General Corona virus updates

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Splinty

Shake 'em off
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
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Thanks doc. I was trying to figure out if they meant it in the literal or figurative sense.
There are stories in the news about guys not being able to afford getting home and are walking vast distances. No social safety net and no work to be had so they're collapsing along the way from food and water shortage.
 

BeardOfKnowledge

The Most Consistent Motherfucker You Know
Jul 22, 2015
60,554
56,071
I believe it's only about high density austere living situations. Prisons notorious for fast spread of disease.
But isn't releasing covid positive people out into the public counterintuitive? It seems to me having all the covid people in one place be optimal for preventing spread?
 

Splinty

Shake 'em off
Admin
Dec 31, 2014
44,116
89,900
But isn't releasing covid positive people out into the public counterintuitive? It seems to me having all the covid people in one place be optimal for preventing spread?
didn't read your question right. I thought you were asking about the stories of prisons dropping their populations in anticipation.

What's the context?
I mean it's a highly contagious disease that requires a significant increase in manpower to isolate. Prisoner has covid everyone is going to get it. You need that person out of there to protect the other prisoners.
Are they in the public? Or home quarantined?
 

BeardOfKnowledge

The Most Consistent Motherfucker You Know
Jul 22, 2015
60,554
56,071
What's the context?
They're not saying who they're letting out, but they're letting people out. It occurs to me that being asymptomatic would mean you're probably releasing people who have it whether you realize it or not.
 

MMAPlaywright

First 100
First 100
Jan 18, 2015
6,030
10,648
“Norfolk’s jailers have freed hundreds of inmates because of the coronavirus pandemic, far more than other lock-ups in the region.

Roughly 250 of the nearly 900 inmates in the Norfolk jail two weeks ago have since been released, though new arrestees have taken some of their places. On Wednesday, there were 787 inmates inside, an 11 percent drop.

Other jails in the area have also been releasing similar types of inmates — those convicted of non-violent crimes with less time left on their sentences. But Norfolk has released the most, by far. The Chesapeake sheriff has released the second highest number — 38 inmates. Sheriffs in Newport News and Hampton haven’t freed anyone because of the pandemic.

Letting inmates out is a gamble. No one in Virginia’s prisons or jails has tested positive for coronavirus, although state officials said the Department of Corrections hasn’t tested any prisoners. Jail administrators have tried to keep it that way by diverting some inmates they would normally put behind bars, while screening and quarantining those they still have to lock up .

But officials fear an outbreak could ravage a jail, spreading quickly in close quarters amongst an especially vulnerable population, and then overwhelming the facility’s limited medical resources.

They’re not alone. Across the country, public health and corrections officials have issued dire warnings that cramped and unsanitary conditions could turn prisons into a haven for the virus, endangering not just inmates but also corrections officers and prison health-care workers as well as their families and communities, according to The Washington Post. New Jersey began freeing hundreds of prisoners last week and officials in the federal prison system are coming under increased pressure to do the same.”