oceanbreeze77
Well-Known Member
overnight hospitalizations up 453.
overnight hospitalizations up 453.
How many were discharged? The important number is the hospital capacity.overnight hospitalizations up 453.
Windermere is an elite area. I very much doubt there's an issue with proper pandemic etiquette there.
overnight hospitalizations up 453.
What spin? Just reporting the facts with context as opposed to that one fact you reported without contextand the spinning of high overnight hospitalizations begins.
Windermere is an elite area. I very much doubt there's an issue with proper pandemic etiquette there.
What spin? Just reporting the facts with context as opposed to one fact without context
Also the time to act is before hospitals get full, not when. Waiting until they are full is too late and people will literally die because of the delay.
Well there is evidence for over a month (frankly much longer than that) that hospitals have a plan, are acting on it and executing it fine as the have remained stable. I trust they will continue.Also the time to act is before hospitals get full, not when. Waiting until they are full is too late and people will literally die because of the delay.
I don't know why we keep trying to discuss things with irrational people. Save the energy and stop.
Also the time to act is before hospitals get full, not when. Waiting until they are full is too late and people will literally die because of the delay.
okay so people get discharged...but over 400 new admissions overnight!! That can't be a constant thing.Also the time to act is before hospitals get full, not when. Waiting until they are full is too late and people will literally die because of the delay.
It's true that people don't need to ride Space Mountain. They don't need to eat in restaurants, stay in hotels, or to travel.
Except for the people whose jobs rely on theme parks, restaurants, hotels, and the travel industry. That's roughly 25MM of the 155MM jobs in the U.S. (about 16%). And, of course, the people employed in those industries spend money on everything else in the economy, like food, services, electronics, cars, and homes.
I think the vast majority of people's "Plan A" would've been to stay at home until we developed a vaccine. The U.S. doesn't have social programs to accomplish that. So a substantial part of the U.S. economy needed a Plan B.
Plan B The U.S. implemented additional unemployment insurance. That ends in 16 days and hasn't been extended. But let's assume that every person who needed it, got it, it all worked perfectly, and it was enough to cover everyone's expenses.
Employers got up to 2.5 months of payroll expenses through the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). Let's say that all of that worked perfectly too, that companies didn't have other expenses besides payroll, and that everyone who needed the PPP, got it. Assuming that started in April, that would've lasted until mid-June. Emergency (EIDL) loans are available for up to $150K. Let's say that gets 2.5 months too, through the end of August, and that EIDL worked perfectly.
Plan C Thus, at the end of July (workers) or August (companies), lots of people need a Plan C. Let's assume that Plan C is that everyone perfectly followed what financial advisors said, and had 3 to 6 months of emergency money sitting around. That gets us to November to January.
Plan D Assuming everything went exactly to plan at every step along the way, workers and companies will run out of their own emergency savings and all existing government assistance programs starting in a little over 100 days from now.
The economy will not be fixed 100 days from now.
It's worth pointing out that 46 U.S. states plus the District of Columbia have laws that mandate balanced budgets - they can't run deficits, even if they wanted to implement their own emergency social programs. (They could change those laws, of course. As far as I can tell, no state is considering doing so.)
If you're trying to plan ahead, then, the two most likely options for Plan D are "hope the federal government helps" or "figure it out for yourself."
Again, the right thing to do would be for everyone to re-isolate until a vaccine is available. To do that without destroying the lives and livelihoods of 1/6th of the U.S. economy for the next decade, the federal government would need to indicate now that it's going to do whatever it takes to support the economy.
The federal government isn't doing that.
That's why businesses like theme parks are re-opening.
As usual, I could be wrong.
Well there is evidence for over a month (frankly much longer than that) that hospitals have a plan, are acting on it and executing it fine as the have remained stable. I trust they will continue.
I don't know why we keep trying to discuss things with irrational people. Save the energy and stop.
In a system that has 12000 beds available right now.okay so people get discharged...but over 400 new admissions overnight!! That can't be a constant thing.
Register on WDWMAGIC. This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.