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The Coronavirus thread

Sen. Ted Cruz self-quarantines after contact with CPAC attendee who has coronavirus

Sen. Ted Cruz has self-quarantined after shaking hands with a person who tested positive for COVID-19, he said in a news release.

Cruz, R-Texas, said Sunday that he shook hands and briefly spoke with an attendee at the Conservative Political Action Conference last month in Maryland. That person later tested positive for the new coronavirus.

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-...fQDg_wLwLuJyEAc3c27ahUF7ZDqdhUyVz1txa9CB24qgo

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I have 4 Corona beers quarantined in my garage refrigerator. I normally make a 6 pack last for months,so no worry on an outbreak. Just trying to contain this new black plague type flu.

I read someplace online yesterday that we had approximately 19,000 people die from the flu last year in the United States. It was barely a blip on TV.

But since it's an election year and both coup attempts have failed,drastic times call for drastic measures.
 
Sen. Ted Cruz self-quarantines after contact with CPAC attendee who has coronavirus

Sen. Ted Cruz has self-quarantined after shaking hands with a person who tested positive for COVID-19, he said in a news release.

Cruz, R-Texas, said Sunday that he shook hands and briefly spoke with an attendee at the Conservative Political Action Conference last month in Maryland. That person later tested positive for the new coronavirus.

https://www.chron.com/news/houston-...fQDg_wLwLuJyEAc3c27ahUF7ZDqdhUyVz1txa9CB24qgo

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Thanks Ted! Now about all people you possibly exposed in the MONTH after you shook his hand?

If you got it the damage has already been done.
 
I have 4 Corona beers quarantined in my garage refrigerator. I normally make a 6 pack last for months,so no worry on an outbreak. Just trying to contain this new black plague type flu.

I read someplace online yesterday that we had approximately 19,000 people die from the flu last year in the United States. It was barely a blip on TV.

But since it's an election year and both coup attempts have failed,drastic times call for drastic measures.

The flu in this country kills over 60,000 some years, as few as 12,000 others... butvthe overall death rate for it is miniscule...

With the coronavirus, the countries like South korea who are vigorously testing for it have low death rates, places that are only really looking at hospitalized cases have a way higher death rate cause they miss the majority of cases that are mild
 
Well, if Spike is off the bandwagon, it must be bad. Aside from Indy, he was the biggest Trump homer on the board.
 
Thanks Ted! Now about all people you possibly exposed in the MONTH after you shook his hand?

If you got it the damage has already been done.

I think he was just made aware that the person he shook hands with just found out they had the Coronavirus. But our elected officials should have already been taking all precautions, including not shaking hands with dozens of people in any setting.
 
Watch this video of Trump's former FDA commissioner and tell me you wouldn't feel a little more comfortable with him leading this Coronavirus task force. He's always been knowledgeable, level-headed and apolitical in the times I've read or heard him:

 
Well, if Spike is off the bandwagon, it must be bad. Aside from Indy, he was the biggest Trump homer on the board.

I ran the campaign and directed all the winning races, I can't help if they drove off course and into the ditch, my directions were clear and easy to follow.


Now go back to your GOPe RomneyCruz/Jeb couch, you are just along for the ride in the trunk.
 
US Army orders stop to movement of troops and their families into and out of Italy and S Korea for 60 days.

Yeah, "its just the flu"
 
Watch this video of Trump's former FDA commissioner and tell me you wouldn't feel a little more comfortable with him leading this Coronavirus task force. He's always been knowledgeable, level-headed and apolitical in the times I've read or heard him.

Nah, that would make too much sense. It's much more comforting listening to Trump/Pence lie to us that this is a nothingburger. According to Trump ten days ago, the cases should be right around 0 right now in the US. He's got this thing figured out, is more knowledgeable about the virus than any stupid doctor or researcher, and is doing a fantastic job overall, like nothing we've ever seen before.
 
<samp class="EmbedCode-container"><code class="EmbedCode-code"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">2nd Republican member of Congress to "self-quarantine" after interacting with person at CPAC who now has coronavirus <a href="https://t.co/jg1pnUGLPu">https://t.co/jg1pnUGLPu</a> <a href="https://t.co/8Wm8AH1JZm">pic.twitter.com/8Wm8AH1JZm</a></p>— The Hill (@thehill) <a href="https://twitter.com/thehill/status/1236960436962103297?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 9, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> </code></samp>
 
Trump retweeting this meme from his social media director Dan Scavino this past weekend is beyond the pale.

I hope Trump supporters are grateful and content for electing this outstanding man President. Job well done.

<samp class="EmbedCode-container"><code class="EmbedCode-code"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">The president, who is goofing off at his golf resort as his administration's train wreck of a pandemic response goes from bad to worse, retweets an image posted by HIS OWN social media director that's reminiscent of Nero fiddling as Rome burned. Because neither has heard of Nero. <a href="https://t.co/qlYvzV2NOn">pic.twitter.com/qlYvzV2NOn</a></p>— Walter Shaub (@waltshaub) <a href="https://twitter.com/waltshaub/status/1236780349205725185?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">March 8, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> </code></samp>
 
I doubt there was anything this administration or any administration could have done to prevent the spread of the virus. Other admins may have been more tactful, but short of an all out travel ban nothing would have helped. No admin. is going to issue an all out travel ban and by the time China released the info it would have been too late anyways
 
I doubt there was anything this administration or any administration could have done to prevent the spread of the virus. Other admins may have been more tactful, but short of an all out travel ban nothing would have helped. No admin. is going to issue an all out travel ban and by the time China released the info it would have been too late anyways

Sorry to say jitter, but that's a cop-out.

The entire US response has been botched at the top w Trump from the beginning. Hopefully, it can get corrected in time and the situation can get under control.

For six weeks behind the scenes, and now increasingly in public, Trump has undermined his administration’s own efforts to fight the coronavirus outbreak — resisting attempts to plan for worst-case scenarios, overturning a public-health plan upon request from political allies and repeating only the warnings that he chose to hear. Members of Congress have grilled top officials like Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and Centers for Disease Control Director Robert Redfield over the government’s biggest mistake: failing to secure enough testing to head off a coronavirus outbreak in the United States. But many current and former Trump administration officials say the true management failure was Trump’s.

“It always ladders to the top,” said one person helping advise the administration’s response, who noted that Trump’s aides discouraged Azar from briefing the president about the coronavirus threat back in January. “Trump’s created an atmosphere where the judgment of his staff is that he shouldn’t need to know these things.”

Interviews with 13 current and former officials, as well as individuals close to the White House, painted a picture of a president who rewards those underlings who tell him what he wants to hear while shunning those who deliver bad news. For instance, aides heaped praise on Trump for his efforts to lock down travel from China — appealing to the president’s comfort zone of border security — but failed to convey the importance of doing simultaneous community testing, which could have uncovered a potential U.S. outbreak. Government officials andindependent scientists now fear that the coronavirus has been silently spreading in the United States for weeks, as unexplained cases have popped up in more than 25 states.

“It’s a clearly difficult situation when the top wants to hear certain answers,” said one former official who’s briefed the White House. “That can make it difficult for folks to express their true assessment — even the most experienced and independent minds.”

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/03/07/trump-coronavirus-management-style-123465
 
I doubt there was anything this administration or any administration could have done to prevent the spread of the virus. Other admins may have been more tactful, but short of an all out travel ban nothing would have helped. No admin. is going to issue an all out travel ban and by the time China released the info it would have been too late anyways

So any and all attempts to prevent the spread of the virus are foolhardy? Really?
 
I doubt there was anything this administration or any administration could have done to prevent the spread of the virus. Other admins may have been more tactful, but short of an all out travel ban nothing would have helped. No admin. is going to issue an all out travel ban and by the time China released the info it would have been too late anyways

No one can come up with millions of testing kits and vaccines for something new in a month. I don't care who is running the government.
 
Tibs, you obsequious ********.

The spread of a new virus is not political.
(reports from SK suggest COVID 19 is similar to other past flus)

The Saudis bashing the Russians and Iranians with massive drops in oil prices is highly political, but you have not figured out how that fits your agenda yet, so no comment from you. Gold is at highs, oil at lows, bonds are at record lows --- all things suggesting geopolitical upheaval --- and all you got is hanging **** on Trump because of the flu.

Asshat

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So any and all attempts to prevent the spread of the virus are foolhardy? Really?

No i am just saying it was too late to keep it out of the US and i think they are doing all they can without infringing upon people's rights. People are selfish and not going to follow rules or going on a cruise or vacation is much more important than health and safety concerns. On the flip side you have people that think they have every disease known to man so that makes it extra difficult for health officials. I do not know what else they could be doing. Sure Trump says stupid stuff, but he is not really running this show. Pence differs most questions to the experts which is how it should be. Even Trump said he didn't want the cruise ship people coming to land, but he said he would differ to the experts. As for the test kits they don't appear out of thin air and im sure they are doing what they can to get as many as possible
 
So any and all attempts to prevent the spread of the virus are foolhardy? Really?

Not foolhardy but it would be racist and nobody wants to be called a racist.
 
Well, if Spike is off the bandwagon, it must be bad. Aside from Indy, he was the biggest Trump homer on the board.

Hey, Spike put up 549 posts telling us Lizzie was his girl and she was gonna get the nomination.

Take Spike's predictions with many grains of salt.

I doubt there was anything this administration or any administration could have done to prevent the spread of the virus. Other admins may have been more tactful, but short of an all out travel ban nothing would have helped. No admin. is going to issue an all out travel ban and by the time China released the info it would have been too late anyways

Even then, it may not have mattered. Back in 1918 with the Spanish Flu, when we weren't globally connected (massive international travel), the Spanish flu ravaged hard to reach, outlying places like the Aleutian Islands. Even an all out travel ban would have failed here.

Don't let Tibs fool you into believing screening would have any iota of an impact.

No one can come up with millions of testing kits and vaccines for something new in a month. I don't care who is running the government.

Ummmm....If you are Tibstardlodyte, the Black Jesus, the original Bathhouse Barry, Chicago's Great Orator, B. Hussein Obama would have had those testing kits. He'd have predicted this **** was coming and would have responded to it just as efficiently as he did the H1N1 flu.....oh **** that's right, 10,000 died before he ever spoke publicly about it.
 
My thoughts......
This flu season will end, like it does every year. People will die, like happens every year. The stock market will rebound. Gas prices will be low, until it goes back up. Tibs will continue to say Orange Man bad. The press will skip from one hysteria to the next.

Okay, carry on......


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WHO says there is no evidence of coronavirus returning to kill cured people

The World Health Organisation has said there is no evidence of "reinfected" cases of coronavirus in China, after reports said earlier this week a young man in Wuhan died of coronavirus five days after he was discharged from a hospital.

"From the evidence we have, those cases were not reinfected," Maria Van Kerkhove, acting head of WHO's emerging diseases unit, said. She also suggested that initial tests that showed negative results could have been wrong in the first place.
 
These nine companies are working on coronavirus treatments or vaccines — here’s where things stand

A mix of legacy drugmakers and small startups have stepped forward with plans to develop vaccines or treatments that target the infection caused by the novel coronavirus.

COVID-19, which was first detected in December in Wuhan, China, has sickened more than 100,000 people worldwide and killed at least 3,400. There are no Food and Drug Administration-approved vaccines or therapies for the disease.

In the U.S., the companies that are initiating development have received funding from two organizations: the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA), which is a division of the Department of Health and Human Services, and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a division of the National Institutes of Health. Some companies have received funding from Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), a global organization based in Oslo. Other companies are funding trials by themselves or through partnerships with other life sciences companies.

Here are some of the companies developing treatments or vaccines in the U.S. for COVID-19:

Company: Gilead Sciences Inc. GILD, -5.348%

Type: Treatment

Stage: Phase 3 clinical trials

Name: remdesivir

Background: Gilead is a longtime drug maker that is best known for developing the first major cure for hepatitis-C in Sovaldi, a therapy that changed the standard of care for that disease but also kicked off the national debate about drug pricing. The company has experience developing and marketing HIV drugs, including Truvada for pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), its preventive HIV medicine. Along with U.S. trials, Gilead is conducting a randomized, controlled clinical trial in Wuhan, testing remdesivir as a treatment for mild to moderate forms of pneumonia in people with the virus. The trial was given the go-ahead by China’s Food and Drug Administration in February.

Clinical trials:

1. On Feb. 21, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases started enrolling patients in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled Phase 3 trial evaluating 394 hospitalized patients with COVID-19 at up to 50 sites worldwide. The trial is expected to conclude April 1, 2023. Sites include the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md., (not recruiting), the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha (recruiting), the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston (not recruiting), and Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center in Spokane (recruiting).

2. On March 3, Gilead said a randomized, open-label Phase 3 trial will evaluate remdesivir in 600 patients with moderate COVID-19. The trial is expected to start enrolling patients in March, with results to come in May.

3. On March 3, Gilead said a randomized, open-label Phase 3 trial will evaluate remdesivir in 400 patients with severe COVID-19. The trial is expected to start enrolling patients in March, with results in May.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of Gilead are up 17.6%.


Company: GlaxoSmithKline GSK, -1.416%

Type: Pandemic adjuvant platform for vaccines

Name: AS03 Adjuvant System

Background: GSK is another leading vaccine maker, having brought to market vaccines for human papillomavirus (HPV) and the seasonal flu, among others. On Feb. 3, it said the CEPI-funded University of Queensland will have access to the British drugmaker’s vaccine adjuvant platform technology, which is believed to both strengthen the response of a vaccine and limit the amount of vaccine needed per dose. On Feb. 24, GSK said that Clover Biopharmaceuticals Inc., a Chinese biotechnology company, is also using adjuvant technology in combination with its vaccine candidate, COVID-19 S-Trimer, in preclinical studies. Dr. Thomas Breuer, chief medical officer for GSK Vaccines, is leading work on vaccines and the adjuvant platform.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of GSK have tumbled 12.8%.


Company: Inovio Pharmaceuticals Inc. INO, 19.517%

Type: DNA-based vaccine

Stage: Preclinical

Name: INO-4800

Background: Another CEPI grantee, Inovio has said it already began preclinical testing and small-scale manufacturing.

Timeline: Inovio develops immunotherapies and vaccines but hasn’t yet had a product approved for treatment. For INO-4800, preclinical testing was performed between Jan. 23 and Feb. 29. The company plans to begin clinical trials in the U.S. with 30 participants in April. It also plans to launch human trials in China and South Korea that same month, and that it has a total of 3,000 doses prepared for the trials in the three countries. Inovio said it expects to have the first results from the trial in the fall and to have 1 million does of the vaccine ready for additional clinical trials or emergency use by the end of the year.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of Inovio have soared 278.2%.


Company: Johnson & Johnson JNJ, -2.746%

Type: Vaccine

Name: TBD (“We are still in the process of identifying a vaccine candidate, so no there is no name at this time,” a spokesman said March 4.)

Background: On Feb. 11, J&J said it is working with BARDA to test its vaccine candidate, with both organizations providing funding for research and development and the public-health organization funding the Phase 1 trials. Similar to GSK, J&J’s AdVac and PER. C6 technologies are used to improve the development process for a vaccine and were also used to develop J&J’s experimental Ebola vaccine. “We are also in discussions with other partners, that if we have a vaccine candidate with potential, we aim to make it accessible to China and other parts of the world,” Dr. Paul Stoffels, J&J’s chief scientific officer, said in a statement. J&J also said Feb. 18 that it is partnering with BARDA on a project that aims to screen existing antiviral medications, including experimental or approved therapies, that may be effective against COVID-19.

Timeline: The company aims to start a Phase 1 clinical trial by the end of 2020, “compared to the typical five to seven years it takes for this milestone in vaccine development,” Stoffels said on Dr. Paul Stoffels, J&J’s chief scientific officer and leader of J&J’s global COVID-19 response, said March 2.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of J&J are down 4.8%.


Company: Moderna Inc. MRNA, -10.267%

Type: RNA-based vaccine candidate

Stage: Preclinical

Name: mRNA-1273

Background: On Jan. 23, Moderna received funding from CEPI to develop an mRNA vaccine against COVID-19. On Feb. 24, it said it had shipped the first batch of mRNA-1273 to the NIAID for a Phase 1 clinical trial in the U.S.

Clinical trials: On Feb. 21, the NIAID said it would begin enrolling 45 healthy adult patients in an open-label Phase I clinical trial at one location to test mRNA-1273 as a vaccine for COVID-19 on March 19. The trial is expected to conclude June 1, 2021. Participants will be followed for one year. The trial will be conducted at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in Seattle.

Year-to-date stock performance: Moderna’s shares have gained 45.7%.


Company: Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. REGN, -2.356%

Type: Treatment

Stage: Preclinical

Name: No name yet

Background: On Feb. 4, Regeneron announced it is working on developing monoclonal antibodies as treatments for COVID-19. The company’s VelocImmune platform uses genetically-engineered mice with humanized immune systems in preclinical testing. “We are aiming to have hundreds of thousands of prophylactic doses ready for human testing by end of August,” a spokesperson said. Christos Kyratsous, VP of infectious disease R&D and viral vector technology, is running the project.

Year-to-date stock performance: Regeneron’s shares are up 27.8%.

Company: Sanofi SNY, -4.211%

Type: Vaccine

Stage: Preclinical

Name: No name yet

Background: Starting Feb. 18, Sanofi is working with BARDA to test a preclinical vaccine candidate for severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) for COVID-19 using its recombinant DNA platform. It has a long history of producing vaccines in its Sanofi Pasteur business and acquired this candidate through its 2017 acquisition of Protein Sciences for $750 million. The French drugmaker previously worked with the organization on flu vaccines. Scientists in Meriden, Ct., are working on the vaccine; David Loew, Sanofi Pasteur’s EVP, is leading the project.

Timeline: A spokesperson said Sanofi aims to put a vaccine into a Phase 1 clinical trial between March 2021 and August 2021.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of Sanofi are down 4.3%.


Company: Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Ltd. TAK, -2.886%

Type: Treatment

Stage: Preclinical

Name: TAK-888

Background: Takeda is one of the most recent entrants to the race to develop a treatment for COVID-19. The Japanese drugmaker said March 4 it plans to test hyperimmune globulins for people who are at high risk for infection. As part of its research, which will be performed in Georgia, Takeda said it would need access to plasma from people who have recovered from COVID-19 or those who have received a vaccine if one is developed. Dr. Rajeev Venkayya, president of Takeda’s vaccine business, is the co-lead of the company’s COVID-19 response team. Like J&J, Takeda plans to examine whether other therapies, both experimental or with regulatory approval, may have treatment potential.

Year-to-date stock performance: Shares of Takeda are down 8.7%.


Company: Vir Biotechnology Inc. VIR, 3.597%

Type: Treatment

Stage: Preclinical

Background: Vir said Feb. 25 it is collaborating with Shanghai-based WuXi Biologics to test monoclonal antibodies as a treatment for COVID-19. If the treatment is approved, WuXi will commercialize it in China, while Vir will have marketing rights for the rest of the world. The preclinical company is run by George Scangos, the former CEO of Biogen.

Year-to-date stock performance: Vir shares have jumped 279%.
 
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