Those of my generation grew up seeing the USA as the immensely practical "can do" country, who could take on any disaster properly, & prevail.
We saw that start to come apart with Hurricane Katrina, & it is worse with this crisis.
What the hell happened, USA?
the same hell that happened all over the world
that is what happens when the freedom of the market comes before the freedom and the rights of real people
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I even read that in the US, a couple of days ago, a 17 years old boy died of COVID-19 just because he could not afford to pay the hospital while yesterday mr Trump promised to help Italy with health devices for a value of 100 millions of USD
that does make little sense given that even the US have a lack of those devices while the contagion in the most stricken parts of Italy is already decreasing and probably Spain might need them more than us now
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In the USA, law exist that
an acute patient cannot be rejected by any hospital - even private hospitals. The patient must be stabilized and under no immediate danger before they can let the patient leave. Law is one thing, hospitals and emergency rooms are in practice a chaotic place. I had to visit the emergency room on a couple of occasions - had the wait-time for the 2nd visit been as long as the 1st visit, my wife would probably have died waiting. If you can wait, they will see you - insured or not. Died while waiting - well, happens to the insured and uninsured.
That 17 year old who died may not be in the USA. Besides being rejected by hospital which is hard to believe, according to CDC Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR March 26 update (with corrections)
[1]), there is no confirmed deaths for anyone at or below 19 years old. I have been monitoring. Over the weekend, I read about an unconfirmed case of an infant, but clearly 17 year old would not be an infant.
As to the lack of equipment or tests, most irresponsible government (local, state or federal) let their stand-by equipment
unreplenished. The prior administration let the stock went near empty. No one noticed until they need the surge-stock.
Right now, New York is our worst State in terms of cases. Of the (approx) 160K positive cases in the USA, almost 70K are in NY state - NY City alone has over 40K cases. According to "VENTILATOR ALLOCATION GUIDELINES" developed by New York State Department of Health in Nov 2015
[2], they had practically no surge capacity. Of the 8991 ventilators which included the 1750 intended for surge, 85% are already in use. Simple math said they were dipping into the emergence stockpile even in normal times. Expansion was necessary since at least 2015 as stated in the report. I am sure many other States are in similar situation. Spend the money on extra pension and perks instead of stocking up for rainy days.
The Federal government was in similar situation. H1N1 (swine flu), Ebola, (etc.) used up plenty of stock and was
not replenished.
With the Federal Government's declaration of emergency, it gave the Feds the power (DPA) to force industries to produce certain products needed by the nation to deal with the emergency. Many corporations already responded without DPA, but at least one did need the influence of DPA before getting moving. So, we have plenty of manufacturing capacity coming on-line, soon. Trump is rather generous - with expectation that we will
soon be able to make more than we need, he is offering those anticipated excesses to help others. As to it could be too late then, well, that is as fast as it can happen. If we don't need it by then, all the better for having recovered from an emergency sooner rather than later.
As to "same hell that happened all over the world..." Yeah, profit before the "good of others" is all over the world. I am however sure it is just being profit-driven that brought "hell over the world". Case and point: the selfish people who just want their "spring break at the beach" risk infecting others just so they have a good time. Clearly, "spring break" has no profit in it for the spring-breakers. So, this is my
opinion: I think most kids (most people) now are a bit too self-centered and a bit too soft (lacking grit or the ability to deal with dirty/difficult circumstances) to deal with reality. They want freedom, but how many are willing to bleed to defend it?
References:[1] CDC MMWR March 26 updatehttps://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/69/wr/mm6912e2.htm
[2] "VENTILATOR ALLOCATION GUIDELINES" developed by New York State Department of Health
https://www.health.ny.gov/regulations/task_force/reports_publications/docs/ventilator_guidelines.pdf