Dutch Uncle
* Tertia Optio * Defend the Constitution
"DESOTO COUNTY, Miss. — Mississippi’s state health officer says more mask mandates could be on the horizon as COVID-19 cases continue to climb.
The warning comes after numbers released Monday showed six major hospitals — including Baptist DeSoto — had no available ICU capacity.
“I do think we’re on the front end of something that could be bad,” state health officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs said."
More COVID-19 cases in Mississippi may mean mask mandates as ICU beds fill up, health official says
***
No problem it's all a hoax. One day it will just miraculously go away. 15 cases going to zero.
This was predicted last Spring when the RWNJs were screaming that COVID was only a problem in the Democrat shithole cities. Smaller cities and towns don't have the capacity to handle a large influx of casualties or illnesses.
Normally, rural areas don't have the same problems spreading disease due to lower density populations, but when they completely disregard standard CDC procedures and protest bars, strip joints and carnivals being closed, disease is more quickly spread leaving places like Mississippi with a capacity problem.
March 28th
https://www.justplainpolitics.com/s...19-could-be-especially-bad-news-for-the-South
This article points out some major issues with poor states in the South when seeking to fight COVID-19.
Obviously Trump will let the states handle it themselves until the situation becomes desperate.
https://www.popsci.com/story/health/south-coronavirus-health-care/
...“Before any of this coronavirus came along, we were facing significant challenges in the health care area,” said Crawford, who is 72 and now lives in Jackson. Today, with the relentless advance of the disease known as COVID-19, Crawford worries about his state’s vulnerability—especially given that the population is generally older, poorer, less insured, and stricken with higher rates of chronic disease than urban hubs. Mississippi, which has the lowest life expectancy in the country, is one of 14 states that have not expanded Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act....
....While no corner of the country is likely to be untouched by COVID-19, some experts worry that the virus might leave a deadlier wake once it gathers strength in southern states. Early numbers are still low in the Deep South: Mississippi has about 250 cases and one death. Alabama has around 200 cases and no documented fatalities. Louisiana numbers are higher, at more than 1,000 infections and more than 30 deaths—though most so far are in and around New Orleans. But the mortality of coronavirus infection rises when patients have underlying health concerns.
One study in Wuhan, China, found that more than half the deaths occurred among those who had conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, and coronary heart disease. Another study in Italy reported that upwards of 99 percent of deaths were among people with prior medical conditions. In the US, data already suggest that rural counties, especially those in the South, bear the highest death rates from lower respiratory infections.