Putting things in perspective in Minnesota

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Minnesota reports five new coronavirus deaths
By Joe Carlson

Star Tribune

April 6, 2020 — 9:36am

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ANTHONY SOUFFLÉ • [email protected]
Ambulances came and went at Hennepin County Medical Center on Thursday in Minneapolis.

Susan M. Jack struggled through months of complications from a double-lung transplant in the hopes of meeting her newest granddaughter, whose birth is due Friday. But coronavirus disease dashed that hope.

Jack, 69, of Bloomington, died Tuesday at M Health Fairview University of Minnesota Medical Center, 10 days after testing positive for COVID-19. Jack became one of 29 people who have died in Minnesota in the past 15 days after getting the coronavirus.

“I never imagined that I would bury my mom and deliver my child within two days, which is what is happening this week,” said Jack’s daughter, Cassie Bonstrom, who is planning a Tuesday funeral. “My mom literally fought for the last nine months of this. … She fought so hard to see this baby.”

Minnesota officials on Sunday reported five new COVID-related deaths, tying the state’s record for the number of coronavirus deaths tallied in a single day.

“We can never forget that these numbers are in fact beloved family members, friends and neighbors who are mourned,” Minnesota Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm said in a statement Sunday.

Minnesota health officials reported 70 new confirmed coronavirus cases, bringing the state’s total count to 935.

The latest numbers show the outbreak continues to intensify in Minnesota and across the nation, with state and federal officials issuing dire forecasts for the weeks ahead. The U.S. has 336,000 reported cases, with some of the most intense hot spots scattered along the West and East coasts.

Most people with coronavirus disease exhibit mild flu-like symptoms, like fever, fatigue and cough. More rarely, the disease can be serious or even fatal, particularly among older people and those with medical conditions like asthma, heart disease or a compromised immune system.

Many Minnesotans who have gotten the coronavirus have recovered. About 450 people, or just under half the state’s total number of confirmed cases, no longer need to be in isolation.

Despite the daily increases in case counts and deaths, Gov. Tim Walz has said that his executive orders on social distancing and staying at home appear to be working. One organization, the University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, has lowered its expected COVID-19 death toll in Minnesota from 2,000 to 932.

“It is very important for all Minnesotans to do their part in that effort by following social-distancing guidelines and other public health recommendations,” Malcolm said.

On Sunday, the number of long-term care facilities with cases of COVID-19 remained at 32, according to the state’s daily coronavirus update. The tally includes facilities where at least 10 people live, and it includes senior-living, rehabilitation, long-term acute care centers and at least two addiction-treatment facilities.

Despite recent public focus on older Minnesotans in group-living situations, the case counts showed that the most common age group for Minnesotans confirmed with the coronavirus is not the elderly, but those between 20 and 44 years old.

As of Sunday, that age group included 380 cases, which was higher than the 315 cases seen in people ages 45 to 64, the next-most prevalent group. Medicare-age residents accounted for only 212 of the cases, while those 19 or younger made up 28.

However, older residents appear to be more likely to need intensive hospital care if they are exposed.

The median age of a Minnesotan with a confirmed coronavirus case was 49 on Sunday, but the median age of someone who was hospitalized or treated in the intensive care unit of a hospital was 63. The median age of people who have died from the illness was 86.

That increased susceptibility to the potentially devastating health effects of COVID-19 helps explain the growing focus on group-care settings amid the outbreak.

As of Sunday, 17 of the people who died were residents of one of 13 long-term care facilities, including four of the five new deaths reported.

Under mounting pressure, the state Department of Health on Saturday released the names of several dozen nursing homes and assisted-living facilities with confirmed cases of COVID-19. Eleven of the facilities are in Hennepin County, and the remainder are spread across the state, from St. Louis County to Winona County to Wilkin County.

Most of the facilities are senior-living centers, though there are also rehabilitation centers and long-term acute care facilities in the list. At least two of them are addiction-treatment centers — Minnesota Adult and Teen Challenge in Crow Wing County and Fountain Centers in Freeborn County.

Brainerd’s Minnesota Adult and Teen Challenge said it has temporarily stopped accepting new clients after a male resident in its short-term treatment program had a confirmed case of COVID-19. The client was sent to Essentia Health-St. Joseph’s Medical Center in Brainerd on March 28, and then released to a family member later that day to quarantine at home.

The nursing team and medical director at the drug and alcohol treatment center have been in “close contact” with state Health Department officials, and are following state and federal guidelines for handling a client with COVID-19, a statement from the facility said.

“In keeping with those protocols the organization is temporarily suspending new intakes at its Brainerd facility while continuing its existing isolation and quarantine practices,” the statement said.

Additionally, they are offering telemedicine services to both residential and nonresidential clients.
 
Coronavirus: new figures on intensive care deaths revealed
Findings of critical care report raise concerns about how effective new facilities will be
Denis Campbell and Toby Helm
Sun 29 Mar 2020 08.34 BSTFirst published on Sat 28 Mar 2020 18.25 GMT
An ambulance worker unloads oxygen tanks outside the ExCel centre in London, which is being converted into a temporary hospital.
An ambulance worker unloads oxygen tanks outside the ExCel centre in London, which is being converted into a temporary hospital. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Detailed insight into the profile and outcome for patients placed in intensive care after being infected with Covid-19 has been revealed in a new report.
Data from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC) showed that of 165 patients treated in critical care in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since the end of February, 79 died, while 86 survived and were discharged. The figures were taken from an audit of 775 people who have been or are in critical care with the disease, across 285 intensive care units. The remaining 610 patients continue to receive intensive care.
While early data may not be indicative of the outcome for all patients, the potentially high death rate raises questions about how effective critical care will be in saving the lives of people struck down by the disease. As a top priority, the NHS is opening field hospitals in London, Birmingham and Manchester, which will incorporate some of the biggest critical care units ever seen in Britain.
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“The truth is that quite a lot of these individuals [in critical care] are going to die anyway and there is a fear that we are just ventilating them for the sake of it, for the sake of doing something for them, even though it won’t be effective. That’s a worry,” one doctor said.
The report also found that though the majority of those who have died from coronavirus across the UK were over 70, nine of the 79 who died in intensive care were aged between 16 and 49, as were 28 of the 86 who survived.
The audit suggested that men are at much higher risk from the virus – seven in ten of all ICU patients were male, while 30% of men in critical care were under 60, compared to just 15% of women. Excess weight also appears to be a significant risk factor; over 70% of patients were overweight, obese or clinically obese on the body mass index scale.

https://www.theguardian.com/society...ve-care-uk-patients-50-per-cent-survival-rate

Exercise more....
 
Coronavirus: new figures on intensive care deaths revealed
Findings of critical care report raise concerns about how effective new facilities will be
Denis Campbell and Toby Helm
Sun 29 Mar 2020 08.34 BSTFirst published on Sat 28 Mar 2020 18.25 GMT
An ambulance worker unloads oxygen tanks outside the ExCel centre in London, which is being converted into a temporary hospital.
An ambulance worker unloads oxygen tanks outside the ExCel centre in London, which is being converted into a temporary hospital. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Detailed insight into the profile and outcome for patients placed in intensive care after being infected with Covid-19 has been revealed in a new report.
Data from the Intensive Care National Audit and Research Centre (ICNARC) showed that of 165 patients treated in critical care in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since the end of February, 79 died, while 86 survived and were discharged. The figures were taken from an audit of 775 people who have been or are in critical care with the disease, across 285 intensive care units. The remaining 610 patients continue to receive intensive care.
While early data may not be indicative of the outcome for all patients, the potentially high death rate raises questions about how effective critical care will be in saving the lives of people struck down by the disease. As a top priority, the NHS is opening field hospitals in London, Birmingham and Manchester, which will incorporate some of the biggest critical care units ever seen in Britain.
4000.jpg

Coronavirus: the week explained - sign up for our email newsletter


Read more
“The truth is that quite a lot of these individuals [in critical care] are going to die anyway and there is a fear that we are just ventilating them for the sake of it, for the sake of doing something for them, even though it won’t be effective. That’s a worry,” one doctor said.
The report also found that though the majority of those who have died from coronavirus across the UK were over 70, nine of the 79 who died in intensive care were aged between 16 and 49, as were 28 of the 86 who survived.
The audit suggested that men are at much higher risk from the virus – seven in ten of all ICU patients were male, while 30% of men in critical care were under 60, compared to just 15% of women. Excess weight also appears to be a significant risk factor; over 70% of patients were overweight, obese or clinically obese on the body mass index scale.

https://www.theguardian.com/society...ve-care-uk-patients-50-per-cent-survival-rate

Exercise more....

Obesity itself is fatal even without Covid-19.

14% of all premature deaths in the USA are caused by being grossly overweight.

However instead of doing something about it we are not allowed to fat shame people anymore. We are supposed to celebrate the "diversity" of shapes and sizes.
 
Obesity itself is fatal even without Covid-19.

14% of all premature deaths in the USA are caused by being grossly overweight.

However instead of doing something about it we are not allowed to fat shame people anymore. We are supposed to celebrate the "diversity" of shapes and sizes.

Also, no better time to be a slim and young woman, seeing they are the 2nd least likely to die. :biggrin:
 
Walz for Trump...

More Walz family members come out against Kamala Harris’s vice presidential nominee​

In another awkward development for Kamala Harris, more members of her VP pick’s own family have come out against him.
Samuel Clench

02:17
Tim Walz's brother ‘100 per cent opposed’ to ‘everything’ about him
Sky News host Paul Murray says Tim Walz's brother has “many stories” he could tell... more
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More family members of Kamala Harris’s pick for the American vice presidency have come out in favour of Donald Trump, in an embarrassing blow for the Democratic candidates.
Tim Walz, currently the Governor of Minnesota, is running alongside his party’s presidential nominee, Ms Harris. They’re up against Mr Trump, the former president, and his pick for the vice presidency, Senator J.D. Vance.
Mr Walz grew up in a rural community in Valentine, Nebraska. He went on to join the National Guard and become a school teacher, before entering politics as a candidate for Congress in the early 2000s.
In the United States, rural areas typically vote overwhelmingly for the Republican Party, with cities leaning heavily towards the Democrats.
And that is reflected, it seems, in the Walz family.
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz. Picture: Mandel Ngan/AFP
Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz. Picture: Mandel Ngan/AFP
It previously emerged that Mr Walz’s brother, Jeff Walz, was writing posts critical of him on social media, saying he was “100 per cent opposed to all” of the Democratic vice presidential candidate’s ideology.
Jeff said he knew unflattering “stories” about his brother, and was weighing the privacy of his family against his desire to keep Mr Walz out of the White House. He also commented that he had considered formally endorsing Mr Trump.
“I’m torn between that and just keeping my family out of it. The stories I could tell. Not the type of character you want making decisions about your future,” he said of his brother.
Jeff has since told NewsNation he was trying to clarify his political views for other people in his life, and regretted posting them on a public platform like Facebook.
“It was a post that I made because I was getting a lot of feedback from my friends, old acquaintances, thinking that I was feeling the same way that my brother did on the issues, and I was trying to clarify that, just to friends,” he said.
“I used Facebook, which wasn’t the right platform to do that for.”
The brothers reportedly haven’t spoken to each other for eight years.
Tim Walz's brother, Jeff Walz. Picture: Facebook
Tim Walz's brother, Jeff Walz. Picture: Facebook
Asked by NewsNation about the “stories” he’d hinted at, Jeff downplayed the drama.
“My little brother, when we were younger, we would go on family trips and in a station wagon. And the thing was, nobody wanted to sit with him, because he had car sickness and would always throw up on us” he said.
“That sort of thing. There’s really nothing else hidden behind there. People are assuming something else.”
Jeff isn’t alone, within the Walz family, in favouring the Republicans. A photo has now emerged of other relatives posing in T-shirts supporting Mr Trump.
The image was initially shared by Charles W. Herbster, a Republican candidate for governor in Nebraska, and has since gone viral among Mr Trump’s supporters on social media. It shows eight people wearing shirts that read “Walz’s for Trump”.
“Tim Walz’s family back in Nebraska wants you to know something,” Mr Herbster said, captioning the image.
Approached by The Daily Mail, a spokesperson for Mr Herbster said the people in the photo were related to Mr Walz through his great uncle (his grandfather’s brother). That makes them quite distant relatives, but relatives nonetheless.
More relatives of Tim Walz are supporting Donald Trump. Picture: Twitter
More relatives of Tim Walz are supporting Donald Trump. Picture: Twitter
It’s been a rough few years for America’s prominent political families.
Mr Trump has a niece, Mary, and a nephew, Fred, who frequently speak out against him. In addition to that his sister, the federal judge Maryanne Trump Barry, was once caught on tape saying her brother had “no principles”, was “cruel”, and could not be trusted.
Meanwhile independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr, who recently suspended his campaign and endorsed Mr Trump, has copped scorn from the rest of his famous family, who claim he’s betrayed the legacy of his father, Bobby Kennedy.
The elder Kennedy was a Democrat who served as America’s attorney-general in the administration of his brother, the assassinated former president John F. Kennedy.
Mary Trump wrote a book, published in 2020, which described Mr Trump as a “pathetic, petty little man” who was “ignorant, incapable, out of his depth” and “delusional”.
While it was certainly less than charitable towards her uncle, the book actually reserved its most scathing criticism for Mr Trump’s domineering father, Fred Trump.
“In a way, you can’t really blame Donald,” Mary wrote
Mary Trump. Picture credit: Peter Serling
Mary Trump. Picture credit: Peter Serling
She blamed Fred Trump for the death of her father, and Mr Trump’s brother, Freddy, who passed away at 42 after a years-long struggle with alcoholism – partly fuelled, in her view, by Fred’s contempt.
“The only reason Donald escaped the same fate is that his personality served his father’s purpose. That’s what sociopaths do: they co-opt others and use them towards their own ends, ruthlessly and efficiently, with no tolerance for dissent or resistance,” she wrote.
“Fred destroyed Donald too, but not by snuffing him out as he did Freddy; instead, he short-circuited Donald’s ability to develop and experience the entire spectrum of human emotion.
“By limiting Donald’s access to his own feelings and rendering many of them unacceptable, Fred perverted his son’s perception of the world and damaged his ability to live in it.”
This week Mr Trump’s nephew, Freddy III, spoke out about his uncle’s controversial visit to Arlington National Cemetery, claiming the former president “doesn’t give a s***” about dead members of the military.
“He just doesn’t. Donald believes in Donald,” he said.
Mr Kennedy’s latest feud with his family started late last month when he threw his support behind Mr Trump instead of Ms Harris.
“I was surprised to discover that we are aligned on many key issues,” Mr Kennedy said at the time, adding that, in meetings with Mr Trump, the pair had talked about forming a “team of rivals” which would let them “disagree publicly and privately” while also “working together on the existential issues upon which we are in concordance”.
Bit of a change, there, from Mr Kennedy’s attitude as recently as May, when he said there were “no circumstances” under which he would join forces with Mr Trump.
“Our positions on certain fundamental issues, our approaches to governance, and our philosophies of leadership could not be further apart,” he said then.
RFK Jr. Picture: Olivier Touron/AFP
RFK Jr. Picture: Olivier Touron/AFP
The Kennedy family released a statement in response to the endorsement.
“We want an America filled with hope and bound together by a shared vision of a brighter future, a future defined by individual freedom, economic promise and national pride,” RFK Jr’s sister, Kerry Kennedy, said in a statement immediately afterwards, also issued on behalf of fellow family members Kathleen, Courtney, Chris and Rory.
“We believe in Harris and Walz. Our brother Bobby’s decision to endorse Trump today is a betrayal of the values that our father and our family hold most dear.”
Kerry subsequently slammed her brother during multiple TV interviews.
“I’m outraged and disgusted by my brother’s gaudy and obscene embrace of Donald Trump,” she told MSNBC, speaking to former White House press secretary Jen Psaki, who is now a host for the network.
“And I completely separate and dissociate myself from Robert Kennedy Jr in this flagrant and inexplicable effort to desecrate, and trample, and set fire to my father’s memory.”
No one’s playing happy families in America at the moment, it seems.
Read related topics:
 
Tim Walz’s family members go viral as they allegedly turn against him, pose in ‘Walz’s for Trump’ shirts
Tim Walz grapples with alleged family defectors who appear to back Trump
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Political commentators were in an uproar on social media Wednesday after a picture purportedly showing eight relatives of Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Walz expressing support for former President Donald Trump went viral.

“Tim Walz’s family back in Nebraska wants you to know something…,” Cornhusker State Republican Charles W. Herbster wrote on X Wednesday morning alongside the photo, which The Post has not been able to independently confirm shows Walz’s relatives.

A political operative who helped disseminate the image, told The Post the people in it were related to Walz through his paternal great-uncle, but declined to give their identifies, claiming that they were overwhelmed by the attention.

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Viral photo
The photo, which The Post has not independently confirmed actually shows Tim Walz’s relatives backing Donald Trump, quickly went viral Wednesday. Charles W. Herbster/X
All eight people in the photo posed in front of a “Trump 2024: Take America Back” flag while wearing navy blue “Nebraska Walz’s for Trump” t-shirts.

None were willing to be named or speak with The Post Wednesday. The Harris-Walz campaign declined to comment.

Barron Trump emerges from Trump Tower flanked by Secret Service, arrives on campus for first day of college
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A mutual friend of the operative and one of Walz’s supposed relatives helped ensure the picture wound up in the hands of Herbster, a two-time candidate for Nebraska governor who has faced past controversy over sexual misconduct allegations that he denied.

The image quickly spread on social media, with conservative commentators quick to note the incongruency.

Tim Walz
Tim Walz has talked about having awkward political discussions with family members on Thanksgiving. AFP via Getty Images
“Now, do we think this will get the same coverage Mary Trump or Kerry Kennedy has received?” podcaster Megyn Kelly mused on X, referring to famous relatives who have spoken out against the Republican nominee and his endorsement by the former independent presidential candidate.

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“In the last few days, Walz’s brother and multiple other members of his extended family have come out publicly against him and for Trump. Is anyone in the leftwing media going to cover this?” Donald Trump Jr. wrote on X.

“So Tim Walz’s brother doesn’t want him to be vice president. His extended family doesn’t want him to be vice president. Members of his National Guard unit don’t want him to be vice president. I’m starting to think this guy isn’t the stand-up midwestern family guy that he claims to be,” conservative Greg Price wrote.

Tim Walz was born in West Point, Neb. and grew up in rural Valentine. He previously described his upbringing as coming “from a town of 400 — 24 kids in a class, 12 cousins, farming, those types of things.”

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Kamala Harris, Tim Walz
Tim Walz’s brother Jeff bashed him on Facebook as The Post previously reported. AP
After a stint teaching in China, Walz met his wife Gwen at Alliance High School in Nebraska while teaching and working as an assistant coach for the school’s football as well as basketball teams.

Tim and Gwen moved to Minnesota in 1996, but he has many relatives still living in Nebraska, including his sister, 63-year-old Sandy Dietrich, who told The Post Wednesday that the governor’s immediate family are pretty much “all Democrats,” except for their older brother Jeff, who has made multiple disparaging Facebook posts about the vice presidential hopeful.

Jeff Walz, 67, a father of two, lives in the Florida Panhandle with his wife, Laurie. Multiple attempts by The Post to reach him Wednesday were unsuccessful.

“I’m 100% opposed to all his ideology,” Jeff Walz wrote on Facebook Aug. 30 about his brother.

“I’ve thought long and hard about doing something like that! I’m torn between that and just keeping my family out of it,” he replied to one user who suggested he “Get on stage with President Trump and endorse him.”

“The stories I could tell,” Jeff Walz added. “Not the type of character you want making decisions about your future.”

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Donald Trump
Two of Donald Trump’s relatives have written books trashing the former president. AP
Since his posts went viral, the elder Walz brother has expressed regret that his private remarks blew up in the public eye, but contended that he stands by his views.

“Sounds like a really great guy!” Trump wrote on Truth Social after The Post reported on Jeff Walz’s comments.

A source familiar with the family dynamic suggested to The Post that the Walz family had hoped Jeff would refrain from badmouthing his brother to the press ahead of the Nov. 5 election.

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Jeff and Tim Walz haven’t spoken in eight years, the older brother previously posted on Facebook and reiterated in a recent interview with NewsNation.

The Minnesota governor has made quips on the campaign trail about awkward family political discourse at the Thanksgiving table.

“Remember the time when you could go to Thanksgiving with your relatives,” he said last month, “and not complain about politics the whole time?”
 
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