Coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2 / COVID-19) and Tinnitus

First, let's remember that ten years ago 59 million Americans contracted H1N1, 250,000 were hospitalized, and 12,000 died. Just in the US: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009_flu_pandemic_in_the_United_States

Remember how the market tanked, sports were cancelled, universities shuttered, toilet paper was out in the stores, borders were sealed, and people were trying to use the panic as a political cudgel?

Oh, wait, none of that happened.

So this thread was started Feb 28, which was two weeks ago. And this flu started in China in December, with actually some rumblings of pneumonia clusters before that, but for ease let's say this started in Mid December, or three months ago. So this pandemic that started three months ago on a planet of 7,000,000,000 people right now has 145,000 cases and 5,400 deaths. Right now (March 13) within the US there are 1629 cases and 41 deaths (mostly from a cluster in an elder home), and the population in the US is about 330,000,000

Now the panic people when presented these numbers, which were even lower two weeks ago, say:
- Carriers can not show symptoms for two weeks, just wait! (the median time to show symptoms is FOUR days, which means half the people don't even take that long. "Two weeks" is the worse case for a very small fraction of cases at the tail of the curve)
- There are not enough people tested, just wait! (the amount of testing in the US has grown exponentially, but confirmed cases have not grown on nearly the same scale)
- The Ro is much higher than everyone thinks, just wait! (probably, but mixed info on what)
- The death rate is much higher than the flu, just wait! (yes for sure, but claims range from 2x to 10x to even 20x and there are differences, most markedly by age, with hardly any deaths of youths).

Okay, so maybe this is really bad, and we wait. And if the panic people are right, then it is worth the global market panic, losing a ton of money in my 401K, having my kid sent home from college, having to cancel spring break vacation, cancelling business meetings and am now working from home along with my wife for the next two weeks. All sports events are cancelled, even golf of all things. If the zombie apocalypse is around the corner I will give the panic people proper credit for shutting down society and tanking the markets in order to do the right thing with 41 dead Americans about to explode into six figures and overwhelmed hospitals.

But at what point of time, if the numbers don't explode into mass deaths, if people aren't dying in hospital corridors for lack of respirators, if the the death rate is more in line with the Swine Flu which had a "normal" reaction to a new illness, do the a panic people say they are wrong? Ever?

New cases in China and Korea are declining. Korea's death rate is pretty small, even after two more weeks of waiting, and there is not the excuse of "not enough testing" there for their low death rate. Things do seem grim in Italy with their very aged cluster, but by comparison Taiwan which is next door to China with tons of cross visitors has a couple dozen cases and one death. If you look at the breakout by country Italy seems an anomaly, not the norm.

So let's do this - I will check back in on this thread on March 27 and we check the numbers again. And then again two weeks after that, which makes it a month from now. And at that point I either give the panic people credit, or they eat crow. And if I am right, then I get pissed for the panic that destroyed so much global wealth, which will put so many people out of work, which will hurt far more people than the flu.
Your logic is backwards.

If the apocalypse you describe never happens, it doesn't mean the threat wasn't real, it could be exactly because a strong response - the response that's inconveniencing everybody - prevented it.
 
Me - Going to the supermarket for some Uncle Ben's :rockingbanana:
Me - Coming home disappointed :cry:
I JUST got back from the supermarket. Virtually every bag of rice was gone. There was only one bag of imported paella rice in a cloth sack, and a tiny packet with some kind of powdery mixture of wild rice I found hidden in the back.

I bought (low salt) crackers instead. :dunno:

I sensed that the panic hoarding was spreading from toilet paper to other non-perishable items as well.
 
Yesterday our prime minister was all proud to say how proactive Australia has been, much better than rest of the world (as usual :banghead:).
He said before flights to China were suspended, we used to have 10.000 Chinese coming daily, now it's only 100 and they are all Australian citizens returning home.

But he forgot to mention that we still have thousands of Chinese coming via Canada now!!!!

He also said, from Monday, no gatherings bigger than 500 people!!!! 50 is too much, let alone 500.

Schools, universities, shopping centres... business as usual!!!

Yet again instead of learning from mistakes of others they continue to remain blaze! Complete lock down should have happened few weeks ago!

My conclusion is that everyone should be proactive and take necessary measures to protect themselves and family.
It's down to personal, not government responsibility!
 
I hear what you are saying Lane.
Unfortunately there is no up cycle for me.
Every day is the same horrible existence.

My "best day" was a little while ago, when I got knocked out for a dental procedure.
Being unconscious for about 1 hour was the highlight of this waking nightmare.

Because I knew, that unlike trying to sleep (and not being able to), that one was a sure thing made by an appointment.

I will fight for as long as I can, but the gas tank is pretty much empty.
If I was a cell phone, my battery indicator would be flashing red with the last 3% remaining with no way to recharge.
Can you take something for sleep?

At your level of suffering, is there any reason not to take something like one of the antidepressants that makes you sleepy, or a benzo like Klonopin?
 
40 Coronavirus deaths in the US to date vs 35,000 deaths annually from influenza.
Even though 1/3 of all Space Shuttles ultimately exploded during flight, while planes have a failure rate of almost zero, far more people have died in airplane crashes than in Space Shuttles.

Would you similarly argue that Space Shuttles are safer than airplanes?
 
For anybody who has even a tepid interest in the potential value of Vitamin C therapy to treat or possibly prevent coronavirus infection, the following information about the origins of Vitamin C therapy in the U.S. might be of interest. I actually think it makes for a pretty gripping story. -- It's amazing to me how many online articles are now appearing trying to poo poo the potential for what I consider to be a remarkable therapy.
...............................................................

Linus Pauling (who lived to age 93), was well known for his advocacy of Vitamin C therapy. What most people don't know is that his interest in Vitamin C was piqued by a rural country doctor from N. Carolina (Frederick Klenner) who practiced back in the 1940's. This doctor was at a loss as to how to treat the many children coming in with polio. But having read some interesting articles on IV Vitamin C, he thought why not give it a try on these children with polio. In short, he treated 60 kids, and they were all healed within 3-5 days.

The work of Klenner and Pauling eventually caught the interest of Thomas E. Levy, MD, a board-certified internist and cardiologist, and author of several books. His website is http://www.PeakEnergy.com .) Below is a portion of what he had to say about the above story on Klenner curing children with polio (From this article: Vitamin C May Be A Life-Saver - Mega-doses Can Counter Avian Flu, Hepatitis & Herpes, And Control Advance Of AIDS).
..............................................................

""Imagine that a deadly virus is sweeping the world, killing and maiming hundreds of thousands of children. Nothing seems able to stop it - until a doctor stands up at the American Medical Association and reports on 60 cases involving severely infected children, all of whom have been cured. Yet his work, subsequently reported in a peer-review journal, is ignored, leaving the virus to wreak havoc for decades.

This isn't a docudrama about some futuristic plague - it's a true story about what happened in June 1949 when polio was at its peak. Dr Frederick Klenner, a clinical researcher from Reidsville, North Carolina, reported that a massive intravenous dose of Vitamin C - up to 20,000mg daily for three days (today's recommended daily allowance is 60mg) - had cured 60 of his patients. The findings were published in a medical journal, yet there was virtually no interest. Apart from a couple of minor trials, no attempt was made to find out if they had any scientific substance.

Relating this curious incident in a new book, Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases & Toxins: Curing the Incurable, Dr Thomas Levy, a US cardiologist, admits to being gripped by a range of emotions when he came across Klenner's work and other studies that replicated it. "To know that polio had been easily cured yet so many people continued to die, or survived to be permanently crippled by it, was difficult to accept."

Levy argues that the medical profession has routinely ignored research showing that high doses of Vitamin C can combat bacteria, toxins and severe viral infections including avian flu, SARS, hepatitis and herpes. And this is not a case of doctors sniffing at anecdotal evidence from a handful of enthusiasts. "Vitamin C is possibly the best-researched substance in the world. There are more than 24,000 papers and articles on the authoritative clinical website, Medline. Yet virtually the all the evidence has been dismissed." Levy even claims that Aids can be controlled if a high enough dosage of Vitamin C is maintained.""
 
The Coronavirus vs the flu:
  • deadlier than the flu
  • more contagious
  • higher incubation time
  • there is no vaccine
ES_v3sMUEAA4uKk.jpeg

ES_3A4oXsAI4IKG.jpeg

5e6a7b2584159f1962421227.jpeg
The goal of the current protective measures is to flatten the curve.
Science_Covid19-Infographic.jpg
 
The snippet below is from this article: -- Vitamin C Protects Against Coronavirus -- March 13, 2020

...The basis for using high doses of vitamin C to prevent and combat virus-caused illness may be traced back to vitamin C's early success against polio, first reported in the late 1940s.[6] Many people are unaware, even surprised, to learn this. Further clinical evidence built up over the decades, leading to an anti-virus protocol published in 1980.[7]

It is important to remember that preventing and treating respiratory infections with large amounts of vitamin C is well established. Those who believe that vitamin C generally has merit, but massive doses are ineffective or somehow harmful, will do well to read the original papers for themselves. To dismiss the work of these doctors simply because they had success so long ago sidesteps a more important question: Why has the benefit of their clinical experience not been presented to the public by responsible governmental authorities, especially in the face of a viral pandemic?

Read the full press release at Orthomolecular.com
 
For anybody who has even a tepid interest in the potential value of Vitamin C therapy to treat or possibly prevent coronavirus infection, the following information about the origins of Vitamin C therapy in the U.S. might be of interest. I actually think it makes for a pretty gripping story. -- It's amazing to me how many online articles are now appearing trying to poo poo the potential for what I consider to be a remarkable therapy.
...............................................................

Linus Pauling (who lived to age 93), was well known for his advocacy of Vitamin C therapy. What most people don't know is that his interest in Vitamin C was piqued by a rural country doctor from N. Carolina (Frederick Klenner) who practiced back in the 1940's. This doctor was at a loss as to how to treat the many children coming in with polio. But having read some interesting articles on IV Vitamin C, he thought why not give it a try on these children with polio. In short, he treated 60 kids, and they were all healed within 3-5 days.

The work of Klenner and Pauling eventually caught the interest of Thomas E. Levy, MD, a board-certified internist and cardiologist, and author of several books. His website is http://www.PeakEnergy.com .) Below is a portion of what he had to say about the above story on Klenner curing children with polio (From this article: Vitamin C May Be A Life-Saver - Mega-doses Can Counter Avian Flu, Hepatitis & Herpes, And Control Advance Of AIDS).
..............................................................

""Imagine that a deadly virus is sweeping the world, killing and maiming hundreds of thousands of children. Nothing seems able to stop it - until a doctor stands up at the American Medical Association and reports on 60 cases involving severely infected children, all of whom have been cured. Yet his work, subsequently reported in a peer-review journal, is ignored, leaving the virus to wreak havoc for decades.

This isn't a docudrama about some futuristic plague - it's a true story about what happened in June 1949 when polio was at its peak. Dr Frederick Klenner, a clinical researcher from Reidsville, North Carolina, reported that a massive intravenous dose of Vitamin C - up to 20,000mg daily for three days (today's recommended daily allowance is 60mg) - had cured 60 of his patients. The findings were published in a medical journal, yet there was virtually no interest. Apart from a couple of minor trials, no attempt was made to find out if they had any scientific substance.

Relating this curious incident in a new book, Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases & Toxins: Curing the Incurable, Dr Thomas Levy, a US cardiologist, admits to being gripped by a range of emotions when he came across Klenner's work and other studies that replicated it. "To know that polio had been easily cured yet so many people continued to die, or survived to be permanently crippled by it, was difficult to accept."

Levy argues that the medical profession has routinely ignored research showing that high doses of Vitamin C can combat bacteria, toxins and severe viral infections including avian flu, SARS, hepatitis and herpes. And this is not a case of doctors sniffing at anecdotal evidence from a handful of enthusiasts. "Vitamin C is possibly the best-researched substance in the world. There are more than 24,000 papers and articles on the authoritative clinical website, Medline. Yet virtually the all the evidence has been dismissed." Levy even claims that Aids can be controlled if a high enough dosage of Vitamin C is maintained.""[/QUOTE
Funny you mention that! I upped my vitamin C, D and melatonin:)
 
Yeah, I know about topping, and all sorts of other training. I'm fundamentally lazy as hell, and I seem to get the best yields from just scrogging like this with a wire mesh, and it requires very, very, very little maintenance. Keep water reservoir filled, minimal trimming, look at plants every day or two.

I just got 4.7ounces off a plant that had been neglected, maligned and died a week early, ha.

One reason people top or train vs SCROG is to get huge cola buds. I don't care, because I turn all my weed into shatter (oil) with -20F ethanol and a closed loop, so the look and prettiness of the buds doesn't matter to me.

Okay, I may disagree with you less than I thought, but, if we limit that to "other countries who are in the top 20 for GDP per capita", I would still be inclined to think that's not going to be true because of the total lack of prep and testing here.

Comparing what's going to happen here to, like, Brasil is not really fair.

"none of these things are realistic for unskilled civilians who do not already possess the equipment and training for this; practice social distancing".
I didn't want to be a dick, but YEAH your plant looked like shit... You said it doesn't matter, it looked like that... My tinnitus doesn't allow me to smoke because it goes 3x higher. Haven't smoked in probably 1.5 years at least.
 
The Coronavirus vs the flu:
  • deadlier than the flu
  • more contagious
  • higher incubation time
  • there is no vaccine
The goal of the current protective measures is to flatten the curve.
View attachment 37275
So when does civilization get back to normal? When we go down to a lot less fever cases with no cure do sports go back on, do people go back to work, do schools open? If there's only 50 cases in the US in 5 months somehow without a vaccine, are things back to normal?
 
Can you take something for sleep?

At your level of suffering, is there any reason not to take something like one of the antidepressants that makes you sleepy, or a benzo like Klonopin?
I tried some benzos (Clonazepam and Lorazepam) just to see what happens, but they don't seem to work for me.
Even if they did, I don't think I would go down that road, because from what I understand it will make tinnitus even worse later on, once you hit tolerance.

Tried bunch of antidepressants too, such as Amitriptyline, Mirtazepine and Trazodone.
While they do make me tired physically, inside my head I'm wide awake because of the loud, high pitched sand blaster, mixed with screeching and oscillating metallic sound.

There is no escaping it, because it is reactive to sound and any attempt at masking makes it that much louder.
 
So when does civilization get back to normal? When we go down to a lot less fever cases with no cure do sports go back on, do people go back to work, do schools open? If there's only 50 cases in the US in 5 months somehow without a vaccine, are things back to normal?
It DOESN'T go back to normal. Things may improve, but normal is history. When we all got tinnitus, did our lives ever go back to normal? Of course not. Hopefully our lives improved after a while and our suffering is less than it was shortly after our injuries, but there's no way to go back to normal Or maybe another way of saying it is, welcome to the NEW normal.
 
I've had lyme for the past 3 years, and managed to treat a mycoplasma pneumonia without resorting to antibiotics (naturopathic herbs).
Herbs do much less damage usually and can help manage Lyme often very well. However, Lyme has an extremely slow double time (the period of time when it is susceptible to being targeted by anti infective of any kind)--many orders of magnitude slower than that of the bacterial strains that complicate viral pneumonia and can cause sepsis. Because of that, herbs aren't likely to be nearly as effective in acute pneumonia, unfortunately. They don't have as much time to be.

Mycoplasma is similarly an intracellular pathogen that spreads more slowly.
 
I tried some benzos (Clonazepam and Lorazepam) just to see what happens, but they don't seem to work for me.
Even if they did, I don't think I would go down that road, because from what I understand it will make tinnitus even worse later on, once you hit tolerance.

Tried bunch of antidepressants too, such as Amitriptyline, Mirtazepine and Trazodone.
While they do make me tired physically, inside my head I'm wide awake because of the loud, high pitched sand blaster, mixed with screeching and oscillating metallic sound.

There is no escaping it, because it is reactive to sound and any attempt at masking makes it that much louder.
My heart goes out to you. I know that doesn't help, but wanted you to know. I can speak for many here... we love you and are anguished by your suffering...

Sincerely, Daniel
 
In the New England Journal of Medicine, Bill Gates warned that the coronavirus is behaving like a "once in a century pathogen."
Bill Gates, well known infection and immunology professor.

It's funny because if something big happens everyone will say "he told us, he is a genius" but if nothing happens everybody will forget about it. No risks taken making assumptions like this.

Panicking is useless. Making stacks is useless.
If everyone would be cautious, as they should be all year, with wearing mask if they are sick and washing their hands regularly, there would be virtually 0 contamination and in a one month all of this would be over, with no need of closing everything down.
The contamination is by droplets, there is no secret.

But we can thank the mass media for all the countdowns of death and all the apocalyptic theory that create a bubble of fear. Fortunately they don't do that for every virus.

Fun fact: the year of H1N1 there were less deaths from the flu because people were more cautious with their hygiene. I dream of a world where people would just be cautious and clean all year, and don't panic for every new virus.
 
Your logic is backwards.

If the apocalypse you describe never happens, it doesn't mean the threat wasn't real, it could be exactly because a strong response - the response that's inconveniencing everybody - prevented it.
It's nice to see you've gotten a head start on the damage control that is going to occur once this thing fizzles and the inevitable finger pointing that will happen in response to the massive economic damage that the overresponse will have caused.
 
So when does civilization get back to normal? When we go down to a lot less fever cases with no cure do sports go back on, do people go back to work, do schools open? If there's only 50 cases in the US in 5 months somehow without a vaccine, are things back to normal?
After the election when there's no longer any political benefit to be had.
 
The pandemic is taking a toll at me mentally. My company introduced mandatory home office, and my country's closing everything. We have military police at the borders. It's like a damned disaster movie.

Unfortunately I don't think this is unnecessary panic. The stats from other EU countries are terrifying (e.g. a 100% growth in cases in Spain in just 1 day). And while it doesn't kill young people... it can leave lasting damage. Permanently reduced lung capacity, or permanent neurological issues like CFS are well documented for the original SARS.

"Just the flu, bro" is simply not true. This meme needs to stop.

"Just wash your hands, bro" is nowhere near sufficient anymore.

"People buying toilet paper are retards hurr durr" is also god damned stupid. Calmly stocking up for plausible scenarios is smart. The "very clever" people who "refused" to panic buy will be begging their neighbors for supplies if this gets worse.

We're in for some major public-health pain followed by a royal economic recession. :/
 
It's nice to see you've gotten a head start on the damage control that is going to occur once this thing fizzles and the inevitable finger pointing that will happen in response to the massive economic damage that the overresponse will have caused.
So what do you attribute this "overresponse" to then? Are European governments, Trump now, the WHO and billion dollar industry all just victims of media hype and don't know any better? Is that what you are proposing?
 
Even though 1/3 of all Space Shuttles ultimately exploded during flight, while planes have a failure rate of almost zero, far more people have died in airplane crashes than in Space Shuttles.

Would you similarly argue that Space Shuttles are safer than airplanes?
First we would need to address the incorrect statistics that you provided.

You would need to compare actual missions per shuttle rather than just the number of shuttles in use. 135 Space shuttle missions vs the 5 Space Shuttles that actually flew missions.

The total number of crew members of all 135 space shuttle missions: 833.

Number of crew members that died: 14

That means that 1.680672268907563% of all Space Shuttle crewmembers died during their missions on a vehicle that traveled at speeds of 17,500 miles per hour. All things considered that's not a bad track record for what it is.

*The 2003 accident could arguably be excluded because it was the result of a completely unnecessary replacement of the standard tank foam with a harder "environmentally friendly" foam that damaged the tiles on take off and led to the eventual disaster during reentry. Apparently someone at NASA was concerned that having a relatively small piece of the safer foam fall into a swamp in the middle of nowhere was a major problem and decided to replace it with the harder Astronaut killing foam that caused the accident. A perfect example of how alarmist overreactions can cause dire unintended consequences.

The total number of passengers that flew on commercial airliners in 2017 alone was 4.1 billion. I wasn't able to find the exact statistics for the entire history of commercial aviation but based on that number it's probably safe to assume it's around 50 billion.

The number of people killed in commercial airline crashes since 1942 is approximately 75,000.

That means that 0.00015000000000000001% of all
commercial airline passengers over the past 80 years have died during their flight. We could more specific and adjust for the fact the Shuttle program only lasted 30 years but it really isn't necessary for our purposes.

In theory traveling on the Space Shuttle is 11,200x more likely to result in death than traveling on a commercial airliner.

In reality 74,986 more people have died on the statistically safer mode of transportation.
 
So what do you attribute this "overresponse" to then? Are European governments, Trump now, the WHO and billion dollar industry all just victims of media hype and don't know any better? Is that what you are proposing?

The response is disproportionate to a realistic assessment of the actual threat. The various government and cooperate entities all have varying motives for the alarmist behavior.
 

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