The Covid-19 Thread: News, Preparation Tips, Etc

SoniT

Well-Known Member
I saw my Daddy in person for the first time in I don't know how many months. I dropped off some cookies and visited briefly. We both kept masks on and he was very happy to see me . I've been trying to do the right thing throughout this pandemic and I'd never forgive myself if I inadvertently gave him the virus.
 

Ganjababy

Well-Known Member
I have a young family (late 20’s) member in hospital with COVID. The person is losing their mind and posting everything and every crazy thought on Facebook. I don’t know if it’s the long isolation, then having to be in hospital over the holidays. But she has gone batpoop crazy and posting all kind of crazy thoughts and accusations. I am worried about it coming back to bite the person in the future. She is a professional. In addition, Covid can induce psychosis, mania and hallucination. I suspect that’s what’s happening because she is never like that. She is a college educated professional with a calm and level and headed demeanour. The person posting is the total opposite with no filter whatsoever
 
Last edited:

lavaflow99

In search of the next vacation
Oh dear....Africa has held their own and stayed strong for the most part in this pandemic. Not sure how much longer if this pandemic keeps raging.


As Virus Resurges in Africa, Doctors Fear the Worst Is Yet to Come​

The coronavirus killed far fewer people in Africa than in Europe and the Americas, leading to a widespread perception that it was a disease of the West. Now, a tide of new cases on the continent is raising alarms.
Credit...Samantha Reinders for The New York Times

Sheri Fink
By Sheri Fink
  • Dec. 26, 2020Updated 11:01 a.m. ET
PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa — At the center of a terrifying coronavirus surge, 242 patients lay in row after row of beds under the soaring metal beams of a decommissioned Volkswagen factory.
Workers at the vast field hospital could provide oxygen and medications, but there were no I.C.U. beds, no ventilators, no working phones and just one physician on duty on a recent Sunday — Dr. Jessica Du Preez, in her second year of independent practice.
In a shed-like refrigerator behind a door marked “BODY HOLD,” carts contained the remains of three patients that morning. A funeral home had already picked up another body.




On rounds, Dr. Du Preez stopped at the bed of a 60-year-old patient, a grandmother and former college counselor. Her oxygen tube had detached while she was lying prone, but the nurses had so many patients they hadn’t noticed. Now, she was gone.


As two porters placed her corpse in a bag, a worker peeked through the door to tell them another patient, a 67-year-old diabetic man, had died.
Meanwhile, the condition of a teacher in her 50s was deteriorating. Dr. Du Preez tried to find I.C.U. space for her elsewhere in the city, to no avail. She called the teacher’s husband, who asked what he could do. “Not much,” the young doctor responded.
“Shame,” she said again and again that day.
For hours, the alarm on the teacher’s bedside monitor bleated. Her oxygen level was dangerously low, her pulse racing and her blood pressure soaring. Still, she remained conscious, saying she could not breathe. That evening, she died alone. A book, “A Heartbeat of Hope: 366 devotions,” lay on her bedside stand alongside a pair of reading glasses.
When the pandemic began, global public health officials raised grave concerns about the vulnerabilities of Africa. But its countries overall appeared to fare far better than those in Europe or the Americas, upending scientists’ expectations. Now, the coronavirus is on the rise again in swaths of the continent, posing a new, possibly deadlier threat.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/22/...on=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive...on=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/12/20/...on=CompanionColumn&contentCollection=Trending


In South Africa, a crush of new cases that spread from Port Elizabeth is growing exponentially across the nation, with deaths mounting. Eight countries, including Nigeria, Uganda and Mali, recently recorded their highest daily case counts all year. “The second wave is here,” John N. Nkengasong, the head of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, has declared.



When the virus was first detected, many African countries were considered particularly at risk because they had weak medical, laboratory and disease-surveillance systems and were already battling other contagions. Some were riven by armed conflict, limiting health workers’ access. In March, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the first African director-general of the World Health Organization, cautioned, “We have to prepare for the worst.”
But many African governments pursued swift, severe lockdowns that — while financially ruinous, especially for their poorest citizens — slowed the rate of infection. Some deployed networks of community health workers. The Africa C.D.C., the W.H.O. and other agencies helped expand testing and moved in protective gear, medical equipment and pharmaceuticals.
The reported toll of the pandemic on the continent — 2.6 million cases and 61,000 deaths, according to the Africa C.D.C. — is lower than what the United States alone currently experiences in three weeks.
But that accounting is almost certainly incomplete. Evidence is growing that many cases were missed, according to an analysis of new studies, visits to nearly a dozen medical institutions and interviews with more than 100 public health officials, scientists, government leaders and medical providers on the continent.
“It is possible and very likely that the rate of exposure is much more than what has been reported,” Dr. Nkengasong said in an interview.







Now, as they battle new outbreaks, doctors are convinced that deaths have also gone uncounted. Dr. John Black, the only infectious-disease specialist for adults in Port Elizabeth, said he and other physicians feared that many people were dying at home. Indeed, a government analysis showed that there had been more than twice as many excess deaths as could be explained by confirmed cases in South Africa. “We don’t know what the real number is,” he said.
Scientists are also considering other explanations for the continent’s outcome. These range from the asymptomatic or mild infections more common in youth — the median age in Africa is just 19.7, about half that of the United States — to unproven factors including pre-existing immunity, patterns of mobility and climate. If those conditions helped protect against the virus earlier, officials ask, will they do so now?
In South Africa, the continent’s leader by far in coronavirus cases and deaths, the growing devastation in its medical system has led to the rationing of care for older adults. Last week, officials announced that a new variant of the virus that may be associated with faster transmission has become dominant. With stricter control measures lifted and many people no longer seeing the virus as a threat, public health officials fear that Africa’s second wave could be far worse than its first.
“The risk perception has gone from something very scary at the beginning to now something people are not worried about anymore,” said Dr. Chikwe Ihekweazu, director-general of the Nigeria Center for Disease Control.




Some Africans view Covid-19 as an affliction of Westerners and wealthy travelers. In a classroom in a Somali community displaced by drought and war, a fourth grader readily identified the United States as having the most cases. “Donald Trump was Covid-19-positive,” he said.



Sarah Oyangi, 35, an apartment complex manager who lives in what she refers to as a slum in Nairobi, said friends told her they weren’t worried because the virus “is for wazungu and the rich,” using a Swahili word meaning European or white people. “It’s not our disease.”
Dr. Nkengasong said he was very worried about how long it would take to vaccinate enough people on the continent to protect the most vulnerable from unwitting spreaders.


A global effort to help low- and middle-income countries aims for 20 percent coverage at most by the end of 2021, a third of what African leaders say is needed. “The U.S. is not going to target 20 percent of its population. Europe is not going to target 20 percent of its population,” he said. “Why do you think in Africa we should?”

The First Wave​

The first case on the continent was detected on Feb. 14 in a foreign traveler from China to Egypt. Two weeks later, Nigeria discovered that a contractor who had flown in from Milan was ill. In South Africa, the earliest cases involved a half-dozen or so people who had gone skiing in Italy. The W.H.O.’s regional director for Africa reported on March 19 that infected travelers from Europe had come into 27 or 28 countries.
Early on in sub-Saharan Africa, only South Africa and Senegal had supplies to perform diagnostic tests, but with aid, every country on the continent was later able to do some testing.



As the virus overwhelmed the West’s advanced health systems, governments across Africa, with some notable exceptions, imposed stringent curfews and lockdowns. Some countries had only a few cases at the time; Zimbabwe declared a national disaster without having announced one.



“They went into shutdown because we were terribly ill prepared,” Dr. Nkengasong said. But that desperate action may have put Africa ahead of the curve in fighting the virus, instead of behind it, as the United States and Europe found themselves.
Dozens of African health ministers agreed on a continental strategy in February, coordinating closely through the Africa C.D.C. West African nations also built on lessons from the Ebola response in 2014 and 2015.



South Africa shut schools, curbed travel from high-risk countries and restricted mass gatherings. “For the first three weeks, our epidemic was growing on track, almost case for case, with the British epidemic,” said Dr. Salim S. Abdool Karim, a top infectious-disease expert. Then “the pandemic just turned,” he added. “It slowed.”


Later, the country prohibited alcohol sales, which led to a drop in car accidents, assaults and shootings, freeing up hospital capacity to treat Covid patients. The police and military enforced the measures, arresting thousands and killing several.
Eventually, the government eased the restrictions, finding the economic cost too steep. Cases soared and hospitals were pummeled. South Africa brought in outside help: 200 physicians from Cuba, medical staff from Doctors Without Borders and scientists from the W.H.O. By late August, the numbers dropped.
Roughly 3,000 miles away, and at the other end of the economic spectrum, Somalia had also imposed a lockdown. The country had a 70 percent poverty rate; the restrictions hit subsistence workers hard and also delayed childhood vaccinations. “African countries have followed the footsteps of all the other countries without understanding if it’s the best thing to do,” said Dr. Mamunur Rahman Malik, the W.H.O. representative in Somalia.



Closed borders and canceled domestic flights impeded the flow of lifesaving equipment and outside experts. Soon, about 150 health facilities in far-flung rural areas ran out of medical supplies, and international agencies had to charter flights to keep them stocked.
The agencies also felt obliged to send ventilators, costing up to $25,000 each, to poorly equipped countries. But Somalia, which has one of the lowest ratios of doctors and nurses to population in the world, did not have enough personnel trained to operate them.



That was the case with De Martino, a Covid hospital in Mogadishu, which had no I.C.U. or even basic fever medicine, according to its director, Dr. Abdirizak Yusuf Ahmed. Unable to secure medical oxygen for its patients — a problem throughout Africa — the hospital bought tanks from an industrial supplier, built a Rube Goldberg-like network of pipes to the isolation wards, and assigned technicians to switch out empties around the clock.


Somalia exploited one advantage: a system of hundreds of polio workers that extended from the capital to remote rural areas. Employed by the W.H.O., they were redirected to inform people about the pandemic and help identify cases. Community workers have detected about 40 percent of its 4,690 known infections, according to Dr. Malik, the W.H.O. representative.
But about half the country was not reporting any cases at all. Laboratory workers fanned out; in terrain controlled by the Shabab terrorist group, some were driven away. Elsewhere, they found a high number of cases in several districts where the virus had never before been documented.



With widely varying rates of testing and data collection across the continent, public health officials are struggling to assess the pandemic’s reach. In more than a half-dozen countries, antibody tests suggest that the virus has spread far more widely than reported, according to research involving blood donors, pregnant women, H.I.V.-positive people and hospital staff.
Many African countries are planning much broader sampling. But financial and political realities often cause delays. That happened in Hargeisa, Somaliland, when health officials one recent morning debated which districts should bear the cost of notepads, pens, pencils and cellphone airtime.



Participants also objected that some areas were excluded from the survey, which they attributed to planners in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, from which Somaliland declared its independence in 1991 after a civil war.
Determining the death toll is especially challenging. Only a third of the nations on the continent record and report annual deaths, according to the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa, many not meeting international standards.
But South Africa offers clues. An estimated 60,000 more people have died there than would normally be expected; fewer than half have been attributed to Covid-19. Disrupted health services may account for some of them, but researchers believe that many fatal Covid cases have gone undetected.
Older adults, people with chronic health conditions and those admitted to public, rather than private, institutions are more likely to die, according to the country’s National Institute for Communicable Diseases. White South Africans have been hospitalized for the coronavirus at higher rates than their share of the population, probably because of their higher average age. But the institute found that when controlling for age, Black, Indian and mixed-race South Africans were more likely than white South Africans to die of the disease in hospitals.



Still, experts generally believe that fatalities on the continent are far lower than in the West, potentially for reasons beyond demographics. For instance, countries that regularly immunize babies with a tuberculosis vaccine also tend to have lower coronavirus mortality, though a causative link has yet to be proved.
To achieve widespread immunity, more targeted vaccines are needed, like those now rolling out in the United States and Europe. Most African countries have not struck direct deals with Western vaccine makers, though some are importing Chinese-made vaccines not yet vetted by stringent regulators. The continent itself has little vaccine-manufacturing capacity. Biovac, a company in Cape Town, was trying to find a partner and would need up to a year to begin filling vials.
But Africans have played an important role in developing coronavirus vaccines. In Durban, Senzo Maloyi, 30, volunteered for a clinical trial of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, as part of the United States’ Operation Warp Speed. “By us participating, if it does go well, we’ll be helping a lot of people,” he said. There was no guarantee, though, that those who’d be helped would be in South Africa.

A Rattled Health System​

Last month, South African officials thought they had a brief opportunity to douse hot spots of infection in the Eastern Cape before they spread across the country.
Crowded post offices, college dormitory parties and migrant farmer encampments were potential sources of outbreaks. So were the traditional three-week initiation retreats where an expected 50,000 18-year-old boys would undergo circumcision in December and January.
The government imposed a nighttime curfew in Port Elizabeth and limited alcohol sales and the size of gatherings. A proposal to screen nearly all adults in the most affected areas, though, was dropped after a pilot project strained labs.
Meanwhile, cases mounted, highlighting the health system’s inequalities. Most South Africans rely on public health services; only 14 percent get medical care from better-endowed private providers. In Port Elizabeth one recent day, 57 of the 59 patients on ventilators were in private hospitals.



Even the private sector was hard-pressed in the outbreak. Dr. Hlanjwa Maepa, the sole pulmonologist at Netcare Greenacres Hospital, spent her day attending to nearly 40 coronavirus patients, inserting breathing tubes and catheters and not stopping once in 12 hours to take off her protective equipment to eat or use the toilet.

The hospital was not proning Covid pneumonia patients — turning them on their bellies — even though evidence shows that it improves oxygen levels and reduces the need for ventilators. “We don’t have enough manpower to do it,” Dr. Maepa said.
The 16-bed I.C.U. was full, and she shifted patients like puzzle pieces to make space for the sickest. A wealthy executive begged her to save him because his affairs were not in order, asking to buy his own ventilator and be treated at home. A middle-aged man sobbed as he visited his dying wife. “There’s a mountain coming, and I may not be able to get over it with her,” Dr. Maepa told him. “But we’re trying either way.”
The scene inside two of the city’s public hospitals was more dire. Dozens of medical workers were out sick, and patients stayed hours, sometimes days, in crowded observation rooms awaiting ward admission. One aging hospital, Dora Nginza, lacked an I.C.U. and was rushing to finish a renovation because it could not properly isolate patients. The physician in charge, Dr. Lokuthula Maphalala, spent her shift pushing stretchers and lifting patients. The other public hospital, Livingstone, had to refuse most patients who needed transfer to the I.C.U. “These cases and faces come back to you,” said its director, Dr. Lizette van der Merwe.


At the nearby field hospital in Port Elizabeth, doctors were forced to ration. Dr. Black, the infectious-disease specialist, saw that an 84-year-old man had been placed on a high-flow oxygen device, a decision he said was “completely against” the protocol tacked to a wall, labeled “Allocation of Scarce Critical Care Resources During the COVID-19 Public Health Emergency.”


“If I need it, I’m going to take it away from him, because he’s not a great candidate,” Dr. Black said.
According to the guidelines, patients more than “mildly frail” at baseline, including those who “often have problems with stairs” and need minimal help with dressing, were to be denied critical care. Other patients were to be divided into low-, medium- and high-priority groups based on pre-existing conditions and degree of illness, with age groups as a tiebreaker.
In practice the procedure was cruder. If you’re 60 with another health condition, “the chance of you getting into an I.C.U. is close to zero,” Dr. Black said. “I have patients dying here in their 30s who couldn’t get into a hospital, and now I.C.U.s are full.”


That night, the nursing staff wound through the wards singing hymns and the Lord’s Prayer. A nurse who sang in her church choir beat an empty water bottle against a cardboard box labeled for compliments and complaints.

‘Killing People Silently’​

In Howlwadaag, a rubble-filled settlement in Hargeisa for Somali and Ethiopian refugees displaced by conflict and drought, the risks of transmission were evident. Residents live among prickly cacti, sleeping in crowded corrugated sheet metal shacks and rounded cloth-covered dwellings. Polio outreach workers advised residents to sleep separately if sick and wash their hands often. But community members said they could not afford soap.

A woman complaining of a cough and difficulty breathing rejected the advice of health workers to go to the hospital one day this month. “I’m afraid of people not being able to come see me,” said Khadra Mahdi Abdi, adding that the price of transport was too steep.
In the region, the pandemic often inspires denial. Restaurants are busy, social distancing rare, large family gatherings common. Mask wearing carries a stigma.
“People are watching you and point their fingers at you and say, ‘This is corona man,’” said Hassan Warsame Nor, a senior lecturer at Benadir University, in Mogadishu, who led a Unicef study of attitudes in Somalia’s capital.
And resisting medical treatment is routine.
At Hargeisa’s designated Covid hospital, Daryeel, five patients separated by empty metal frame beds lay beside hissing oxygen tanks, with handwritten medication orders taped to the walls. Nurses swatted away flies that flew in through windows facing a courtyard, where patients were sometimes rolled for a dose of sunshine and bird song. Most had a family member attending them, which the hospital director, Dr. Yusuf M. Ahmed, felt compelled to allow.



There was only one doctor on duty at an isolation hospital in Hargeisa, Somaliland, a region that has declared independence from Somalia but is not internationally recognized.CreditCredit...Video by Sheri Fink. Photo by Samantha Reinders for The New York Times.
He said that about 80 percent of patients scheduled for transfer to Daryeel after testing positive at the main public hospital never showed up. People were dying at home. “The virus is now killing people silently,” said Dr. Hussein Abdillahi Ali, a junior physician there.
Judging by the condolence pages on Facebook, the director said, Covid-19 has come back “with a vengeance.”

At least two of those hospitalized that day later died. “Patients are coming at a late stage,” he said. “It’s much harder than the first round.”

The Baqiic cemetery in Hargeisa. Doctors believe many coronavirus deaths have gone unreported.Credit...Samantha Reinders for The New York Times
At the Baqiic cemetery on the outskirts of Hargeisa, about 50 men and boys gathered at a grave site this month to bury a family matriarch who had died of unknown causes. Their shovels hit the ground in a frenzy, causing a plume of earth to rise in the air like smoke.
A caretaker at the cemetery’s entrance produced a notebook with handwritten entries for the deceased. Because families often dug graves for their loved ones, he said, he logged only some of the burials and did not share his list with the government.
 

chocolat79

Well-Known Member
I haven't read through everything, but the stats in SoCal are right. I work in a hospital in a neighboring county to LA county and our ICU is full and our hospital is almost full. I think we had 6 beds available last week. Our morgue is overflowing. All different ages have been affected and younger people are dying. We had a 29 year old die with Covid.

Lots of people still getting together though and Kirk Cameron is singing Xmas caroles with thousands. Ironically enough, the hospital in Thousand Oaks been full for a while, so if any of those people get Covid, they're probably going to a hospital across town, if not out of the county. Now isn't the time to be getting sick with anything.
 

chocolat79

Well-Known Member
This is scary, sad, an outrage
This poor lady! She did right by requesting to be transferred to another hospital but I guess it was too late?

This is why Black people still need advocates. Since it's Covid and hospitals aren't allowing visitors, she should've gotten her colleagues to help her. I actually have a few coworkers who'd advocate on my behalf and I've made sure to befriend important doctors in the hospital for just such an event. Black people (women in particular) can have a difficult hospital stay, so if you can have an advocate with you, do so. If not, make friends with one of the most helpful nurses and see if they'll help. If you're a HCW in the hospital, befriend some doctors. I'm just a lowly technologist but I've been very deliberate about "befriending" doctors and nurses who I know would advocate for me. In healthcare, use all possible resources that are available to you, especially if you're a HCW.
 

yamilee21

Well-Known Member
This article is too long to copy and paste, but it is worth reading. The larger media narrative is that mostly the elderly are dying from COVID-19; even when the disproportionate impact on the Black community is mentioned, it’s easy to ignore the true effect of that impact.

 

Kitamita

Well-Known Member
This article is too long to copy and paste, but it is worth reading. The larger media narrative is that mostly the elderly are dying from COVID-19; even when the disproportionate impact on the Black community is mentioned, it’s easy to ignore the true effect of that impact.

I was just about to post this. It is so saddening to see how Covid-19 has attacked minority populations.

This portion of the article is so telling:

"Stress is a physiological reaction, hard-wired in the body, that helps protect it against external threats. At the first sign of danger, the brain sounds an alarm, setting off a torrent of neurological and hormonal signals that whoosh into the blood, stimulating the body to fight or give flight. The heart beats faster and breathing quickens; blood vessels dilate, so more oxygen reaches the brain and muscles. The immune system’s inflammatory response is activated to promote quick healing. When the threat passes, hormone levels return to normal, blood glucose ebbs and heart rate and blood pressure go back to baseline. At least, that’s how the human body is designed to work.

But overexposure to cortisol and other stress hormones can cause the gears to malfunction. “Your body’s over-producing, always working hard to bring itself back down to the normal level,” said Roland J. Thorpe Jr., a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and founding director of the Program for Research on Men’s Health at the Hopkins Center for Health Disparities Solutions. The constant strain “resets the normal,” he said. As blood pressure remains high and inflammation becomes chronic, the inner linings of blood vessels start to thicken and stiffen, which forces the heart to work harder, which dysregulates other organs until they, too, begin to fail. “Your body starts to wear down,” Thorpe said — a phenomenon known as weathering.



The cumulative effects of stress begin in the womb, when cortisol released into a pregnant woman’s bloodstream crosses the placenta; it is one of the reasons a disproportionate number of Black babies are born too early and too small. Then, exposure to adverse childhood experiences — anything from abuse and neglect to poverty and hunger — continues the toxic stream; too much exposure to cortisol at a critical stage in development can rewire the neurological system’s fight-or-flight response, essentially causing the brain’s stress switch to break. The more stress a youngster endures, the more likely he or she is to have academic, behavioral and health problems from depression to obesity.

Weathering isn’t specific to race, but it is believed to take a particular toll on Black people because of the unique, unrelenting stress caused by racism that wears away the body and the spirit, “just like you have siding on the house, and the rain or the sun beats on it, and eventually it starts to fade,” said Dr. Jerome Adams, the U.S. surgeon general under the Trump administration. Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson, a social epidemiologist at Ohio State University, says the human body isn’t designed to withstand such biological and emotional assaults: “It’s the same thing as if you revved the engine of your car all day, every day. Sooner or later, the car is going to break down.”

The effects of stress can be seen at the cellular level. Researchers have found that in Black people, telomeres — repeated sequences of DNA that protect the ends of chromosomes by forming a cap, much like the plastic tip on a shoelace — become shortened at a faster rate, a sign of premature aging. In a 2018 study examining changes in seven biomarkers in cardiac patients over a 30-year period, researchers found that Black patients weathered at an average of about six years faster than whites. And it was the extraordinarily high rates of hypertension in the Black community that prompted scientists to look at the impact of stress in the first place. By age 55, about 76% of Black men and women develop high blood pressure, versus 54% of white men and 40% of white women, which increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes.

Sustained stress has strong links to obesity, which Black children and adults have at much higher rates than whites. Some of this is physiological: The interplay between cortisol and glucose is complex and insidious, triggering metabolic changes that can lead to diabetes and other chronic diseases. Some of it is psychological and behavioral: Stress is strongly associated with depression and other mental health disorders. “The way that people deal with stress is by strategies that make us feel better,” such as comfort eating, said Thomas LaVeist, dean of Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine. Stress and anxiety cause sleeplessness, which itself is correlated with weight gain. The result is often a cascade of health problems — hypertension, cardiovascular disease, metabolic syndrome — that strike early and feed off of each other. "


Unfortunately, these predispositions along with a distrust/mistreatment of the medical filed has stacked the deck against us as a whole.
 

Ms. Tarabotti

Well-Known Member

Sentence Is Cut for U.S. Student Who Broke Quarantine​


Skylar Mack, 18, was sentenced to four months in prison for violating coronavirus restrictions in the Cayman Islands. After an outcry, her sentence was reduced to two months on Tuesday.




A panel of judges in the Cayman Islands on Tuesday cut the sentence of an American college student who violated the territory’s coronavirus laws to two months from four months after her lawyers argued that the punishment was too harsh.
A lawyer for the student, Skylar Mack, 18, and her boyfriend, Vanjae Ramgeet, 24, said they were sorry and asked for the forgiveness of the people of the Cayman Islands.
“Whilst it was our hope that Skylar would be able to return home to resume her studies in January, we accept the decision of the court and look forward to receiving its written reasons in due course,” the lawyer, Jonathon Hughes, said in a statement.
Ms. Mack and Mr. Ramgeet were sentenced last week to four months in prison after violating the Cayman Islands’ required 14-day quarantine period for visitors.

Her grandmother pleaded for an early release ahead of the hearing.
“She cries, she wants to come home,” Jeanne Mack, 68, said on NBC’s “Today” show on Monday. “She knows she made a mistake. She owns up to that, but she’s pretty hysterical right now.”

  • Dig deeper into the moment.
Subscribe for $1 a week.

In late November, with her semester at Mercer University in Georgia complete, Ms. Mack flew to the Cayman Islands to watch Mr. Ramgeet compete in the islands’ Jet Ski racing national championship.
When she arrived, however, there was a problem.
She got there on a Friday; the championship was on Sunday. And the country’s laws required her to remain in her hotel room for 14 days.

CORONAVIRUS BRIEFING: An informed guide to the global outbreak, with the latest developments and expert advice.
Sign Up
To elude the restrictions, Ms. Mack, after receiving a negative coronavirus test, slipped an electronic monitoring bracelet from her wrist and escaped to a beach on Grand Cayman’s South Sound, where she saw Mr. Ramgeet win first place.
But the event organizers were notified that Ms. Mack may have been in breach of the rules and the police were called, her lawyer said. Ms. Mack was charged with leaving her home during the quarantine period, and Mr. Ramgeet was charged with aiding and abetting her.

Editors’ Picks​

Are We Ready to Laugh About Covid-19? A British Sitcom Hopes So

Christmas Is Coming. Cue the Guilt Trips and Tears.

The Endless Debate: Cancel or Rebook?


“This was as flagrant a breach as could be imagined,” Justice Roger Chapple said in court during the sentencing, according to the Cayman Compass, a news website in the Cayman Islands. “It was born of selfishness and arrogance.”

The islands, a British territory of nearly 65,000 residents, had reported 316 coronavirus infections and two deaths, as of Monday, with no reported cases of local transmission since July. Only people who have been preauthorized to enter the Cayman Islands can travel there, and they must quarantine at home or in a government or private facility.

Upon arrival in the Cayman Islands, visitors receive an electronic smart wristband and are equipped with a cellphone with an app, called Stay Safe Cayman. Using the app, they must log where they are quarantining. Visitors cannot end quarantines until they can show negative results from tests taken on their 15th day on the island, government officials said

Ms. Mack’s relatives in suburban Atlanta pulled together letters from friends and family members attesting to her character in an effort to get the sentence overturned on appeal, Jeanne Mack said.

Jeanne Mack also wrote to President Trump for help. She received a response from the Office of Presidential Correspondence last week stating that her message had been forwarded “to the appropriate federal agency for further action.”

Eric Trump, the president’s son, said on Twitter on Tuesday that a four-month sentence was unfair. “This is infuriating,” he wrote. “Skylar is an 18 year old girl who left her hotel to watch her boyfriend compete in a jet ski competition… 4 months in jail?!”:violin:

Ms. Mack, a pre-med student and the daughter of Dennis Mack, a professional Jet Ski racer, and her family had no excuses for what happened, her grandmother said: What she did was wrong.

“I’ll do everything to get you home, and when I get you here, I’m going to kick your butt,” Jeanne Mack said. “We’re not saying, ‘poor, innocent Skylar.’ We’re simply saying the punishment does not meet the crime.”

Skylar Mack and Mr. Ramgeet pleaded guilty to breaking the quarantine rules and were initially sentenced to 40 hours of community service and were fined 2,600 Cayman Islands dollars (about $3,100). But the punishment was increased last week after the prosecutor appealed, saying the initial sentences were “unduly lenient and wrong in principle.”

Justice Chapple said in court last week that “the gravity of the breach was such that the only appropriate sentence would have been one of immediate imprisonment,” the Cayman Compassreported.

So the punishment was 'too harsh' for the white American who intentionally broke a country's law and might have endangered a whole group of people?
 

Ms. Tarabotti

Well-Known Member
IDK. I took a quick birthday staycation a few months ago and when I was in that hotel room, I sprayed the entire thing down myself.

It is utterly disturbing that a family is taking a sick person on a trip for a "change of scenery." WTH.

They left on Christmas Eve after getting some test results. They drove down to Virginia during that winter storm that affected the northeastern US, stayed in a hotel that night then continued to drive to Florida.

Get this- they feel uncomfortable going to restaurants in Florida because people are not masked and not social distancing. The mother is slightly upset at the hotel staff because they are not doing what they are 'supposed to be doing'- changing the towels daily and emptying the garbage. I'm sure that there are some signs in the room posted about the hotel's Covid practices for the safety of their employees.
 

Transformer

Well-Known Member
Now I‘m terrified. My sister—the one thatI’m joined at hip—was diagnosed with COVID this morning. She has pulmonary fibrosis. She went to her son’s house for Christmas dinner and her son has reported that he’s lost his sense of taste and smell.

She’s in Atlanta and yesterday tried, and tried, and tried to be seen somewhere. She was told at one urgent care facility to come today at 7am. She stated there was already 40 people ahead of her. You have to wait in your car and they call you when you can be seen.
 

vevster

Well-Known Member
Now I‘m terrified. My sister—the one thatI’m joined at hip—was diagnosed with COVID this morning. She has pulmonary fibrosis. She went to her son’s house for Christmas dinner and her son has reported that he’s lost his sense of taste and smell.

She’s in Atlanta and yesterday tried, and tried, and tried to be seen somewhere. She was told at one urgent care facility to come today at 7am. She stated there was already 40 people ahead of her. You have to wait in your car and they call you when you can be seen.
Do you supplement? I would ramp up on those......
 

Black Ambrosia

Well-Known Member
Now I‘m terrified. My sister—the one thatI’m joined at hip—was diagnosed with COVID this morning. She has pulmonary fibrosis. She went to her son’s house for Christmas dinner and her son has reported that he’s lost his sense of taste and smell.

She’s in Atlanta and yesterday tried, and tried, and tried to be seen somewhere. She was told at one urgent care facility to come today at 7am. She stated there was already 40 people ahead of her. You have to wait in your car and they call you when you can be seen.
Does she have any symptoms? What prompted her to get tested? I assume the pulmonary fibrosis was an existing condition but I may be reading this wrong.
 
Top