COVID-19

Q4492 – Why only [D] governors? … push COVID-19 positive elderly patients back into nursing homes

Jun 21 2020 19:51:55
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How is it possible select [D] governors thought it was ‘safe’ to push COVID-19 positive elderly patients back into nursing homes [hot zones]?

“Each year, 90 percent of deaths worldwide related to influenza-A virus (IAV) strike men and women aged 65 and older.”
If the flu [influenza] is more deadly among the elderly [known] HOW IS IT POSSIBLE SELECT [D] GOVERNORS THOUGHT IT WAS ‘SAFE’ TO PUSH COVID-19 POSITIVE ELDERLY PATIENTS BACK INTO NURSING HOMES [HOT ZONES]?
WHY WOULD THIS BE DIRECTED IF HOSPITALS [+US NAVY MEDICAL SHIPS [NYC-CA] +ERECTED CARE FACILITIES] HAD MORE THAN 70% CAPACITY?

Someone can be accused of third-degree murder if they unintentionally cause someone else’s death while committing a dangerous act.
Negligent?
Reckless?
Who benefits the most?
Why only [D] governors?
How do you reasonably explain what occurred?
Q
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Steve Scalise @SteveScalise 🚨 Alarming Data 🚨

→ 40% of COVID deaths have come from nursing homes
→ 20,000 deaths were avoidable

Numbers don’t lie. Cuomo does.

He violated protocol & forced COVID patients into nursing homes—now he’s trying to cover up the horrific outcome.

He must be held accountable.
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(Yale took down the page)
Archive of that page

Medicine@Yale, 2016 – Sept Oct

There’s good reason behind doctors’ recommendation that older adults receive the flu vaccine annually. Each year, 90 percent of deaths worldwide related to influenza A virus (IAV) strike men and women aged 65 and older. The trouble, according to a widely accepted theory, is that IAV replicates quickly and overwhelms older adults’ immune systems, thus making them more susceptible to catching pneumonia and the like.
A study published in April in the journal Science suggests that the body’s inflammatory immune response, not the virus, leads to death. Akiko Iwasaki, Ph.D., Waldemar Von Zedtwitz Professor of Immunobiology and an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and colleagues found that immune cells from older adults secrete significantly less interferon, a key antiviral protein.
The authors then created mice with immune systems that mimicked this weakened response. “Although the virus was not sufficient to kill mice, the immune response, driven by neutrophils [white blood cells], led to excessive inflammation and lung damage,” says lead author Padmini S. Pillai, a doctoral student in Iwasaki’s lab.
The study could point to new anti-inflammation flu treatments that target and calm this overactive immune response.

Read “Innate virus recognition and autophagy” and watch accompanying video here.

(Here takes to this link:)

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Third Degree Murder Overview

By Bridget Molitor, JD | Reviewed by Kellie Pantekoek, Esq. | Last updated June 01, 2020

Someone can be accused of third-degree murder if they unintentionally cause someone else’s death while committing a dangerous act. This is different from first-degree and second-degree murder charges, where intent is generally required.