cases: this morning it was officially reported that two hospitals in Madrid and Barcelona have a 11% of their staff infected by the virus.
My sister tells me that they have had children presenting with Kawasaki syndrome at her hospital here in Ontario. They noticed this some weeks ago.
I suspect that when people start to realize that this may also kill their children or seriously sicken them....and it isn't just about old people...it will adjust thinking about distancing.
https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/co...BMm9O9sBsqLtXYW4erhT_lPCvSBmr13Jvv8PaAH92klEI
By "this" and "it", it's not clear whether you're talking about COVID-19 or this new Kawasaki-like syndrome.No children have yet died from this. It's not helpful yet to say we know children "may also" die from it.
These children are coming in with something that looks like Kawasaki but they're much sicker and their inflammatory markers are 10-100 times the levels that pediatrician intensivists typically see in Kawasaki, so this might be a totally new syndrome or it could be an exacerbated form of Kawasaki.Some have suffered significant illness.
It was reported in Europe in early April. Because this seems to be a sequelae of COVID-19 that appears days or weeks after infection, there may have been earlier cases that were missed. It wouldn't surprise me if the Chinese go back and determine that they had pediatric cases in January that were missed.The reports are BRAND NEW like only a week or so old. We don't understand this phenomenon, even a little.
Again, it's early to label this Kawasaki since it seems to be more acute that typical Kawasaki. The link to SARS-2 is established but the pathophysiology isn't understood.No connection between this Kawasaki syndrome and covid-19 has been seriously established..
Walks in the park aren't listed on the mortality schedules for pediatric patients but neither is Kawasaki. Kawasaki is stlil a rare disorder, which makes its possible connection to COVID-19 even more mysterious. The important thing to keep in mind is that many of the adults dying with COVID-19 have autoimmune dysfunction... which is what Kawasaki is, too.But lots of things "may also kill their children" like going for a walk in a park. Until we know if this is a real problem, rhetoric like this is..
fearmongering. .
I am NOT going to do anything differently! I think that's an intelligent choice. People get impatient (it's HUMAN) BUT it's going to result in tens or maybe hundreds of thousands more people eventually dying.there is such a concerted effort to abandon physical distancing, avoidance of crowds and full re-opening in states reporting increases and deaths.
I am NOT going to do anything differently! I think that's an intelligent choice. People get impatient (it's HUMAN) BUT (...)
US - 1,204,475 (up from 1,180,634 / 2.0%) - 71,078 deaths
Spain - 219,329 (up from 216,582 / 0.6%) - 25,613 deaths / 123,486 recovered
Italy - 213,013 (up from 211,938 / 0.5%) - 29,315 deaths / 85,231 recovered
UK - 196,243 (up from 191,832 / 2.3%) - 29,501 deaths
By "this" and "it", it's not clear whether you're talking about COVID-19 or this new Kawasaki-like syndrome.
Children have died from COVID-19. Most have had comorbidities but we also haven't seen SARS-2 get into residential homes or medical facilities for children, yet. The mortality for COVID-19 patients under age 18 is estimated to be low- less than 1%- but there's a lot of cases that might have been missed because the early information on COVID-19 was that children didn't get it.
If you're referring to mortality from Kawasaki, the mortality for Kawasaki is generally low- usually less than 1% if it's treated early. And Kawasaki isn't what kills the children who die- it's usually a complication like aneurysm or cardiac failure.
These children are coming in with something that looks like Kawasaki but they're much sicker and their inflammatory markers are 10-100 times the levels that pediatrician intensivists typically see in Kawasaki, so this might be a totally new syndrome or it could be an exacerbated form of Kawasaki.
There's also been a high incidence of a toxic shock syndrome in these kids. They've required hemodynamic support and mechanical ventilation.
It was reported in Europe in early April. Because this seems to be a sequelae of COVID-19 that appears days or weeks after infection, there may have been earlier cases that were missed. It wouldn't surprise me if the Chinese go back and determine that they had pediatric cases in January that were missed.
Again, it's early to label this Kawasaki since it seems to be more acute that typical Kawasaki but the link is established but the pathophysiology isn't understood.
Walks in the park aren't listed on the mortality schedules for pediatric patients but neither is Kawasaki. Kawasaki is stlil a rare disorder, which makes it's connection to COVID-19 even more mysterious. The important thing to keep in mind is that many of the adults dying with COVID-19 have autoimmune dysfunction... which is what Kawasaki is, too.
In this instance, it does challenge the belief that COVID-19 isn't serious in children. And it should give us pause as we're considering whether to reopen public schools.
I found the stories that you referenced:
Coronavirus test kits withdrawn in Spain over poor accuracy rate [The Guardian]
And it sounds like they had two rounds of problems with those tests from Bioeasy?
Spain seeks refund for defective coronavirus tests, after replacement kits also prove faulty [El País]
If I read this story correctly, there has also been complaints about some of the antibody tests- 33% are false positives, no?
Tests used with the Madrid healthcare workers are not reliable [El País]
It's been a problem in the US, too- particularly in march before the CDC allowed a COVID-19 post-mortem diagnosis when no test was done.
That's also been an issue in the US. We get reports from our nursing homes that multiple staff members are testing positive but the test results reported up through our State Health Departments don't report occupation, so there's no metric to tell us how many healthcare workers were exposed on the job. There was a CDC report that estimated that over 9,000 healthcare workers had tested positive but that report came out 3 weeks ago before we reached our peak (and there has been nothing- nothing! - from the CDC since then.
To call out another unfortunate milestone: the death count in the UK has surpassed the death count in every other European country. It is second only to the US.
UK is claiming a 15% mortality which probably means that the case count is undercounted. Don't be surprised if at some point, the UK finds that they have 600,000 to 800,000 people who had coronavirus infections.
It's also likely that the counts in the Spain and Italy are much higher- something discussed in the posts between Belamo and me yesterday.
“It puts into question whether the government’s tactics at the start of the pandemic were sufficiently fast, and especially whether the lockdown should have happened earlier and whether we should have been better prepared with increased capacity for viral testing and contact tracing from the start. Both have proven inadequate.”
I am really interested to hear more about these case studies- whether they knew up front that these children had COVID-19 (i.e. were the symptomatic?) or whether the European cases gave them the insight to test for SARS-2 antigen and antibodies. Some of the early information that is being released is really puzzling....At this point, the only thing that we know is that suddenly this is turning up. Not being overly cautious until more is known could be damaging or even possibly fatal if this mutates in such a way as to hit the youngest as well as the oldest....like what happened when Spanish flu ran rampant in its second wave around the globe.
In reading some of the articles about what the Spanish healthcare system did in April, I was thinking to myself that they seemed to really be thinking and planning this out. Running quality assurance validation on those tests they bought really saved them some problems later on.So much for enjoying the most "competitive" and "efficient" healthcare systems: a good balance sheet provides a good death and infection balance too.
Same as the US: No Plan.... at least until it was too late.How did the UK fuck this up so badly?
“This is presenting very much like a common childhood illness, which it is not,” she said. “This is a novel diagnosis that doesn’t exactly have a name, doesn’t exactly have a timeline, doesn’t exactly have a protocol. We didn’t learn about this in medical school.”
A couple of things in the article which differ from what I said in my post yesterday:zoltanspawn said:No children have yet died from this. It's not helpful yet to say we know children "may also" die from it.As the article notes...it isn't the same as Kawasaki...but can create serious cardiac issues.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/06/...rjgGG5qsk4iPP-ymcBpi_IduD1TCz-IcXY2bjh86VHKWE

A new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is providing the first snapshot of the extent of coronavirus outbreaks in correctional facilities and detention centers across the U.S., where thousands of inmates and staff have tested positive and dozens have died.
Jails and prisons, where social distancing is nearly impossible, have emerged as hotspots for COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus. For its report released Wednesday, the CDC sought data from health departments in 54 states and territories and heard back from 37.
Thirty-two of the jurisdictions that responded reported at least one laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 case among detainees or staff members in 420 separate jails and prisons. In those facilities, 4,893 inmates had been diagnosed with COVID-19 as of April 21, and 88 had died. Staff members accounted for 2,778 cases and 15 deaths.
By "this" and "it", it's not clear whether you're talking about COVID-19 or this new Kawasaki-like syndrome.
Children have died from COVID-19. Most have had comorbidities but we also haven't seen SARS-2 get into residential homes or medical facilities for children, yet. The mortality for COVID-19 patients under age 18 is estimated to be low- less than 1%- but there's a lot of cases that might have been missed because the early information on COVID-19 was that children didn't get it.
If you're referring to mortality from Kawasaki, the mortality for Kawasaki is generally low- usually less than 1% if it's treated early. And Kawasaki isn't what kills the children who die- it's usually a complication like aneurysm or cardiac failure.
These children are coming in with something that looks like Kawasaki but they're much sicker and their inflammatory markers are 10-100 times the levels that pediatrician intensivists typically see in Kawasaki, so this might be a totally new syndrome or it could be an exacerbated form of Kawasaki.
There's also been a high incidence of a toxic shock syndrome in these kids. They've required hemodynamic support and mechanical ventilation.
It was reported in Europe in early April. Because this seems to be a sequelae of COVID-19 that appears days or weeks after infection, there may have been earlier cases that were missed. It wouldn't surprise me if the Chinese go back and determine that they had pediatric cases in January that were missed.
Again, it's early to label this Kawasaki since it seems to be more acute that typical Kawasaki. The link to SARS-2 is established but the pathophysiology isn't understood.
Walks in the park aren't listed on the mortality schedules for pediatric patients but neither is Kawasaki. Kawasaki is stlil a rare disorder, which makes its possible connection to COVID-19 even more mysterious. The important thing to keep in mind is that many of the adults dying with COVID-19 have autoimmune dysfunction... which is what Kawasaki is, too.
In this instance, it does challenge the belief that COVID-19 isn't serious in children. And it should give us pause as we're considering whether to reopen public schools.
A couple of things in the article which differ from what I said in my post yesterday:
- It's not just the 15 cases that NYC Health mentioned in their alert- the article says that NY State has found 64 cases plus there have been additional cases reported in areas of the US with high COVID-19 cases. Europe is reporting at least 50 cases.
- One child- a 14 year old- has died of the Kawasaki-like syndrome (that they're calling "pediatric multisystem inflammatory syndrome" until they determine what it is).
zoltanspawn said:I'm afraid I don't see anything in the above posts yet to indicate we, the great unwashed, should start panicking over.
