Further confirming what I revealed in mid-December, Just the News recently reported that, “States throughout the U.S. are failing to distinguish between patients hospitalized because of COVID-19 and patients who merely test positive for the disease while being hospitalized for other reasons.” This is an important fact for communities across America as hospitalization rates are widely being used to keep much of the U.S. in shutdown mode, including many U.S. schools.
Yes, some U.S. hospitals are more crowded now than they were
months ago, however this is not completely—or, in many cases,
even largely—due to severe Wuhan virus cases. Again, my community in northeast
Georgia provides an excellent example of this. As the image below illustrates, daily
data from Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS) on Northeast
Georgia Medical Center hospitals shows that, although there’s an increase in
Wuhan virus “cases” or “COVID-19 Positives,” the rate of occupied beds has
remained relatively constant for months now.
It is very important to note that the steep increase in
“COVID-19 Positives” does not correspond to a similarly steep increase in
“Total Occupied Beds.” Again, this is almost certainly due to the fact that
virtually everyone who gets admitted—for whatever reason—is tested for the
Wuhan virus, and those hospitalized because of the Wuhan virus are not
being distinguished from those hospitalized with the Wuhan virus. Of
course, we should not be surprised at this, as states and hospitals have long
played similar games with Wuhan virus deaths.
Additionally, as has
been often
reported, the numbers for “Total Occupied Beds” are significantly
lower at the beginning of this graphic because hospitals grossly overestimated
the health care demands of the Wuhan virus. Heeding the rampant Wuhan virus
fear mongering, all across the U.S., hospitals shut down almost all care and
procedures that they could. This was done in preparation for what we were
repeatedly told was going to be a significant Wuhan virus patient surge.
Of course, such a patient surge never materialized. Thus,
U.S. hospitals were left with a massive patient shortage.
This massive patient shortage led to unprecedented, albeit self-inflicted, financial devastation. Recently, the American Hospital
Association (AHA) reported, “Since the start
of the pandemic, hospitals and health systems have faced unprecedented
financial pressures…And now, some hospitals are increasingly facing the threat
of bankruptcy or closure as a result of these pressures.” Thus, much of what we
see with current hospitalization rates has less to do with the Wuhan virus and
more to do with hospitals trying to improve their financial situation.
Because U.S. hospitals already operate at very thin
financial margins—according to this
report, it was 1.7% in 2018 and 1.8% in 2017—they typically operate
at a very high capacity most of the time. Therefore, any significant uptick in
patients will stress most hospitals. In other words, though hospitals may
indeed have few available beds, this is by no means unprecedented. This is
especially the case during flu season, which, interestingly, we are hearing
almost nothing about this year!
As Steven Hayward at Powerline recently
noted, for most every year in recent memory, during flu season, the
media all over the world has reported on hospital “bed shortages,” “record high
occupancy rates,” and as the Los Angeles
Times declared
during the 2018 flu season,
Hospitals across the state are sending away ambulances, flying in nurses from out of state and not letting children visit their loved ones for fear they’ll spread the flu. Others are canceling surgeries and erecting tents in their parking lots [emphasis mine] so they can triage the hordes of flu patients. . . Many hospitals also say they’re too full to accept any more patients or ambulances.
During such times, rarely, if ever, were schools, churches,
and businesses forced—or even asked—to be closed. Nevertheless, as we stand on
the verge of the second semester for most every U.S. school, hospitalization
rates across America are being used as justification for keeping schools in
shutdown mode. This is true in even some of the most conservative parts of the
U.S.
As I’ve noted before, I live in northeast Georgia’s ninth
congressional district. This is one of the most conservative
districts in America. Yet, several
schools across this district are
beginning 2021 in the dreaded “virtual learning” mode or some hybrid
version of this. In addition to the media reports that imply such,
I’ve heard from multiple sources—within the Northeast Georgia Health System (NGHS)
and within the community at large—that these shutdowns are due to messaging
from NGHS administration. I personally know for a fact that such messaging has
been used to scare local churches into shutting down (again).
Along with hospitalizations, school systems also seem to
continue to foolishly be afraid of Wuhan virus “case counts” or, more
accurately “positive tests.” First of all, a “positive test” by no means
constitutes a Wuhan virus case. Additionally, as I have frequently
noted, with this virus, cases without context is virtually
meaningless. After months of data, when it comes to the Wuhan virus and
school-age children, the “context” is clear: school kids are in practically zero
danger. This is true for preschoolers through college age students. There is
nothing in the whole of science or sound morality that disproves this.
In spite of months of tens of millions of students engaging
in in-person learning, there are no incidents of widespread outbreaks of serious
Wuhan virus cases among students. In spite of months of students engaging in
close contact athletics such as football (and now basketball, including two of
my children), there were zero incidents of widespread outbreaks of serious
Wuhan virus cases among such athletes.
Despite this evidence, multiple NCAA football games were
cancelled this past fall. Time and again we were told this was due to “cases”
or those “testing positive” for the Wuhan virus. As we near the end of the NCAA
football season, as far as my research has revealed, there has not been one
reported incident of a serious Wuhan virus case in all of NCAA football.
If there are such cases, they are very few, and a media
eager to support the lockdown narrative is not reporting them. In all of
football—a sport filled with blood, sweat, and constant contact—there seem to
be only a handful
of serious cases where a young person required hospitalization and
was diagnosed with the Wuhan virus.
What’s more, multiple studies, including those very
large and very
recent indicate that the asymptomatic—the vast majority of the
“cases” among school kids—are not spreaders of the Wuhan virus. Whether or not
they’re symptomatic, we’ve known for months now—even prior to the beginning of
this school year—that children
are not significant spreaders of this virus.
Lastly, the lockdowns—including school closures—are having a
devastating effect on all of us. Distinguished Canadian pediatrician, Dr. Ari
Joffe—recently named one of the ten most influential researchers in the field
of pediatric critical care—quantifies these effects in a recent
article. On schools, he says: “Keep schools open: children have very
low morbidity and mortality from COVID-19, and (especially those 10 years old
and younger) are less likely to be infected by SARS-CoV-2 and have a low
likelihood to be the source of transmission of SARS-CoV-2.”
If your school continues in a lockdown/“remote learning”
phase, I encourage you to contact your local school board and administration
and educate them on the facts, or at least make them aware that you know the truth!
(See this column at American Thinker.)
Copyright 2020, Trevor Grant ThomasAt the Intersection of Politics, Science, Faith, and Reason.
www.trevorgrantthomas.com
Trevor is the author of the The Miracle and Magnificence of America
tthomas@trevorgrantthomas.com
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