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Buffalo Bills Fan

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Everything posted by Buffalo Bills Fan

  1. Hope he is ok and is glad negative.. Read online a few places. People first tested positive to neg and positive again. I'm in the wait and see boat.
  2. I really think it's more complex than that.
  3. Yes it is for sure. Ya Fox will I get a post of the day someday from you? lol
  4. This guy I follow the most and doesn't have his head on fire. Some people used to follow but had there hair on fire. Children have minor but can spread easy to others. Why lots of places close schools to bring home to there parents. Among other solid info.
  5. Right. If I was a dad and she lived close to me i'd tell her get the hell outta state. Don't want any kids near her. She's a crazy psycho.
  6. https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/white-house-officials-claim-pelosi-tried-to-put-hyde-amendment-slush-fund-loophole-in-coronavirus-stimulus-bill Several White House officials have accused House Speaker Nancy Pelosi of trying to slip in an exception for the Hyde Amendment into a coronavirus stimulus bill. The officials said Thursday that Pelosi tried to negotiate a provision that would have created a "slush fund" with access for groups previously banned from receiving funds under the Hyde Amendment, according to the Daily Caller. "A new mandatory funding stream that does not have Hyde protections would be unprecedented," one of the officials said. "Under the guise of protecting people, Speaker Pelosi is working to make sure taxpayer dollars are spent covering abortion, which is not only backwards but goes against historical norms." She's so freaking sick! Doing anything or everything for her sickness. She Doesn't care anyone out there struggling.
  7. Me too. Hope she can make it out as well.
  8. Never met Tom Hanks (and his wife) but i'm related to him when my dad took a dna testone day said to them. To Abraham Lincoln related as well. Hope nothing happens to him.
  9. I'm happy Trump suspend Europe for 30 days. Just worried here USA as of right now. Just unsure lots of sick here already. Going to see next few days for that. Hoping everything works out. Ya man I respect you lots of times might disagree but I respect you.
  10. Great post man. The main thing is people should be helping and caring for eachother. Biggest thing right now.
  11. There was a problem with the test kits from CDC. Not blaming anyone just wished they worked. I think they got workable ones now. (not for sure)
  12. Read online there is 65 or 66 million people in USA age 65 or older
  13. Not panic myself. Just sharing.
  14. That is bad how people are living. It's why really don't like Pelosi. Never take care of her own problems or people but willing to do anything to go after others. Sad.
  15. Thanks man stay safe. and everyone. Right on with parents. My parents not healthy. One in nursing home and living with my mother. Know a few older people who smoke. Smoking esp older people is a bad thing with this virus. So many other factors with older people.
  16. Hey hope you and everyone doing ok. Take good care of you're self. Question is i'm asking if you're brother knows if meds helping people out with covid-19? What happens if meds run out? Just seeing meds helping lots people out. Just wondering on this.
  17. https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/why-some-covid-19-cases-are-worse-than-others-67160 Elderly and sick people are most susceptible to severe forms of COVID-19 The latest data from China stem from an analysis of nearly 45,000 confirmed cases, and on the whole suggest that the people most likely to develop severe forms of COVID-19 are those with pre-existing illnesses and the elderly. While less than 1 percent of people who were otherwise healthy died from the disease, the fatality rate for people with cardiovascular disease was 10.5 percent. That figure was 7.3 percent for diabetes patients and around 6 percent for those with chronic respiratory disease, hypertension, or cancer. While overall, 2.3 percent of known cases proved fatal—which many experts say is likely an overestimate of the mortality rate, given that many mild cases might go undiagnosed—patients 80 years or older were most at risk, with 14.8 percent of them dying. Deaths occurred in every age group except in children under the age of nine, and, generally speaking, “we see relatively few cases among children,” World Health Organization Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said last week. This pattern of increasing severity with age differs from that of some other viral outbreaks, notably the 1918 flu pandemic, for which mortality was high in young children and in people between 20 and 40 years of age. However, it’s broadly consistent with records of the SARS and MERS coronavirus outbreaks, notes Lisa Gralinski, a virologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “If you’re over fifty or sixty and you have some other health issues and if you’re unlucky enough to be exposed to this virus, it could be very bad,” she says. Scientists don’t know what exactly happens in older age groups. But based on research on other respiratory viruses, experts theorize that whether a coronavirus infection takes a turn for the worse depends on a person’s immune response. “The virus matters, but the host response matters at least as much, and probably more,” says Stanley Perlman, a virologist and pediatric infectious disease specialist at the University of Iowa. Once SARS-CoV-2 gets inside the human respiratory tract, it’s thought to infect and multiply in cells lining the airway, causing damage that kicks the immune system into action. In most people, it should trigger a wave of local inflammation, recruiting immune cells in the vicinity to eradicate the pathogen. The immune response then recedes, and patients recover. For reasons that aren’t entirely clear, some people—especially the elderly and sick—may have dysfunctional immune systems that fail to keep the response to particular pathogens in check. This could cause an uncontrolled immune response, triggering an overproduction of immune cells and their signaling molecules and leading to a cytokine storm often associated with a flood of immune cells into the lung. “That’s when you end up with a lot of these really severe inflammatory disease conditions like pneumonia, shortness of breath, inflammation of the airway, and so forth,” says Rasmussen. Local inflammation can turn into widespread inflammation of the lungs, which then has ripple effects across all organs of the body. This could also happen if the virus replicates faster than the immune system can respond, so that it then has to play catch-up to contain the pathogen—a situation that could also cause the immune defense to spiral out of control. “With mice, we know that in some cases, particularly for SARS and MERS coronaviruses, virus replication is very rapid and in some cases overwhelming” to the immune system, says Perlman. It’s harder to explain why young, healthy people also sometimes die from the disease—for instance, Li Wenliang, a 34-year-old doctor who first sounded the alarm about the virus. He died a few weeks after contracting the pathogen. Genetic and environmental risk factors might help explain the severity of infections. Though it’s clear that genetic factors can strongly determine the outcome of viral infections in mice—as some of Rasmussen’s work has shown for Ebola, for instance—researchers haven’t yet been able to tease out specific genes or variants in mice, let alone in people, that are responsible for varying degrees of illness. Environmental factors, such as smoking or air quality, may also play a role in disease severity, Rasmussen adds. A lot of research has gone into understanding what causes respiratory failure that results from systemic inflammation of the lungs—also called acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS)—that can occur from coronaviruses and other infections. Yet researchers still don’t know how it occurs exactly, let alone how to treat it, Gralinksi notes. “It’s still a really poorly understood issue.”
  18. I'm really feeling for those older people or those with health problems around the world. Coronavirus hit's the lungs witch makes sense for lots. Older lungs lungs or bad lungs get's hit badly with poor immune system among others. Really think this for older people or those with health problems
  19. Sounds like a sick fetish fantasy lol.
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