China has been battling this virus with massive quarantines and lockdowns since January. Thank God their numbers are trending down, finally. As they get their cities back to work (I don't think they are reopening schools yet) we have to hope all their new measures will continue to keep spread low. That means we have a chance. South Korea after their initial explosion of cases due to the cult is doing a heroic job of testing, contact tracing, isolation and quarantine. They've also canceled schools nationwide. This article is about a week old and information changes quickly but it details what S Korea has been doing to control spread. If the US could implement these measures we might also have a chance to slow things down: https://abcnews.go.com/International/south-koreas-drastic-measures-coronavirus-offers-glimpse-us/story?id=69383034 |
What is Korea doing regarding childcare? How do they plan to catch up with the school year? And how are they handling working adults being quarantine - how are paychecks/rent/food being handled? |
So can the ER just do the swab and send it to labcorp, or do they have to still get approval from the health department? The CDC was the bottleneck because they messed up the test kits, so had to impose really strict standards for testing. Are they imposing these standards on outside labs? It would seem they should ease the restrictions now that private labs are stepping in to pick up the slack for the CDC. |
In my ER, we still need approval from the Health Deparment to test. We aren’t providing orders for ER patients to get tested at LabCorp either. |
How many actual tests have they run though? How many doctors have been allowed to test? |
Why not? |
PP whose husband has been symptomatic: per his internist, who is an infectious disease specialist, he cannot get a test because he has not traveled to a known hot spot. He has taken two trips to other locations (one outside continental US) in the past two weeks. |
Would they test if someone had contact with a parishioner from Christ Church? |
In a perfect world with unlimited tests, maybe. Here I think they would be tier 3, unless they had symptoms. Tier 1 - People with direct contact with the rector. Tier 2 - People in the congregation. Tier 3 - People with contact to parishioners |
I expect we'll start to hear about more symptomatic people in these tiers in the next three days, and the next wave a week later. |
Third case connected to church reported. Lives in Loudon. |
Chris Church Georgetown has confirmed the reverend diagnosed with coronavirus attended a March 3 “Legos for Lent” event where small children and adults had a buffet-style dinner together. Other staff members are being tested
https://twitter.com/fenitn/status/1237431166275391488?s=21 |
According to the email from the GDS HOS, DC DOH did not find any need to test the spouse of the church organist, who tested positive for coronavirus. |
The WaPo and other local news are seeking to hear from people like you, because refusing to test in such circumstances is medically unreasonable, and politically dangerous once it gets out. Contact WaPo. The symptomatic lady in DC who had been refused a test got her story in the WaPo yesterday and the DC health department agreed to test her. |
AU cancelled classes |