WriterGoph
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Press release just went out.
Story forthcoming
Story forthcoming
Ohio State has put voluntary workouts on hold due to positive COVID-19 tests.
Voluntary workouts for the football, men's and women's basketball, field hockey, men's and women's soccer and women's volleyball have been shut down indefinitely, according to a statement released by the university on Wednesday.
Ohio State has not released the number of athletes who tested positive for COVID-19, choosing not to share that information publicly “as it could lead to the identification of specific individuals and compromise their medical privacy.”
Per Ohio State's statement on Wednesday, any athlete who tests positive for COVID-19 “will self-isolate for at least 14 days and receive daily check-ups from the Department of Athletics medical staff. Student-athletes living alone will isolate in their residence. If they have roommates, they will self-isolate in a designated room on campus.”
Floodgates are opening.
Big pause button on school/fall sports being pressed. My gut feeling, nothing more. Hope I’m wrong.
There is still time, but at this point pretty much all that will happen is that deaths will start going up, or not. Don’t think we can get cases under control.
Too much risk, too much unknown at this moment. Will this surge in cases translate into a surge in deaths, or not???
Hope you’re right!!So far, there’s no evidence that we’ll see a surge in deaths. It’s been over 3 weeks since the number of cases per day started climbing. We’re not out of the woods yet, but this is not going to be anything like March/April.
Hope you’re right!!
Experts seem to be in the camp of thinking it won’t be correct.
So death is the decision point?So far, there’s no evidence that we’ll see a surge in deaths. It’s been over 3 weeks since the number of cases per day started climbing. We’re not out of the woods yet, but this is not going to be anything like March/April.
So death is the decision point?
No it was for you, thanks for answering...sounded like deaths would be the decision point for you on playing.I don’t know. I don’t get to decide. I was responding to MplsGopher, who mentioned it. Was this question meant for him?
No it was for you, thanks for answering...sounded like deaths would be the decision point for you on playing.
I think there will be a larger amount of out of state transfers to Iowa and the Dakota’s than as is typical.Random thought/question for high school:
if things look like they’re going towards online only class and no fall sports, can seniors to be simply “opt out” of school this year? Or even just the fall semester? Why should they have to sacrifice their senior year/season?
Would schools and/or state activities associations try to disallow this??
Warm temps don't eliminate the virus and it was never claimed to be such. It inactivates it, the virus was going to be around. What it is likely doing is making it harder to catch or infections are closer to MID. This a good thing, but it won't last. That said I have a hard time with all this hype over a 0.26 mortality rate.But...but I thought the warmer temperatures in April were supposed to eliminate the virus, and we should have started spring practice immediately, and this whole virus is a hoax or a conspiracy.
Hope you’re right!!
Everyone the Media can put in front of a camera to sensationalize this seem to be in the camp of thinking it won’t be correct.
Warm temps don't eliminate the virus and it was never claimed to be such. It inactivates it, the virus was going to be around. What it is likely doing is making it harder to catch or infections are closer to MID. This a good thing, but it won't last. That said I have a hard time with all this hype over a 0.26 mortality rate.
I would be surprised if this is entirely correct. Haven't seen this reported anywhere, so how did you come to know it?Part of the surge in cases comes from the CDC grouping in positive antibody tests in with positive active COVID tests... this is also the art of the reason why deaths are not correlating with the increased cases... I certainly hope decision makers understand this since it seems like not many in the general public are aware...
Poor word choice by me. I didn't mean forgo their senior year entirely, though that's probably what "opt out" means to most people. Sorry.I think there will be a larger amount of out of state transfers to Iowa and the Dakota’s than as is typical.
they can’t opt out of senior year unless they’ve already achieved enough credits to graduate. Because the required credits For graduation hasn’t changed per state law
Can you share some links to experts who have said that the surge in cases will likely not result in a surge in deaths, in the coming weeks? Ideally, this quote/interview should've happened sometime this week.FIFY
It's just not news to talk about this being on the decline, it's either an apocalypse, or it's not newsworthy.
There are experts refuting this. There is evidence in death and hospitalization rates refuting this in Minnesota, nationally and in many countries around the world. Even Walz hesitating on pushing for state wide mask wearing should give you some indication that the worst of the sky is falling crowd is starting to believe we are heading out of this.
No. The air temperature of our environment itself has little to no direct effect.Warm temps don't eliminate the virus and it was never claimed to be such. It inactivates it, the virus was going to be around. What it is likely doing is making it harder to catch or infections are closer to MID. This a good thing, but it won't last. That said I have a hard time with all this hype over a 0.26 mortality rate.
Can you share some links to experts who have said that the surge in cases will likely not result in a surge in deaths, in the coming weeks? Ideally, this quote/interview should've happened sometime this week.
Nope. The virus becomes inactive in higher temperatures. That is a fact.No. The air temperature of our environment itself has little to no direct effect.
The reason air temp has any correlation at all is simply related to how it allows people to be outside. The more people can be outside, in the moving air, the lower the chances are for transmission. The more people are indoors, with relatively still air, the higher the chances.
And that works both ways. When it was cold in the early Spring, northern climates suffered more because people were inside. Now in the very hot, it also pushes people indoors.
June 24. That was before the very recent surge started to go off the rails, I believe. Regardless, thanks for sharing.June 24th transcript of podcast for Dr. Osterholm noting that in renconciling increasing cases and decreasing deaths lag time may play a role but given continued downward trend since April he isn't convinced how much that plays.
Data is current and up to date to today on CDC website and World Meter, keep hearing about the coming surge in deaths, it keeps not showing up.
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Not correct, at all, for the range of temperatures in our environment.Nope. The virus becomes inactive in higher temperatures. That is a fact.
I would be surprised if this is entirely correct. Haven't seen this reported anywhere, so how did you come to know it?
Nope. The virus becomes inactive in higher temperatures.Not correct, at all, for the range of temperatures in our environment.
If you're talking like hundreds of degrees Celsius. then sure.
Or you're using your own, absurd definition of "inactive". That wouldn't surprise me either.
‘How Could the CDC Make That Mistake?’
The government’s disease-fighting agency is conflating viral and antibody tests, compromising a few crucial metrics that governors depend on to reopen their economies. Pennsylvania, Georgia, Texas, and other states are doing the same.www.theatlantic.com