Three of every four rural counties in the U.S. are in what the White House Coronavirus Task Force defines as a “red zone.”
The virus is spreading out of control in rural America, and it’s getting worse by the day trib.al/VyeEHLO
The 10 counties with the highest number of cases per resident are all nonmetropolitan areas with fewer than 50,000 people.
To some extent, resistance to wearing masks and social-distancing has played a role in these outbreaks trib.al/VyeEHLO
But the explosion of Covid in rural communities isn’t a simple morality tale.
In most of these areas, the virus has intensified vulnerabilities decades in the making, and worsened chronic problems that can’t be solved with public-awareness campaigns trib.al/VyeEHLO
In Minnesota, the 21 most unhealthy counties are all rural. In Itasca County, the following activities exceed both state and national averages:
Similar patterns have emerged from coast to coast.
Mortality rates for the five leading causes of death — heart disease, cancer, stroke, unintentional injury and chronic lower respiratory disease — are all higher in rural areas trib.al/VyeEHLO
Common indicators of mental illness, including suicide rates and drug overdoses, are also higher in rural areas.
There’s no one cause behind these bleak statistics, but several factors are clearly contributing trib.al/VyeEHLO
People in rural America tend to be older and poorer than average, making it less likely that they’ll have access to decent health care in the first place. Poverty contributes to:
These problems are only compounded by the glaring inequities of the U.S. health-care system.
Rural hospitals have struggled for years to stay afloat: Since 2005, 175 rural hospitals have closed, with 19 shutting down last year alone trib.al/VyeEHLO
Hospital closures can be devastating for isolated communities:
They’ve been shown to significantly increase mortality for people who have conditions that require immediate help, and they contribute to an acute shortage of intensive-care unit beds trib.al/VyeEHLO
Even when a bed is available, a doctor may not be: Rural areas on average have only about 40 physicians for every 100,000 people, compared to about 53 in cities.
In short, rural America is a very bad place for a pandemic to spread trib.al/VyeEHLO
Some lessons have been learned during the crisis that could mitigate what’s likely to be a bleak winter of infection ahead. Rural areas need:
🏥Hospital upgrades
🥼Larger supply of staffers
⚕️Expanded capacity for telemedicine
💻Rural broadband trib.al/VyeEHLO
In the meantime, rural Americans will need to mask up and socially distance.
Until vaccines are widely available, it may be the best these struggling areas can hope for trib.al/VyeEHLO
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🥶 Dining in the freezing cold
📺Watching a virtual Macy’s parade
🦃Carving the bird over Zoom
Thanksgiving in 2020 is going to be like no other in U.S. history, with the CDC advising that people postpone travel and stay home as much as possible trib.al/u6M6Glp
Despite the precautions many are taking around Turkey Day this year, some are still gearing up for private gatherings with friends and relatives.
Unless you've already established a pod, there's no realistic way to be 100% safe.
While risk can be reduced with pre-isolation and other measures, unless precautions are followed strictly by everyone, they're more theater than protection trib.al/u6M6Glp
In early November, 20,000 people marched out on the streets of Leipzig, Germany to protest coronavirus restrictions.
Flouting all rules, about 90% of the marchers refused to wear masks trib.al/gObEgCM
A similar rebellion against social-distancing rules has happened before. Seeing quarantines and lockdowns as unfair and tyrannical punishments, people took to the streets.
The year was 1625, the place was London, the disease was plague trib.al/gObEgCM
Back to 2020, people have marched, rioted or protested from Trafalgar Square to the Michigan Statehouse, sometimes armed with guns.
There have been more than 30 major protests in 26 countries between March and October just against Covid rules trib.al/gObEgCM
We're perhaps weeks away from getting the first approved Covid-19 vaccine for use in the U.S.
Pfizer's and Moderna's vaccines have been shown to be effective, with no significant safety problems so far trib.al/9CfadE7
Now comes the hard part: Keeping public trust in the vaccine high.
One crucial element of this will be managing tracking and managing the reporting of vaccine side-effects trib.al/9CfadE7
💉As with any new drug, the range of adverse reactions to the vaccine — that’s unintended events linked to the medication — will only be known when a very large number of people have been vaccinated trib.al/9CfadE7
It’s official: The FAA has finally approved Boeing’s 737 Max to resume commercial flights.
But are you ready and willing to get on board? trib.al/8GyD3on
It’s been 20 months since a pair of fatal crashes forced regulators around the globe to ground the once top-selling jet.
The FAA’s blessing will allow Boeing to finally make money off the roughly 450 Max jets it has built but not yet delivered twitter.com/i/broadcasts/1…
Although the approval represents a major milestone for a company that somehow repeatedly managed to make an already devastating crisis worse for itself.
But getting regulators’ approval is only half the battle trib.al/8GyD3on
After five states passed ballot measures for marijuana use last week, the drug will soon be legal in some form for 70% of the U.S. population.
A third of the country won’t even need a medical excuse trib.al/mcJlx3l
Unlike in the past, all of this happened without much of a public uproar.
This is the moment that cannabis companies and their investors have been waiting for: to be considered a legitimate industry rather than a hot voting issue trib.al/mcJlx3l
From here, the goal is to make weed every bit as normal as junk food, wine and other vices long found in stores across America 🍟🍔🍷🍻 trib.al/mcJlx3l