By now the world realizes that Covid-19 isn't some program streaming over the Internet. In brutal affirmation of its true identity, the World Health Organization now describes this newest coronavirus as the root of a global pandemic. Maybe the worst is ahead for the United States, or perhaps we'll be lucky. In the meantime, the nation closes down many key areas and functions, the full consequences of which are yet unknown.
But epidemics and pandemics come and go, and so do health care workers.
Married as many are to their professions, when infections rise beyond the point of properly caring for patients based strictly upon high numbers, physicians, nurses and supporting personnel with common sense may simply walk away. They have families to protect, too, and when there comes a point where sticking around to care for high-risk patients becomes impossible or hopeless as well as dangerous to health care workers prone to multiple viral exposures in hospitals, clinics and doctors' offices, it's simply time to grab your sensibilities and get the hell out. Left behind are not "the walking dead," just the dead. This, at long last, is not just a television series with similarities.
Medical personnel tolerate a lot of crap from patients every day, some of it enhanced by lawyers looking to sue at the drop of a scalpel. You think an attorney is going to wander around an emergency room as human virus incubators are wheeled in one after another?
If we take the abuse administered by unruly or frantic patients and add it to the incredible risks involved with approaching and staying close to vectors of new and perhaps untreatable diseases, one wonders how long it will be before virtually no health care personnel stay involved.
When the only thing to do is to wait until bodies of the dead can be retrieved weeks or months later.
As always, the depth of nearly every crisis is all about the numbers, and the numerical black hole respects neither patient nor medical professional. We may just be in the early stages of forced self-education regarding this matter.
Bernie on the gurney: No, it wasn't a lethal coronavirus, but the Democrats somehow gained common sense and put everybody's favorite communism fan in the back of the bus, at least for the moment. Biden isn't really a cure, but at his age and mental state it's no secret that leftist people way behind the scenes would totally be puppeteering his nevertheless unlikely presidency.
SETI cuts back: After two decades SETI has terminated its popular universe-scanning project which involved the collection of information via personal computers by private citizens -- and once again we say, hey SETI, everything you're searching for may already have been witnessed in the skies as UFOs. Why shop for milk at the dairy store when the cow's been sitting in your living room, flatulently insisting upon its presence all these years?
Thursday, March 12, 2020
Monday, March 2, 2020
Little Things Mean a Lot
The only good thing about ever-evolving viruses is their reminder that we humans are not the masters of the universe, never fully in control of our own destiny. Their worst quality is the advantage of premature public invisibility, causing illness and death, while also causing panic in the streets due to a rational or irrational fear of the unknown. Will daily life become unbearable for weeks to come -- or will the latest viral eruption disappear as quickly as it arrived?
Viruses are sort of like UFOs. Unless viral illnesses can undergo quarantine, there's little to be done about them until an immunization is developed, and even then the anticipated cure may not be all that effective. Regarding UFOs, UAP or whatever designation one wishes to apply to the untouchable, these, too, have a way of confounding and ridiculing current scientific knowledge -- and despite recent official revelations pretty much nailing down military concern about the enigma, the "cure" appears nebulous.
Because talk of the Covid-19 coronavirus occupies minds everywhere. . .
Here's another reason for the uninfected not to wear a mask: Health officials have emphasized the futility of non-infected people wearing masks to protect themselves against the virus, and the shortage of proper masks across the world obviously puts the health and very lives of hands-on medical workers in jeopardy.
Having once worked in hospital health care, encountering instances where I needed to don a mask for either my or the patient's protection, I often wondered whether the mere presence of an enclosed device on one's face wouldn't put the wearer in danger because usually harmless bacteria and viruses living on the face could temporarily be nourished by respiratory moisture expelled into the mask and facial environment -- thereby causing them to flourish and enter the mask wearer's system, stronger and able to cause harm to health care workers who might unknowingly be vulnerable to infection. And then there are. . .
Beards and mustaches: For some, facial hair is merely fashionable, while others follow religions which require a covering. For some men, hair conceals blemishes, either physical or emotional. Some guys are just too lazy to shave.
No matter. In the past we mentioned a small study, a sampling of miscellaneous beards which yielded, surprisingly, a disturbing number harboring microscopic bits of fecal matter. That's alarming enough, to be sure, but with the arrival of a new coronavirus come new warnings about beards. Essentially, medical professionals caution that beards may allow tiny openings between facial hair and face masks, potentially allowing viruses and bacteria to barge in unannounced and undetected.
How strange that some options may come down to choosing between the beard and the mask.
All may be futile anyway, because any virus can enter the body through the eyes, which conventional masks do not protect.
In the meantime, we'll hope that viral uncertainties don't escalate out of control. The world apparently owes a debt of gratitude to the Chinese doctor who blew the whistle regarding Covid-19 -- but, of course, he's dead now, a victim of both the virus and the disease of Chinese communism.
Viruses are sort of like UFOs. Unless viral illnesses can undergo quarantine, there's little to be done about them until an immunization is developed, and even then the anticipated cure may not be all that effective. Regarding UFOs, UAP or whatever designation one wishes to apply to the untouchable, these, too, have a way of confounding and ridiculing current scientific knowledge -- and despite recent official revelations pretty much nailing down military concern about the enigma, the "cure" appears nebulous.
Because talk of the Covid-19 coronavirus occupies minds everywhere. . .
Here's another reason for the uninfected not to wear a mask: Health officials have emphasized the futility of non-infected people wearing masks to protect themselves against the virus, and the shortage of proper masks across the world obviously puts the health and very lives of hands-on medical workers in jeopardy.
Having once worked in hospital health care, encountering instances where I needed to don a mask for either my or the patient's protection, I often wondered whether the mere presence of an enclosed device on one's face wouldn't put the wearer in danger because usually harmless bacteria and viruses living on the face could temporarily be nourished by respiratory moisture expelled into the mask and facial environment -- thereby causing them to flourish and enter the mask wearer's system, stronger and able to cause harm to health care workers who might unknowingly be vulnerable to infection. And then there are. . .
Beards and mustaches: For some, facial hair is merely fashionable, while others follow religions which require a covering. For some men, hair conceals blemishes, either physical or emotional. Some guys are just too lazy to shave.
No matter. In the past we mentioned a small study, a sampling of miscellaneous beards which yielded, surprisingly, a disturbing number harboring microscopic bits of fecal matter. That's alarming enough, to be sure, but with the arrival of a new coronavirus come new warnings about beards. Essentially, medical professionals caution that beards may allow tiny openings between facial hair and face masks, potentially allowing viruses and bacteria to barge in unannounced and undetected.
How strange that some options may come down to choosing between the beard and the mask.
All may be futile anyway, because any virus can enter the body through the eyes, which conventional masks do not protect.
In the meantime, we'll hope that viral uncertainties don't escalate out of control. The world apparently owes a debt of gratitude to the Chinese doctor who blew the whistle regarding Covid-19 -- but, of course, he's dead now, a victim of both the virus and the disease of Chinese communism.
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