โMar-31-2020 06:48 PM
โApr-03-2020 10:17 AM
Walaby wrote:
I appreciate the common sense thoughts and guidelines that appear present in the Az Gov's guidelines.
Love how many take "excerpts" from the various guidance being provided to paint it in a negative light. Seattle Steve - Thank you for providing the full context that physical activity, while maintaining social distancing, is essential.
Mike
โApr-03-2020 09:06 AM
aftermath wrote:Sadly, you may be right, a logarithmic infection rate may be a bit optimistic. However, we are both in agreement that the virus is spreading very quickly, silently, with deadly results.otrfun wrote:The infection rate is growing exponentially, not logarithmically. There is a huge difference and I am basing my claim on all of the charts published to date. The "curve" is growing dramatically. When things start to slow down the growth curve will start to flatten and approach a horizontal line. This is when we will see the "logarithmic fashion" in the growth curve.
...snip
We have no accurate way to determine, realtime, how many people are actually infected with Covid-19. Many who are infected (and spreading the virus) show little to no symptoms. Without strict social distancing, the virus spreads in a silent, deadly, logarithmic fashion....end snip
This hasn't happened yet in the US. Hopefully we will get there sooner (if we all contribute) or later (if we don't).The later part of the story is not a pretty one. Once "everyone" is infected, those who don't actually die will have some kind of immunity. Once the entire population is immune there will be no "new" cases. Not my favorite scenario.
โApr-03-2020 08:34 AM
otrfun wrote:
...snip
We have no accurate way to determine, realtime, how many people are actually infected with Covid-19. Many who are infected (and spreading the virus) show little to no symptoms. Without strict social distancing, the virus spreads in a silent, deadly, logarithmic fashion....end snip
โApr-03-2020 07:37 AM
BarneyS wrote:The vast majority of folks in AZ live in the densely populated Phoenix and Tucson metro areas. The Grand Canyon and all those beautiful, wide-open, spacious, deserted, desert vistas (you may be referring to) are many, many miles away ๐otrfun wrote:
Snip...
Is there something in AZ (and other states with lax social distancing) that makes them immune to what is currently taking place in NY's hospitals and ICUs?
Probably space. ๐
Barney
โApr-03-2020 07:30 AM
otrfun wrote:
Snip...
Is there something in AZ (and other states with lax social distancing) that makes them immune to what is currently taking place in NY's hospitals and ICUs?
โApr-03-2020 06:57 AM
jdc1 wrote:Ditto.
I have two daughters that live in Arizona. One in Phoenix, the other in Kingman. Arizona is three weeks behind the more progressive states. They are wholly unprepared of whats to come. They haven't the infrastucture to care for what's coming their way. With an older population, they will not be able to handle the amount of people that will need care.
โApr-02-2020 04:18 PM
โApr-02-2020 04:02 PM
โApr-02-2020 12:13 PM
mich800 wrote:JAC1982 wrote:
Golf courses here in CO are open even though we are on a stay at home order. The clubhouses are closed, you cannot rent a cart, and they turned the holes upside down so you don't reach in there to grab your ball. Flags are fixed too.
Not a golfer. Does that mean the hole is now shallower so the ball is up higher to grab?
โApr-02-2020 10:44 AM
JAC1982 wrote:
Golf courses here in CO are open even though we are on a stay at home order. The clubhouses are closed, you cannot rent a cart, and they turned the holes upside down so you don't reach in there to grab your ball. Flags are fixed too.
โApr-02-2020 10:22 AM
JAC1982 wrote:
Golf courses here in CO are open even though we are on a stay at home order. The clubhouses are closed, you cannot rent a cart, and they turned the holes upside down so you don't reach in there to grab your ball. Flags are fixed too.
โApr-02-2020 09:29 AM
โApr-02-2020 04:51 AM
โApr-01-2020 03:00 PM