Coronavirus in the US

In UK:

NHS chiefs warn makeshift intensive care units will be needed

UK hospitals have been told to create makeshift intensive care units and to stop treating coronavirus cases in isolation, as pressures on wards soar…

As the World Health Organization (WHO) declared a global pandemic, NHS chiefs said hospitals should aim to expand intensive care capacity “several-fold”.

Tens of thousands of student nurses will be sent to assist on the front line, amid fears that the spread of the virus could see the NHS lose almost a third of its staff at any one time. (Telegraph)

https://www.espn.com/nba/story/_/id/28887560/nba-suspends-season-further-notice-player-tests-positive-coronavirus says that Rudy Gobert of the Jazz preliminarily tested positive for the virus. NBA season will be suspended after completion of today’s games (five other than the Jazz - Thunder game that was postponed).

Could anyone show where they are seeing a shutdown of trade with Europe?

NVM, I found it but I don’t get it:

The restrictions will also apply to the “tremendous amount of trade and cargo”, Mr Trump said.

US restrictions will also apply to cargo
Donald Trump added that the travel restrictions would also “apply to the tremendous amount of trade and cargo,” and “various other things as we get approval.”

The president has taken fire for what critics say is a slow response to the spread of the virus, which has claimed more than 4,500 lives worldwide.

Mr Trump, who said there would be exemptions for Americans who undergo appropriate testing, has repeatedly played down the threat, initially claiming that only a handful of Americans were at risk.

He added that Europe saw more cases because governments failed to stop travel from China, where the Covid-19 epidemic began. (Telegraph)

[ Italy stopped travel from China before the US did. ]

Price of flights rockets
One-way flights to New York from Heathrow with BA now cost over £1,500

The price of flights from London to the US has rocketed on the back of Donald Trump’s announcement, David Millward reports.

One-way economy flights on British Airways from Heathrow to New York in March are now costing over £1,500. Virgin Atlantic flights are marginally cheaper at just over £1,400. American Airlines is quoting one-way fares over $1,800 (£1,400) and on certain days in excess of $2,000.

Airlines use what is known in the industry as “dynamic pricing”, with the cost increasing as demand grows. Much of the work is done by computer, working on algorithms to anticipate what demand is likely to be. Price surges are triggered by internet searches on particular routes.

With the UK being the only route out of Europe to the US, demand is expected to be heavy with tens of thousands of passengers scrambling to find a way of crossing the Atlantic.

March is normally a quiet time of year for transatlantic travel and the spike is certain to trigger accusations of price gouging by the industry. (Telegraph)

GA now has 31 presumed cases.

Related to this, I was out to dinner with a friend at a newly opened popular pizza chain place tonight and it was very busy. The hygiene in the kitchen was DISGUSTING. And Staff were carrying plates with hands and then picking up rags and wiping tables with them. Not a hand sanitizer to be seen. Scary.

24 hrs, 24 days… not sure what some consider constitutes a break.

Figure I’ll be corrected where I’m wrong, but:

– China did indeed quash news of what was brewing in Wuhan, allowed some 40,000 to attend the communal dinner festivities, and then disburse for points all over.

– While - and after - infection was spreading around the globe, WHO was bleating that banning incoming travelers from China wasn’t helpful. And, there was a certain amount of distress in some circles that Westerners were avoiding Asian restaurants. (Think that last has finally evolved into some proof of racism, but the worlds full of idiots that find racism under any rock they kick over…)

– China locked down some 50 or so million people, because they didn’t want the problem to eventually overwhelm the entire country’s medical infrastructure. (That they condemned many of the people of Hubei to die, isn’t a plan that I think will be copied in the West, though it could be argued to have been a prudent choice.)

– That Italy has tested intensively, but is still getting whacked, suggest that it was likely too late by the time the news from Hubei province was fully understood.

— With that in mind, I can’t see the obsession as to available tests in the US as being particularly productive - it’s been too late, for too long.

Could just be me, but I suspect China’s image is going to tarnished for the lifetime of everyone alive today.

I’m sad—a Canadian radiation oncologist just tested positive for COVID-19 after returning asymptomatic from HI!

No details of where she was in HI, but at least on Oahu and caught some ride share because our Public Access Room at our state Capitol is being closed because someone working there is room mates with the ride share driver.

Since she was asymptomatic, hopefully low viral shedding but no idea where she contracted it as it was pleasure trip.

Citizens are excluded. Could have been mentioned. Reality show surprises.

Those airlines…and prices from the UK. That’s Calle price gouging. Shame on them. Their flights will be full. Add extra flights…but gouging passengers should not be allowed.

Uber and Lyft get away with it and call it surge pricing.

People like the great, cheap deals when routes were suffering…

Just like it was right to ban travel from China early on, it is now right to ban travel from Europe. There are many more cases in Europe than the US. Most of Europe did not ban travel from China while the US did. Europe has seen a quicker mounting of cases because of this. Hopefully this will slow down US cases in the end.

@TatinG say WHAT?!! So I guess (for one thing) that my son definitely won’t be attending the Vienna Summer Music Festival in June. He was really looking forward to it. We weren’t too optimistic, but we had been holding out hope.
I wonder if the airlines will refund tickets as a result (not exactly expecting a pandemic, we bought a nonrefundable ticket back in February).

Travel ban on foreign nationals only because US citizens won’t be contagious?

Italian medical chief, Roberto Stella, 67, dies from #coronavirus due to respiratory failure

Twitter requires all employees globally to work from home
From CNN

Twitter announced on their website that they have informed all employees globally they must work from home.

“We understand this is an unprecedented step, but these are unprecedented times. And we will continue to do all that we can to support our Tweeps,” the post said.

Coronavirus patient turned away from Bolivian hospitals

SANTIAGO (Reuters) - One of two people confirmed to have the coronavirus in Bolivia is being sheltered in a government office after local residents and medical staff blocked her entry to up to four hospitals in a provincial city, local media and government health officials said on Wednesday night.

The woman, said by local media to be 65, was transferred by ambulance from the small central Bolivian town of San Carlos to the provincial capital of Santa Cruz on Wednesday afternoon. But concerns over scarce resources and overcrowding saw her turned away from several medical centers, local media said.

“We are not going to allow this woman’s entry because this hospital does not have the conditions to handle a coronavirus case,” one unnamed nurse told Bolivia’s main El Deber newspaper. “There are a large number of patients and people who could be infected.”

Oscar Urenda, a local health official, confirmed the impasse at a news conference in Santa Cruz on Wednesday night.

“We had an area prepared in the San Juan de Dios hospital but we could not overcome the intransigence and lack of humanity of people there,” he said. “We made a plan B, moved to other health centers but everywhere locals barred access.”

Instead, he said, the woman has been housed in a building belonging to the regional government. “She is being cared for and protected in a place with efficient care conditions, and doctors and nurses are standing by for us to find a suitable health center.”

He said the spread of the coronavirus in Bolivia was inevitable, after the World Health Organization declared the virus a pandemic earlier on Wednesday.

“The disease is going to spread and it is not due to lack of foresight; it has spread everywhere,” he said.

Bolivia, one of Latin America’s poorest nations, has seen significant political upheaval in recent months with the controversial departure from office of its longtime president Evo Morales.

On Tuesday it reported its first two confirmed cases of coronavirus, which emerged late last year in China and causes a respiratory illness that can be fatal.

Meanwhile, residents of Yacuiba in southern Bolivia were reported by the newspaper El Deber to have blocked the land border with Argentina over coronavirus fears.

Locals told the paper that they would not allow people to cross the border unless central government put in place better sanitary controls.

Bolivia has land borders with five other nations.

Transcript ““These prohibitions will not only apply to the tremendous amount of trade and cargo but various other things as we get approval. Anything coming from Europe to the United States is what we are discussing,” he said.”

https://abc17news.com/news/politics/national-politics/2020/03/11/read-trumps-oval-office-speech-on-the-coronavirus-outbreak/

Is there even any legal authority to exclude citizens from returning to US?

Oh–travelers FROM Europe. A little attention to detail on my part couldn’t hurt!

It is a 30 day ban. I think it was the right decision and i hope that people are not so self centered as to try and evade it. For example, i hope Canada doesn’t become a back door. Or we might have to do what Argentina is doing.

Italy stopped direct flights from China.

However the EU is a borderless region. And the alps and northeastern Italy are big destinations for European visitors and weekenders. And these same individuals are traveling the globe and lead companies with visitors from all over.

Spain shuts Prado, other Madrid museums due to coronavirus

MADRID (Reuters) - All of Madrid’s state-run museums, including the Prado, the Reina Sofia and the Thyssen-Bornemisza, will be closed to the public due to the coronavirus epidemic that has hit the Spanish capital, authorities said on Wednesday.

“The measure takes effect from tomorrow, March 12, until further notice,” Spain’s Culture Ministry tweeted.

The Reina Sofia, home to Picasso’s ‘Guernica’ and other famous modern art works, also tweeted about its closure.

Madrid has already closed schools for 15 days and banned large gatherings as it tries to grapple with a steep increase in coronavirus cases.

Health authorities said known cases in the capital region had risen to 1,024 from 782 on Tuesday - about half of the nationwide total.

Spain is now the second hardest-hit European country, behind Italy. Spanish authorities have reported 47 deaths, 31 of them in Madrid.

[ Spain is now up to 55 deaths and 2,277 cases]