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Some evidence against the anecdotal narratives being pushed constantly without any data being reported that ICUs are "full of people in there 20s, 30s, 40s, etc and they're dying in droves!".

Interesting. With 60+ doctors and hundreds of nurses, I don't know of anyone at work getting seriously ill, much less admitted to the ICU.
Obviously very location dependent.
Hopefully your town/city stays safe.
Unfortunately not really the case here, things seem to be going as predicted with more and more people being hospitalized.
Some evidence against the anecdotal narratives being pushed constantly without any data being reported that ICUs are "full of people in there 20s, 30s, 40s, etc and they're dying in droves!".
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This says nothing at all about ICU usage.
It’s just a graph of fatality rate and age.
People are saying they're dying. Because they "heard so". Words are tough, but I do believe death = fatality.
Articles are reporting on high rates of young people using ICUs. People are inappropriately extrapolating that to suggest that they are dying in high numbers. I agree with you that young people are not dying in droves, but they are using up a significant proportion of ICU resources. If the point of your graph was only to refute the fatality rate, then OK, but you made it seem like 'young people are requiring ICU level care' was on a similar level of incredulity, which is not the case.
This is bizarre. Can anyone that's seen COVID-19, confirm this:
"Care home nurse tells of terrifying and sudden ways coronavirus struck her patients
The veteran registered nurse started her own mental checklist: cough, rapid breathing and the red eyes -- all the sickest patients seemed to have the red eyes.
For Chelsey Earnest it was the eyes that became the single most important sign as she and other staff at the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington, struggled with the new coronavirus that was sweeping the nursing home even before it became feared across the country.
Chelsey Earnest says she has never experienced anything like the outbreak in Kirkland in 20 years as a registered nurse.
"It's something that I witnessed in all of them (the patients). They have, like ... allergy eyes. The white part of the eye is not red. It's more like they have red eye shadow on the outside of their eyes," Earnest said."
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Inside the first coronavirus outbreak in the US
A nurse from the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington, tells of the war-like struggle as it became the epicenter of the first coronavirus outbreak inside the US. "There's lots of casualties and ... you can't see the enemy," Chelsey Earnest said.www.cnn.com
I did a deep dive on this and posted the US age group data from the CDC on this thread on Thursday. See posts 752 & 754, above.I would actually love to see ICU admits secondary to corona virus stratified in age classes if such data exists.
I did a deep dive on this and posted the US age group data from the CDC on this thread on Thursday. See posts 752 & 754, above.
People are saying they're dying. Because they "heard so". Words are tough, but I do believe death = fatality.
Maybe we should just lockdown NYC. It appears the majority of the disease is there. Everywhere else can 1) stay home if you are sick, and 2) social distance 6 ft apart while at work or play.
Articles are reporting on high rates of young people using ICUs. People are inappropriately extrapolating that to suggest that they are dying in high numbers. I agree with you that young people are not dying in droves, but they are using up a significant proportion of ICU resources. If the point of your graph was only to refute the fatality rate, then OK, but you made it seem like 'young people are requiring ICU level care' was on a similar level of incredulity, which is not the case.
There shouldn't be any, and if nothing else good comes out of this I hope that at a minimum everyone's RT department can learn that MDIs with spacers work just as well as nebulizers if you give an equivalent dose. We could cut down on an enormous number of nonsense ED and office visits if we could just convince everyone that the MDI they have in their pocket works just as well as the nebulizer they get after waiting for a physician.How many people are dying or admitted to ICU because we can't give nebulizers now?
Not a single one, and if nothing else good comes out of this I hope that at a minimum everyone's RT department can learn that MDIs with spacers work just as well as nebulizers if you give an equivalent dose. We could cut down on an enormous number of nonsense ED and office visits if we could just convince everyone that the MDI they have in their pocket works just as well as the nebulizer they get after waiting for a physician.
Children's hospitals have been working to get rid of inpatient nebulizers since before I have started training for exactly that reason, and they have largely succeeded. A significant number of children's hospitals only keep nebulizers for CF patients who need nebulized hypertonic saline. Everyone else gets an MDI.
Ok that is a legitimately bad situation. I guess its terbutaline for everyone until they stock up on MDIs? Or IM epi if they're out of terbutaline?We don't have MDIs at my hospital. They never used to carry them as they would always do nebs. Our hospital has now ordered them, but they are backordered indefinitely. So essentially at this point in time, no albuterol treatments for anyone.
Interesting article in the Financial Times. In the UK they are going to start antibody assays from a random population sample to see what percentage of people have already been infected. This is exactly the kind of data we need so we can figure out what stage of the epidemic we are currently in.
Client Challenge
www.ft.com
Ok that is a legitimately bad situation. I guess its terbutaline for everyone until they stock up on MDIs? Or IM epi if they're out of terbutaline?
So why not terbutaline for those patients? If your hospital has a labor deck they have a ton of it, and its B2 receptor specificActually Epi is what has been recommended. Of course it certainly won't exacerbate the CHF/A-fib/CAD co-morbidities that all my CHFers have.
How many people are dying or admitted to ICU because we can't give nebulizers now? My RTs will literally refuse to give nebs on anyone these days.
Also every intubation is now a "COVID rule-out patient" but I haven't really seen a statistical increase in intubations. I'm still doing one every other shift which hasn't changed. Many of thise "COVID rule-outs" are run of the mill COPD, CHF, or pneumonia which would have come in anyway.
So why not terbutaline for those patients? If your hospital has a labor deck they have a ton of it, and its B2 receptor specific
I’m not convinced that his graph supports a hypothesis that mortality in young adults is low. Look at what is happening in Italy to the 30-49 year olds - mortality is 0.4-0.6%. That is 4-6X the mortality of seasonal flu for all age groups.
Considering 25% of people age 30-49 could get it if we choose not to isolate, a 0.4-0.6% mortality would be devastating.
We are intubating about about 5 suspected cases per day right now (150,000 volume ED). I intubated one yesterday while a colleague intubated 2 suspected cases.
Eh, I imagine the argument will be that the number of reported cases in that age group is a fraction (maybe 6:1 as Birdstrike keeps saying) of the total #o f cases.
I’m not sure. To mirror and compare the age groups measured in other countries? Are they the same? I don’t know.How did they choose their age stratification?
Or we can just keep building and shipping them vents.Maybe we should just lockdown NYC. It appears the majority of the disease is there.
Nationally, only 15%, or about 1 in 7 patients swabbed patients is coming back positive for COVID-19. About 6 out 7 of those suspected are actually coming back negative.How many people are dying or admitted to ICU because we can't give nebulizers now? My RTs will literally refuse to give nebs on anyone these days.
Also every intubation is now a "COVID rule-out patient" but I haven't really seen a statistical increase in intubations. I'm still doing one every other shift which hasn't changed. Many of thise "COVID rule-outs" are run of the mill COPD, CHF, or pneumonia which would have come in anyway.
Nationally, only 15%, or about 1 in 7 patients swabbed patients is coming back positive for COVID-19. About 6 out 7 of those suspected are actually coming back negative.
Www.covidtracking.com
That's surprising because we are generally only swabbing people who we think are high risk of being positive.
Maybe the test sucks
Maybe we are blowing this thing way out of proportion.
(both can be right...)
Italy is starting to flatten the curve - through extreme social isolation that will put their economy in a deep recession. For the past 10 days, people have not been allowed out of their houses in Italy except in very limited circumstances. That is good news.For the “We’re Italy in ten days” people, are we still Italy in ten days?
And for the “Viruses follow ‘exponential growth’ forever, not logistic growth until we all die” people, what’s happening the past few days in Italy?
View attachment 299670View attachment 299671
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Italy COVID - Coronavirus Statistics - Worldometer
Italy Coronavirus update with statistics and graphs: total and new cases, deaths per day, mortality and recovery rates, current active cases, recoveries, trends and timeline.www.worldometers.info
Nationally, only 15%, or about 1 in 7 patients swabbed patients is coming back positive for COVID-19. About 6 out 7 of those suspected are actually coming back negative.
Www.covidtracking.com
Italy is starting to flatten the curve - through extreme social isolation. For the past 10 days, people have not been allowed out of their houses in Italy except in very limited circumstances. That is good news.
Hope they got you guys some PAPRs. As the elective joint volume has dried up here we appropriated some from the OR.
I thought it was to prevent inhalation of bone dust.Your orthopedists wear PAPRs to put in prosthetic joints? Thinking it will somehow prevent septic hips? I think they have something backwards there.
Interesting read:
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'Cacophony of coughing': Inside NYC's virus-besieged ERs
NEW YORK (AP) — A “cacophony of coughing” in packed emergency rooms. Beds squeezed in wherever there is space.apnews.com
There are roughly 3000 ICU beds in the state of NY. They’ve filled 500 of them with COVID cases over the past 2 days.
I work at a hospital outside of NYC and about 3/4 of the ED visits are COVID related. No extreme surges but our hospital is steadily filling with COVID cases. Sustainable for another 2 weeks? Sure. Sustainable for a month? Unlikely. I have co-workers that tested positive and attempted to push through it at home and ended up admitted.I'm beginning to suspect that Italy has a mutated strain, which may have been transmitted to NYC during that Friday rush back to the US. Thousands of people in the airports crowded together.