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Real-time update on coronavirus outbreak

A Japanese surgeon is Positive to nCov and in serious condition as of February 13...
That Surgeon was ill in January 31... but showed up at work from February 3 to 5...

He had a window of contamination for around 14-20 days...

Can't imagine how many got it...
 
A Japanese surgeon is Positive to nCov and in serious condition as of February 13...
That Surgeon was ill in January 31... but showed up at work from February 3 to 5...

He had a window of contamination for around 14-20 days...

Can't imagine how many got it...
How old is he?
 
Update

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Must be from one of those Japanese that return from Wuhan earlier and than they self contained themselves at home.

She isn't one of those, otherwise, the Ministry of Health would not have said so.

13日に肺炎が悪化して亡くなり、新型コロナウイルスへの感染が確認された神奈川県の80代女性が、新たに「陽性」が判明した東京都のタクシー運転手の70代男性の義理の母であることが関係者への取材でわかった。今のところこの2人に接点があったかなどについてはわかっていない。

厚労省は女性の湖北省や浙江省への渡航歴は「なし」としている。
来自雅虎上的一则新闻。
厚生劳动省认为该女性没有赴湖北、浙江的经历。
看起来是本地感染的病例,而且有说法是她为另一个确诊患者法理上的母亲(mother in law)。

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It appears to me China can’t stop the virus. That will have grave consequences. The economy will come to standstill. Has anybody seen Xi Jingping on the TV? He looks like Adolf Hitler in the last days.
Time for every country to brace for hard landing.
 
Just hope that the landing spot isn't Vietnam.
Vietnam has the first village to be completely locked down.

vinhphuc192721581566151-158156-1584-9135-1581569760_r_460x0.jpg

a control checkpoint for the new coronavirus disease in Son Loi Commune, Binh Xuyen District, Vinh Phuc. Photo by VnExpress/Dinh Nguyen.
 
Vietnam has the first village to be completely locked down.

vinhphuc192721581566151-158156-1584-9135-1581569760_r_460x0.jpg

a control checkpoint for the new coronavirus disease in Son Loi Commune, Binh Xuyen District, Vinh Phuc. Photo by VnExpress/Dinh Nguyen.

Your F 1 race maybe will be cancelled
 
Your F 1 race maybe will be cancelled
That will be a huge blow for us when canceled. I think the race “to be or not to be” will decided in March. As of yet, we will go ahead.
 
China reports 121 more deaths, 5,090 new cases as WHO expert says coronavirus may affect two-thirds of world population
DAILY SABAH WITH WIRES
ISTANBUL
Published14.02.202008:34
Updated14.02.202011:44
560

Workers in protective suits are seen at a checkpoint for registration and body temperature measurement, at an entrance to a residential compound in Wuhan, Feb. 13, 2020. (Reuters Photo)
China on Friday reported another sharp rise in the number of people infected with the coronavirus, as the death toll neared 1,400.

The National Health Commission said 121 more people had died and there were 5,090 new confirmed cases.

The number of reported cases has been rising more quickly after the hardest-hit province changed its method of counting them Thursday. There are now 63,851 confirmed cases in mainland China, of which 1,380 have died.

Hubei province is now including cases based on a physician's diagnosis and before they have been confirmed by lab tests. Of the 5,090 new cases, 3,095 fell into that category.

The acceleration in the number of cases does not necessarily represent a sudden surge in new infections of the virus that causes COVID-19 as much as a revised methodology.

"I suspect but can't be certain that the underlying trend is still downwards," said Paul Hunter, a professor of health protection at the University of East Anglia in England. "It almost certainly does not mean that there has been a resurgence of the epidemic overnight."

China's Health Commission has said that the change was aimed at identifying suspected cases in which the patient has pneumonia so they can be treated more quickly and reduce the likelihood of more serious illness or death.

Experts also saw it as a reflection of a chaotic crush of people seeking treatment and the struggle to keep up with a backlog of untested samples in Hubei province and its capital city, Wuhan, where the disease first surfaced in December.

"Clearly in Wuhan, the health system is under extreme pressure and so the first priority has to be the patient," said Mark Woolhouse, a professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the University of Edinburgh.

Elsewhere, Japan confirmed another case, a Japanese man in his 70s, a day after it reported its first death from the virus. Japan now has 252 confirmed cases, including 218 from a cruise ship that has been quarantined in Yokohama.

More than 560 cases have been confirmed outside mainland China and three deaths, one each in the Philippines and Hong Kong and now a Japanese woman in her 80s. Health officials are investigating how she got infected.

In an unprecedented attempt to contain the disease, the Chinese government has placed the hardest-hit cities – home to more than 60 million – under lockdown. People are restricted from entering or leaving the cities, and in many places can only leave their homes or residential complexes for shopping and other daily needs.



https://www.dailysabah.com/asia/202...rus-may-affect-two-thirds-of-world-population
 
IMO we should treat this as just another strain of flu and relax these extreme measures. More people would die by overburdening hospitals and stressing the economy. I've read somewhere that hospitals have no more capacity to treat people who are suffering from other conditions in Wuhan. Any effort to contain it is futile anyway because it's too late to take action and by some estimates 2/3 of the world population would potentially be infected regardless of containment efforts. Also the mortality rate is most likely exaggerated as people suffering from mild symptoms are probably not even aware that they carry the virus so the number of infected is under reported.
 
Turkey to export coronavirus detection kits giving faster results
DAILY SABAH
ISTANBUL
Published14.02.202018:07
656

Burcu Öner (C) speaks to reporters as she leaves the hospital where she has been under quarantine, Ankara, Feb. 14, 2020. (DHA Photo)
As countries scramble to contain the threat from the coronavirus outbreak, Turkey announced Friday that a new locally made detection kit that offers faster results would be exported.

Health Minister Fahrettin Koca, speaking to reporters in the capital Ankara on Friday, said the kit was developed based on data provided by the World Health Organization (WHO) and that Kyrgyzstan had already placed an order for 10,000. Uzbekistan has also placed orders, the minister said, with "four other countries wanting the kit."

The kit detects the virus faster than its counterparts, Koca said. "We used other kits that give results within a period that can extend from four hours to 24 hours. This kit gives results between 90 minutes and 120 minutes. We are currently working on further decreasing this period," he said. The minister noted that a locally made kit was important for the comfort of the patient and faster treatment. "It helps not to keep patients waiting too long and initiate proper treatment as soon as possible," he noted.

The kit was introduced in Turkey last week and has an accuracy rate of 99.6%, according to the minister.

Quarantine ends for evacuees

A 14-day quarantine for 42 people who were evacuated by Turkey from Wuhan, the coronavirus' epicenter in China, also ended Friday. Evacuees – including six Azerbaijani, three Georgian and one Albanian national – left the Zekai Tahir Burak Hospital in Ankara. The disused hospital was allocated for evacuees who were airlifted from China earlier this month. Koca noted that Turkey was the only country to carry out such a comprehensive operation and a proper quarantine. "We devoted a hospital solely for the quarantine, used a special plane converted into an air ambulance for the evacuation and dispatched health care personnel to ensure the health of evacuees," Koca noted. He said the hospital would remain empty after the end of the quarantine and would be exclusively used for possible future cases requiring quarantine.

On other measures against the coronavirus, Koca said Turkey was well prepared to handle any outbreak, reminding reporters that thermal screening at airports had been implemented long before the WHO advised countries to introduce measures. He said they had also distributed leaflets to raise awareness of the outbreak and deployed health care personnel at ports.

He noted hospitals were also equipped with quarantine rooms and Turkey has the capacity of setting up a 50-bed field hospital in one day.

'Wonderful days'

Burcu Öner, Serkan Atamer and Meltem Soylu, three Turkish nationals who were under quarantine, spoke to reporters after they left the hospital and recounted their time cut off from the outside world. Öner, a 34-year-old English teacher who arrived from Wuhan, said she was happy to leave the hospital but sad to leave friends. "We had wonderful days here. We didn't expect to be cared for so well. Officials made little surprises for us like a birthday celebration for one of the evacuees. I thank our state and Health Ministry," she said. Another surprise for Öner was to stay in the room where her mother stayed before giving birth to her. "I phoned my mother while in quarantine and asked her which room she was in. She said it was Room No. 307, the room I stayed," she said.

Serkan Atamer, who lived in a town near Wuhan, said the Turkish state had supported them throughout the process. "Our consulate in Beijing helped us. I wasn't able to leave my home for a long time because of the outbreak. The consulate sent a car to bring me from home and take me to the airport," he said. Atamer hailed the quarantine process and said he particularly liked the hospital food. He said he'd return to his hometown Erzincan. Asked if he'll return to China, he said, "I know my family will read this, but I think I'll be going back once the danger is over." Atamer recalled his days in China "in isolation." "People would rarely go out though we were relatively far from Wuhan. We had limited food and tried to survive," he said.

Meltem Soylu, a PhD student in Wuhan, said the virtual quarantine in Wuhan was "unexpected" for her. "I knew there was an outbreak but did not expect it would be as big as it is. Suddenly, authorities decided to impose quarantine and we couldn't find any means of transportation to leave. We were stranded. The Turkish embassy sent cars and brought us to the airport. I am grateful," she said. Soylu also plans to return China once the outbreak is over.

Turkish aid to China

Along with countering the outbreak, Turkey has also extended a helping hand to China in the fight against the virus.

The Turkish Assembly of Exporters (TİM) has donated about 200,000 pieces of equipment, from face masks to protective gloves, to China. TİM Chairman İsmail Gülle said China faced a tough task to get the outbreak under control. "We wanted to show them the charitable nature of the Turkish people in the fight against the coronavirus. It is important to prevent this from being a global threat, and fast, efficient steps are needed to contain it," he said.

The coronavirus outbreak in China has led to a boom in demand for face masks. Turkish mask manufacturers say they have received a sudden demand for nearly 200 million masks, a huge number compared to Turkey's yearly production of around 150 million. Demand has increased over the past 10 days as the death toll from the virus climbed. China itself is one of the world's largest mask manufacturers, but the outbreak has put pressure on local manufacturers and forced the country to turn to exports.

The Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TİKA) has also sent medical equipment to China, aboard the military cargo plane used to evacuate Turks from Wuhan, including 1,000 biohazard suits, 93,500 face masks with protective filters and 1,000 single-use protective clothes.

https://www.dailysabah.com/turkey/2...onavirus-detection-kits-giving-faster-results
 

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