Governor
Gordon has stipulated that the opening of the state shall proceed in a
step-by-step plan that most seem to be ignoring. Social distancing and
mask-wearing have been crucial in stemming the COVID-19 tide. The state has
registered 600-some cases and only seven deaths. We see numbers similar to
those in neighboring Montana and South Dakota, other places where social
distancing is the norm. Populous Colorado, on the other hand, has more than
20,000 cases and 1,009 deaths. Neighboring Weld County on our southern border
shows 2,190 cases, the fourth-highest tally in the state – the top three are in
the Denver metro area.
Whenever
my wife and I go out, we wear masks and carry hand sanitizer. We had a dryer
delivered yesterday because our old one conked out. The delivery guys showed up
with no masks so we happily lent them some. They put them on once we explained
our high-risk status. Chris and I are both Democrats and are much more open to
COVID-19 due to our Godless status and opposition to Donald Trump. Governors of
hard-hit urban states have been labeled “blue-state whiners” when they complain
about lots of death and no testing or PPE for health care workers. Apparently
health care workers in red states just quietly get sick and die. Especially
vulnerable are staff members in nursing homes and long-term health facilities.
One-third of U.S. fatalities come out of those places. Since retirees
congregate in warm places such as Florida, Arizona, and Texas, many of the
casualties are from those states. My stepmother was one of them (see previous post).
Other
visitors to our house have included Instacart delivery people. They don’t come
in but leave the groceries on the porch. We had the crew from Skyline Solar
here ten days ago to install the wiring and panels for going solar. They wore masks
to the job at our request and were very nice. One young worker was tasked with
adding support beams in our attic. It couldn’t have been easy working in our
hot attic while wearing a mask and work gloves. When he reappeared, he was
drenched in sweat. The electricians were in and out and wore masks.
Our house was built in the middle of the previous century so needed some upgrading to join the 21st century. They installed a new breaker box on the patio wall and tackled the interior breaker box with a mixture of awe and frustration. We have one of those punchbox types so popular in the 1950s and woefully inadequate in 2020. The electrician said he could replace it with a new breaker box but it was a bit expensive for our current budget. So we had to make do.
Our house was built in the middle of the previous century so needed some upgrading to join the 21st century. They installed a new breaker box on the patio wall and tackled the interior breaker box with a mixture of awe and frustration. We have one of those punchbox types so popular in the 1950s and woefully inadequate in 2020. The electrician said he could replace it with a new breaker box but it was a bit expensive for our current budget. So we had to make do.
Annie
is a Millennial so she orders food via Door Dash and all of the rest. A few
days ago she ordered a chocolate pie. I like pie but the only kind I’ve had
delivered is a pizza pie, a name that’s fallen out of favor. Chris and I now
are used to the doorbell ringing and opening the door to find a sandwich or
wings or burger in a bag on the porch. We wipe them down when we bring them in.
All of us have to trust in the cleanliness of the purveyor when it comes to the
making and bagging of the food. It would be so much easier if stainless steel
bots did all of the work but we’re not there yet. Before the pandemic, most
fast-food outlets took pride in assembling your order while you watched. Subway
is a prime example. So is Chipotle. Not sure how that will change when bistros
return to some sort of normalcy.
One
thing about COVID-19 deaths. This morning’s New
York Times carried a Nicholas Kristof op-ed about the virus’s true death
count. It’s not a number that Trump will like but it’s more in keeping with
what experts such as Dr. Fauci say. Taking into account “excess deaths” during
the first seven weeks of the pandemic ending April 25, the U.S. has already passed the 100,000 casualties
mark. In the early weeks of the plague, people were dying of COVID-19 but
because they had other maladies and they were elderly, their deaths were logged
in as heart failure, respiratory failure, acute dementia, etc.
I
know at least one example of this in my own family. My stepmother bore a litany
of health issues before the virus snuck into her nursing home and killed her.
But the cause of death wasn’t listed as such until she was swabbed for COVID-19
at the medical examiner’s office because she came from a nursing home
experiencing an outbreak. The test came back positive. So, her death was not
recorded properly by the State of Florida. That state’s excess death count is
estimated by the NYT as 1,800. In Wyoming, its 100 which puts our tally at 107
instead of 7.
We don’t
really know what we’re dealing with. Coronavirus causes strange sicknesses in
children. It applies the coup de grace
to old people in nursing homes and the younger workers who take care of them. So
many outbreaks have occurred in these facilities from Florida to Colorado. A
tragedy and a travesty. In the nurturing industries, the people we pay least
work with our young children and our old people. It’s almost like we didn’t
care about our future and our past. Our present isn’t doing so well either.
No comments:
Post a Comment