This is sort of interesting. Looks as if the toilet paper shortage may NOT be going away. https://www.msnbc.com/all-in/watch/the-truth-about-the-toilet-paper-shortage-81759813784
And this is even while our testing continues to ramp up so it is probably even better than it looks.
Federal testing sites and any federal funding for testing will stop on Friday.https://www.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/08/829955099/federal-support-for-coronavirus-testing-sites-end-as-peak-nearsIt would be reasonable see a drop in the number of new reported daily cases from this weekend forward.To me this means that I will have to judge the level of the threat based on other sources. (And I am the first to say that I am not sure what that means yet.)
A spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services tells NPR, "Many of the Community-Based Testing Sites (CBTS) are not closing, but rather transitioning to state-managed sites on or about April 10."The agency and a spokesperson for FEMA say the CBTS program originally included 41 sites. It was intended as a stop-gap to bring testing to critical locations, especially for health care facility workers and first responders.
A stat I would like to see is what percentage of people put on a ventilator recover?HiTech
From Wiley: If you're hitting them after they drop, that's not defense, that is revenge.
Not really. The CBTS were only intended to be a temporary stop gap measure and now testing is transitioning to state level management. Nobody is reducing testing. They are just changing who is running it.
Was watching NBC the other night and Dr. Anthony Fauci said only about 20% of people on ventilators recover.Coogan