This is how far back we have to put the swab to test you for #COVID19.
tee hee
Important to exercise in quarantine
The viral load in this COVID-19 illness is meaningful to know about.
Heartbreaking
Covidiots in NYC waiting to see the hospital ship. Wtf are they thinking???!!
awww, RIP, an interesting human being, who did a likable thing, walking every street in NYC
Curious, gregarious and inexhaustibly energetic, Mr. Helmreich was fearless in his study of human beings. Via
tee hee
Important to exercise in quarantine
My mum's neighbours - 4 young people who share a house - are choristers for Wells Cathedral. At evening they've been singing in their front garden for the street to hear.— Lydia Massiahπ²π (@lydia_massiah) March 29, 2020
I believe this piece is by the English composer Gerald Finzi.#IsolationLife #music #SundayMotivation pic.twitter.com/4lNEuodp4B
The @EmpireStateBldg reminding us that the city is in the middle of an emergency. pic.twitter.com/50TjEjOogN— Rita J. King (@RitaJKing) March 31, 2020
The viral load in this COVID-19 illness is meaningful to know about.
Viral dynamics in mild and severe cases of COVID-19
I'm not sure what that means. Maybe it means that the more contact with the virus a person has, the worse the illness is?
Does a high viral load or infectious dose make covid-19 worse?
Does being exposed to more coronavirus particles mean you will develop a more severe illness? Rumours circulating on social media suggest that hospital workers or their household members exposed to a higher “viral load” become sicker than the general population. But emerging research indicates the relationship between infection and covid-19 severity may be more complex – and differ from that of other respiratory illnesses.
First of all, the way most people are tested right now is by putting a swab in the nasopharynx, which is the nose and the back upper part of the throat, and then looking for the viral genetic material. That’s the gold-standard test. But what’s really interesting is that the test isn’t necessarily positive or strong positive throughout the whole disease. That’s really important to know. Just because somebody is negative on that test, doesn’t mean they don’t have the disease. We’re making a lot of decisions on how to care for people, whether they should self-isolate, all of these things based on that test. It’s very important to figure out not only the viral load, but even how well these tests work to categorize someone as having the disease.
I looove culture mashups. This is a very interesting one.
I'm A Chinese Cowboy With A Southern Accent
Every hotel in Vegas is completely empty right now. https://t.co/Tar4kjuSkl— Krystal Ball (@krystalball) March 30, 2020
The New York Nobody Knows with William Helmreich
When your cats watch too much anime...πππΈππ— Rock & Tattoo Lady (@PenelopeRuzy) March 31, 2020
Good Morning Tw-Friends and all!
Happy and funny Tuesday to all!ππΌ✌πΎπ#StayAtHomeAndStaySafe pic.twitter.com/BXOyuqLvgh
This is possibly the most accurate gif I've ever seen. pic.twitter.com/mbH9lvQ641— Jon Green (@jon_m_green) March 30, 2020