Pine crest 99
Active Member
Outcomes not good ether way is my opinion.
10@110x3 last 40Hows the crew doing, dumpy?
your opinion has no value. Your lies have less.Outcomes not good ether way is my opinion.
Are you American?Do you believe that covid can transmit from waste sewage plant where you can smell it?
Yes. Apart from a 3 week lock down in April/May 2020. Life's normal as there is no Covid due to a 3 week lockdown. I'm not sure you understand what I'm saying so ill try to explain.kids are back to school now ?
I thought you had one truck and were part of a crew. Now you have 3 trucks and run a crew and make an easy half mil every year. Good on you for giving yourself an internet raise!10hrs@110 by3 trucks every day last 40 days minus Sunday and only 1 for 8 on Saturday.
It took a while, but now I understand the question. The reason you lock down healthy people is so unhealthy ones don't come in and spread the virus.No , thread is lockdowns work,
Like to try to understand the logic behind
Locking down healthy people.
We judge how widespread (prescription or otherwise) drug use is in a city is from testing waste water. The same is being done with covid. And no, you can't catch covid from smelling waste water.Do you believe that covid can transmit from waste sewage plant where you can smell it?
so Alberta and Sask. are your red states? good to know.Alberta and Saskatchewan decided people know best in doing what is needed in terms of the virus, economy full steam ahead.
Alberta's hospitals near 90% of surge capacity
Alberta's health-care system is buckling under an influx of sick COVID-19 patients as hospitals are nearing the 90-per-cent threshold of their surge capacity.
The province has been adding hospital beds to cope with the soaring number of cases. Even so, intensive care capacity — including the additional surge beds — is currently at 87 per cent, Alberta Health Services (AHS) says.
Without the additional surge spaces, provincial ICU capacity would be at 174 per cent.
Hospitals in the central and northern parts of the province are particularly hard hit. Those zones are at or above 100 per cent capacity, even with surge capacity, AHS said in a written statement.
As of Wednesday, there were 1,040 patients in Alberta hospitals with COVID-19, the highest the province has seen.
There are currently 302 patients in ICU, the vast majority of whom are COVID-19 positive. This is the highest number of ICU patients since the pandemic began, AHS said.
Sask. reports most active COVID-19 cases to date with 4,864
For the seventh straight days Saskatchewan has reported record high COVID-19 hospitalizations, adding 492 new reported cases on Saturday. For the seventh straight days Saskatchewan has reported record high COVID-19 hospitalizations, adding 492 new reported cases on Saturday.
Almost a third of the new 492 cases are in the age category of 20 to 39 and around 22 per cent of the new cases recorded in those eligible (ages 12 years and older) were fully vaccinated.
The seven-day average of new COVID-19 case numbers was 477, or 39.9 cases per 100,000 population.
Sask. COVID-19 hospitalizations record high seven days in a row; 492 new cases reported
For seven straight days Saskatchewan has reported record high COVID-19 hospitalizations, while also adding 492 new reported cases on Saturday.regina.ctvnews.ca
ICU doctor cautiously optimistic about looming impact of 4th COVID-19 wave in Manitoba
A Manitoba critical care doctor and infectious diseases specialist remains cautiously optimistic when it comes to the impact of the fourth wave in Manitoba. It comes as Alberta and Saskatchewan deal with a surge in cases and capacity issues in hospitals.
Dr. Anand Kumar points to Manitoba’s move earlier this summer to reintroduce mask mandates and proof of vaccination requirements and the percentage of eligible Manitobans who are fully vaccinated but he said we’re not out of the woods yet.
“I think we are going to see an increase in activity but my hope is that it will be sufficiently blunted,” he said. “That we don’t see the kind of overwhelming hospital strain and ICU strain that they’re seeing in Alberta and Saskatchewan and that we saw, frankly, back in May and June.”
Even without a drastic spike in COVID-19 patients, numbers show Manitoba’s intensive care units are already stretched beyond normal capacity.
As of midnight, Shared Health said Thursday there were a total of 81 patients in ICUs with 14 of those patients receiving care for COVID-19. Provincial data shows only one of those patients is fully vaccinated. Before the pandemic, the normal baseline capacity for the critical care system was 72 patients.
ICU doctor cautiously optimistic about looming impact of 4th COVID-19 wave in Manitoba
A Manitoba critical care doctor and infectious diseases specialist remains cautiously optimistic when it comes to the impact of the fourth wave in Manitoba.winnipeg.ctvnews.ca
Sask, is a funny place. They were the birthplace of the National Democratic Party (NDP), I will just paste, it is easier.so Alberta and Sask. are your red states? good to know.
can i catch covid from reading his shitty posts? lolWe judge how widespread (prescription or otherwise) drug use is in a city is from testing waste water. The same is being done with covid. And no, you can't catch covid from smelling waste water.
Wash your hands afterward, you will be fine.can i catch covid from reading his shitty posts? lol