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pandemic

More Covid News Stories

As much as I want to ignore hysterical news coverage, I still cannot tune out covid stories. Even though I try not to open the news app on my phone, I find myself jolting into full consciousness after scrolling for who-knows-how-long and wincing as I realize that I’m reading yet another covid story. By that point, I’m halfway to bookmarking it to share with y’all later or reading it aloud to my sister. Because you know the old adage– misery loves company. With that depressing introduction, here’s three stories that caught my interest so far this week…

one: covid transplant

Organ transplant patient dies when they receive (unknown) covid lungs. You have to keep doing transplants during a pandemic because people are still dying waiting for them… and when an organ becomes available, you have a VERY limited amount of time to utilize it. But there is really such a short window of time in which the whole process occurs, sometimes 1 day. A person can test negative for covid but actually be positive in that time. So sad that someone got new lungs, only to get covid also.

two: doc photog

Dr. Scott Kobner is the chief emergency room resident at the Los Angeles County-USC Medical Center and an amateur photographer. He photo-documented covid as it occurred at his hospital in stunning black and white.

three: bird flu

Even the headline on this piece made my blood run cold and my heart shutter a little as I remember all the pregnant women in the ICU in 2009, the year we fought H1N1: “Russia tells WHO it has detected first case of avian flu strain in humans.” My first thought: pandemic on top of pandemic??? NOOOO!!!!!! But it turns out the headline is a little misleading because although 2 people have indeed been diagnosed with H1N8, a new bird flu to transmit to humans, it was from direct bird contact and has not passed from human to human. But, you know, we might want to insert the word “yet” in the previous sentence so it reads “it has not YET passed from human to human.” Don’t all the viruses seem to go that way eventually?