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COVID-19 confirmed in Hawaii: 607+ cases 16 deaths
#41
"Could have been infected on plane, I suppose"

She stated she began to get sick before flying ! A medical professional.

"We went to a medical conference over there and on the day we were going to leave, I had little sniffles. That’s it.”
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#42
Thats what I was going to say Obie, She got it here on the islands. 3 weeks is plenty of time for incubation.
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#43
A virus specialist on TV recommended that we assume most people are carrying the virus and to live accordingly (social distancing),since Hawaii has no idea how widespread it may be here because only "a tiny fraction of the testing we need" is available and a lot of people don't even know they have contracted it because their symptoms are mild.
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#44
She stated she began to get sick before flying ! A medical professional.

Shh, talk quietly. We don't want to disturb Governor Ige's slumber.
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#45
As of March 13, all American citizens and legal permanent residents who have been in high-risk areas and return to the United States are required to fly to one of the following 13 airports:

Boston-Logan International Airport (BOS), Massachusetts

Chicago O’Hare International Airport (ORD), Illinois

Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW), Texas

Detroit Metropolitan Airport (DTW), Michigan

Daniel K. Inouye International Airport (HNL), Hawaii

Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport (ATL), Georgia

John F. Kennedy International Airport (JFK), New York

Los Angeles International Airport, (LAX), California

Miami International Airport (MIA), Florida

Newark Liberty International Airport (EWR), New Jersey

San Francisco International Airport (SFO), California

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport (SEA), Washington

Washington-Dulles International Airport (IAD), Virginia
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#46
From: https://www.hawaiinewsnow.com/2020/03/14...s-confirm/

2 visitors who tested positive for coronavirus on Kauai also exhibited symptoms on Maui

Where in part it reads..

Gov. David Ige released the following details on their itinerary:

• The two traveled from Indiana on a direct United Airlines flight to Maui on March 2.

• They stayed in Lahaina from March 2 to 8. Shortly after their arrival, however, one of the visitors developed a fever, shortness of breath and cough. That visitor went to an urgent care facility.

• On March 7, the second visitor also started developing symptoms and went to urgent care.

• A day later, both of the visitors flew to Kauai on Hawaiian Airlines Flight 149.

• They’ve been on Kauai since then, and were staying at the Kauai Marriott until being placed in an isolation facility provided by the county.

• Ige said that on March 9, one of the visitors — the first to get sick — visited an urgent care facility on Kauai. The visitor was prescribed antibiotics.

• Then, on Thursday, the visitors went to Wilcox Medical Center. At that point, the two informed health care workers that they’d had close contact with an individual who had tested positive for coronavirus.

Late Friday, the two tested positive for the coronavirus, also known as COVID-19.


So we're in the sweet spot for a bloom. We have two cases on the streets staying in hotels and using public transportation. Flying from Maui to Kauai on March 8. In a nursing home in Washington Sate that timeline would have us at the beginning of some kind of Stephen King horror story.. the virus from hell. But here?

I'm starting to scratch my head, wondering where is the bloom we are rightfully expecting. In general, without this one, now known, case and with our porous borders and lack of any accountability my instincts are screaming OMG! But with each day that passes without a surge in cases, and yeah we don't do testing but people getting severely ill push the data, tests follow. So where's the outbreak?

Maybe, just little ol' maybe, Hawaii's climate is working in our favor against good ol' #19. Consider..

From: https://europepmc.org/article/med/22312351

The Effects of Temperature and Relative Humidity on the Viability of the SARS Coronavirus.

Where the abstract begins..

The main route of transmission of SARS CoV infection is presumed to be respiratory droplets. However the virus is also detectable in other body fluids and excreta. The stability of the virus at different temperatures and relative humidity on smooth surfaces were studied. The dried virus on smooth surfaces retained its viability for over 5 days at temperatures of 22-25°C and relative humidity of 40-50%, that is, typical air-conditioned environments. However, virus viability was rapidly lost (>3 log(10)) at higher temperatures and higher relative humidity (e.g., 38°C, and relative humidity of >95%). The better stability of SARS coronavirus at low temperature and low humidity environment may facilitate its transmission in community in subtropical area (such as Hong Kong) during the spring and in air-conditioned environments. It may also explain why some Asian countries in tropical area (such as Malaysia, Indonesia or Thailand) with high temperature and high relative humidity environment did not have major community outbreaks of SARS.

I am not suggesting we don't have #19, but maybe this shedding, this aerosol of droplets, this life span on surfaces, all the things we are to protect ourselves against, maybe they aren't as threatening because of our climate?

OMG would that be wonderful.

With the report of the two new cases on Kauai, and the details of their becoming sick on Maui and days later flying to Kauai still being in the wild the whole time, it is remarkable that alone hasn't already sparked a bloom of cases. Though we probably still have more time, a few days, a week before the window on that happening begins to close.

Anyways, just a thought.. not that I am suggesting any more than OMG wouldn't it be nice if paradise came with protection?
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#47
The fifth case of the virus was tested today. Or results are in I should say.
https://www.khon2.com/coronavirus-2/fift...on-hawaii/
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#48
"Honolulu officials announced that test results for one individual under investigation on Oahu came back positive for COVID-19 on March 14.

A press conference about this matter will be held by Hawaii Governor David Ige on Sunday, March 15, at 1 p.m."

Another grain of wheat on the chessboard...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheat_and_...rd_problem
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#49
What a farce, Ige holds a press conference again about less than a handful of cases when we all know very well testing has been sparse if that and there are most likely cases in the thousands. Who can take what he says seriously?
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#50
It's now six people in the state who have tested positive.

https://www.staradvertiser.com/2020/03/1...-announce/
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