Here's one of the most disturbing images I've seen in some time.
2- Zoomed in. The red pin is the Thwaites Glacier. I drew a red line around the Thwaites Tongue. It's the part of the glacier that is not over land, but over the ocean where most of the calving takes place.
3- This is a view from 2019. The important piece here is the Eastern Ice Shelf, which you can see is greatly eroded in the above images.
4- This is a series of satellite images of the region I just created. Notice how the Eastern Ice Shelf is breaking up.
5- This could have been expected given the crevasses forming in prior years, which indicates stress in the ice.
6- "Ice shelves do not contribute directly to sea level rise when they break up because they are already floating on water. However, ice shelf collapse contributes to sea level rise indirectly because the glaciers that flow into the ice shelf accelerate."
7-7 "If the Thwaites Glacier collapses and destabilizes the heart of West Antarctica, then sea-level rise jumps to five meters, placing the homes of at least 20 million U.S. people and another 50 million to 100 million people worldwide below high tide."
All Minnesota. Here's the full portfolio of templates that I will use for each state. If you have commentary on one, please reply in that part of the thread. I could also use another set of eyes for typos. I have them in the order I think would be of most interest.
2-COVID admissions stacked and stratified by age and hospital reporting.
3-Similar previous, but adjusted to account for the lack of reporting of suspected cases using a ratio of suspected to confirmed as a coefficient for the confirmed admission numbers for each age/date combo. This is only confirmed admissions using the coefficients.
"20.3% of [exposed] children and 5.9% of the [controls] received a diagnosis of neurodevelopmental delay within 12 months of life (p=0.013, RR= 3.44; 95% CI, 1.19- 9.95).
For the exposed group, the prevalence of neurodevelopment impairment using ASQ-3 was 35.7% at 4 months, 7% at 6 months, and 32.1% at 12 months.
Our findings indicated that intrauterine exposure to SARS-CoV-2 infection can have consequences for offspring in the first year of life, including developmental delay.
Since my post last night about rabies garnered a lot of interest that I wasn't expecting, I'll tell the story of my prior experience with it with my other son and add some recommendations at the end as a PSA.
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I had taken him to a wooded park in a MSP suburb. We were walking a limestone trail when a pit bull lept from the shrubs at me. I knocked it away with my arm as it flew toward me. It proceeded to bite my son, although the bite itself was very minor, but the skin was broken.
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I called the police about the dog because I wanted it captured and tested for rabies. That kind of unprovoked aggressive behavior was alarming. I later learned that it took a chunk out of one of the officer's calves, but they got it. Thankfully, it wasn't rapid.
It's the usual suspect. "COVID-19 was associated with a significantly increased risk for RSV infections among children aged 0β5 years in 2022. Similar findings were replicated for a study population of children aged 0β5 years in 2021...
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...Our findings suggest that COVID-19 contributed to the 2022 surge of RSV cases in young children through the large buildup of COVID-19-infected children and the potential long-term adverse effects of COVID-19 on the immune and respiratory system."
Hospital onset COVID in the US. Note the big drop when the required reporting was dropped. I've been reviewing the primary text of my professional association to acquire my board certification in infection prevention again.
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In the legal issues chapter, "In general, for a person to bring a cause of action against another, the following elements must exist:
-The plaintiff must have an interest that is protected by law.
-The plaintiff must show the defendant had a legal duty to act.
3-
-The plaintiff must prove the defendant breached the duty to act.
-The plaintiff must show injury or damage to the protected interest.
-The plaintiff must prove that the defendant's breach of duty caused the injury...
Here's my estimate of current COVID cases/day in the US and my rationale. I am using hospital admission data, which is only current until two weeks ago, but this is the most recent that became available today.
2- For the week starting 9/10, there were 17,731 reported COVID admissions. You can see that the change in suspected reporting requirements dropped admission numbers by half, so I'll double admissions to 35,462. Divide that by 7 to get 5,066 admissions per day.
3- About 1% of infections require hospitalization, so from that number alone, one can assume that this accounted for 506,600 infections per day.