Northwestern Medicine Kish doctor: how to get tested for COVID-19 and why isolation matters – DeKalb Daily Chronicle

As a public service, Shaw Media will provide open access to information related to the COVID-19 (Coronavirus) emergency.

DeKALB After seven new cases of COVID-19 were announced Thursday, local health officials are reiterating the urgency of getting adequate testing for public, to help prevent further person-to-person spread as cases arise north of the Chicago area.

"We've never seen anything like this, maybe since 1957 when they shut the schools down with the flu," said Bob Manam, an infectious disease specialist at Northwestern Medicine Kishwaukee Hospital. "We can see there's a change in the health officials within the last 24 to 48 hours, where they've really ramped it up. So they must be having some numbers of local sustained spread of infection."

Gov. JB Pritzker announced Thursday more cases in McHenry and Kane counties, which add to the total of 32 cases of coronavirus statewide. DeKalb County schools, events, organizations and government agencies inundated the news cycle Thursday with closures, cancellations and postponements, in an effort to deter in-person contact.

Manam said there's still an important step missing: providing enough testing kits for area hospitals to rule out coronavirus in patients who exhibit telling symptoms. Quest Diagnostic Labs announced today they've now been equipped with COVID-19 testing kits, Manam said. LabCorp Diagnostics will soon provide testing in Illinois as well, he said.

"These testing kits have to be provided to the hospitals or doctor's offices," Manam said. "Even today, if I wanted to get a test, I would not be able to. Today was the first day that I saw from Quest Labs. Likely in the next week or so those who need testing will get that."

The Illinois Department of Public Health has a testing lab, but Manam said the tests haven't been widely enough distributed so that area hospitals have access to them.

The tests themselves, spawned from a nasal swab which are sent in a contained package to the labs, don't take long to produce results, but the waiting game to be tested is the problem, he said. And in the interim, Manam said people should limit their contact with the outside world.

What if I get coronavirus?

If you test positive for it, chances are the virus will run its course, Manam said, but advised you maintain regular contact with your doctor, and said many may be able to heal at home.

"The majority of people will be fine," he said. "Everybody has to be following the guidelines through, making sure they're safe and their family is at home."

If you contract COVID-19, Manam said avoid elderly people or those who are immunocompromised.

When should I take the test and how do I get one?

If a person suspects they may have coronavirus, they're advised to not go into a local hospital or clinic and ask for a test, nor should they walk into an area Quest Lab for one, Manam said.

If you suspect you may have COVID-19 (symptoms include higher fever and persistent cough, but not runny nose which can come with the flu), you should contact your primary care physician who can instruct you on next steps. You can also call the Northwestern Medicine coronavirus hotline 312-47-COVID.

Manam said turn-around times to get a result are 24 hours through the IDPH lab or 72 hours for QuestLabs. While you await your test results, you should isolate yourself and limit as much human-to-human contact as possible.

The health department will help determine who you've been in contact with (usually those in your home, or co-workers) who should also then self-isolate.

"Doing this is not to spread panic but to slow this virus down so everybody does not get sick at one time," Manam said.

Though DeKalb County doesn't have any confirmed cases as of Thursday, he said hospital workers are operating with heightened arrangements because of it. If you experience a medical emergency unrelated to coronavirus, you shouldn't be afraid to seek medical attention at the hospital.

He said it's not an overreaction to stay away form public places, and people shouldn't view it as a minor inconvenience is events are canceled.

"Even 1% of a large number is too much for institutions to handle," he said. "We're not built for that at this time. This is something. You've never seen the government come down so strong. It's not the media. You're looking at expert health officials."

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Northwestern Medicine Kish doctor: how to get tested for COVID-19 and why isolation matters - DeKalb Daily Chronicle

First Presumed Positive Case of COVID-19 Confirmed at UChicago Medicine – The Chicago Maroon

University of Chicago Medicine (UCM) has confirmed its first presumed positive case of the novel coronavirus, COVID-19. The patient is not affiliated with the University.

The University announced the case in an email to the University community from Kenneth Polonsky, Executive Vice President of the University for Biology and Medicine. Presumed positive means that theMedical Center is waiting on confirmation from the CDC.

A statement sent to The Maroon by Lorna Wong, the executive director of communications for UCM, said that the Medical Center is taking extensive precautions to keep the risk of infection low in the campus community.

Apatient from outside the University of Chicago has a presumed positive test for COVID-19 infection and is under care at the University of Chicago Medicine, with extensive precautions to maintain the communitys safety, Wong wrote. The Medical Center is awaiting confirmation from the CDC, which is expected in the coming days."

UCMhad previously admitted a patient suspected of having COVID-19on March 4. The patient, who was unaffiliated with the University, tested negative for the virus.

There are 46 confirmed cases of coronavirus in Illinois as of Friday, the Sun-Timesreported. Several city institutions have announced temporary closings, including the Field Museum and the Museum of Science and Industry.

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First Presumed Positive Case of COVID-19 Confirmed at UChicago Medicine - The Chicago Maroon

Elected officials promise functioning services from government – Medicine Hat News

By COLLIN GALLANT on March 14, 2020.

cgallant@medicinehatnews.com

The work of government will continue, southeast Albertas elected representatives stressed on Friday, as the legislative bodies considered suspending or altering proceedings to avoid transmitting of the coronavirus.

The House of Commons will not meet again until mid-April, and the Alberta Legislature suspended public visits on Thursday. The province is now evaluating whether to suspend the winter session that began in late February.

Three provincial and federal politicians that represent Medicine Hat said Friday they will sit as required, but understand measures that they limit risk.

The most important thing is Albertans take care of themselves and the Alberta government to help protect our communities, said Cypress-Medicine Hat MLA Drew Barnes.

He said ministry work and service delivery will continue.

School tours and other group visits to the legislature grounds are now suspended and the public gallery is closed, though proceedings will still be broadcast.

In terms of local operations, Barnes said his office will remain open, but interactions will be limited as much as possible, on advice from health professionals. Personal appearances will also be cancelled on advice from legislature officials.

Medicine Hat-Cardston-Warner MP Glen Motz said he will return to Medicine Hat this weekend. He said he is watching government actions and hopes to conduct business as normally as possible over the next five weeks.

Obviously its unusual, he said. You need to be prudent, but the public expects us to lead at this time.

But just because parliamentarians are away (from Ottawa) at this time, that doesnt mean public health officials and others wont be working hard.

If we get called back, well go back.

In Ottawa, MP duties involve not only sitting in the House for debate and votes, but interacting with staff, senior bureaucrats and industry leaders during committee work.

Motz said that when you add general travel schedules of all involved, and a large number of public visitors to parliament buildings, the potential risk is great.

This week Alberta Health Services issued an advisory to cancel all events that might attract 250 or more people.

City meetings in Medicine Hat will continue as scheduled, though under Alberta Health guidelines and advisories to limit physical contact and increase cleanliness.

On Friday, city officials stated that public attendance is generally low.

While there are fewer than 90 MLAs in the relatively spacious legislature, the daily program involves a large number of support staff and office workers and top administrators congregating.

The Alberta Electrical System Operator announced Friday it would ban in-person meetings between its staff and stakeholders, and instead reschedule them for telephone or internet conferencing in the interest of health.

There are a lot of things that can be accomplished over the phone and internet that couldnt be done 20 years ago, said Motz, who plans to keep his office open but follow health officials directions.

A constituency open house that was planned for next week in Raymond may be reconsidered, he said.

Brooks-Medicine Hat Michaela Glasgo said the province should be united in its response to pandemic.

As always, I am grateful to those who are on the front lines dealing with this issue and protecting our public health, she wrote.

Both Motz and Barnes said eyes are now on the federal governments response, not only to the health crisis, but also a quickly worsening economic outlook.

The goal should be to get as much money in to the pockets of residents as soon as possible, said Barnes.

Solidarity in Ottawa

A unanimous vote and many messages of support for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who is in isolation after his wife entered quarantine following a positive test.

As well on Friday, the union representing 120,000 federal workers announced it would suspend an ongoing strike vote among its members and would re-evaluate the situation on March 30.

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Unofficial list of event cancellations in the Hat – Medicine Hat News

By Medicine Hat News on March 14, 2020.

The Alberta government has asked that all gatherings of 250 people or more be suspended until further notice in an effort to slow the potential spread of COVID-19.

This recommendation affects numerous events in Medicine Hat area, including smaller events which organizers are employing extra caution for.

This list is current as of 5 p.m. on Friday, but please check with organizers of your particular event for further information.

Western Hockey League All games suspended until further notice, including at the Canalta Centre in Medicine Hat. Upcoming games included

Canalta Centre All WHL games until further notice. Fridays Brad Paisley concert, postponed, details on potential rescheduling to follow, Roseanne Barr (May 1), Baby Shark Live! (June 23)

Esplanade Canada Ballet Jorgens Anne of Green Gables the Ballet (Friday), refunds available

Medicine Hat College Journey Towards Healing and Reconciliation Conference (March 23-27) and regional science fair (March 21) have been postponed indefinitely

The Hat Grannies for Alberta Fabric, Yarn and More Sale on Saturday, has been postponed until further notice.

All Raising the Curtain events have been postponed.

Saturdays Polar Plunge in support of Special Olympics Alberta has been cancelled.

The annual Stars of the Festival concert during the Rotary Music Festival has been cancelled. A winner of Fridays Rose Bowl will be published in Mondays News.

The annual Cabane A Scure was slated to run March 21 at Crescent Heights High School. The event has been cancelled, with full refunds being offered on tickets.

The Pecha Kucha event planned for the upcoming Friday has been cancelled. Event staff will work with speakers to get them in at different events.

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Black box warning to be added to popular asthma/allergy medicine – KVUE.com

AUSTIN, Texas New warnings for a popular asthma and allergy drug after the FDA links the medicine to mental health issues.

The FDA issued a black box warning for Singulair,or the generic form called montelukast sodium, after studying the serious side effects for more than 12 years.

The FDA has received 14,485 reports from patients experience side effects. More than 10,000 of those are considered serious.

Many of those reports are occurring in young children and teenagers. The FDA said the warning is necessary because "we continue to receive reports of serious neuropsychiatric events with montelukast."

There continue to be reports of serious mental health side effects from people taking this medicine, including dozens of suicides.

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Most of the time doctors and pharmacists get these warnings, but it's important that parents know about them too. According to the FDA, this is what patients should know:

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Merck, the maker of Singulair, sent us a statement:

"At Merck, we are committed to working with regulators, including the US Food & Drug Administration (FDA), to label our products appropriately, enabling physicians to make informed decisions about the products they prescribe.

We remain confident in the efficacy and safety of SINGULAIR (montelukast sodium), a medicine that has been prescribed to tens of millions of indicated patients with asthma and allergic rhinitis since its approval more than 20 years ago. We will work with the FDA to update the labeling for SINGULAIR. Today Merck supplies only a small portion of the overall market.

If patients have questions regarding the use of montelukast they should consult their physician."

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Black box warning to be added to popular asthma/allergy medicine - KVUE.com

Dubious Old Pharmaceutical Posters That Will Make You Appreciate Modern Medicine – Observer

Promotional material for a dicey hemorrhoid cure. Found Image Holdings/Getty Images

As the coronavirus bears down on Americans, its become increasingly clear that the heath care systems we have in place and the infrastructures that tenuously hold society together are not, shall we say, quite completely equipped to handle the onslaught of whats to come. Coronavirus testing is inexplicably difficult to access and still exorbitantly expensive, people whove tested positive with the virus are still traveling, and the elderly have proven to be extremely vulnerable to the illness in and of itself, due to the severe respiratory aspects of the disease.

All of this is to say: if you can detect a particularly high-pitched note of anxiety in the world around you today, its not just you. With this in mind, Observer took a peek back through the archives to find some of the most absurd, far-fetched and downright strange medicine advertisements of years (and centuries) past.

Its one thing to be dealing with a pandemic with 21st century resources, and quite another to contemplate how something like the coronavirus might have gone down smack dab in the middle of the Roaring 20s. Everyone probably would have been so booze-addled back then, they wouldnt have even noticed particularly high fevers or severe coughing.

Advertisement for Bravais iron tonic used to cure paleness, consumption, poorness of blood, etc. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Man Sitting at Poker Table, Tarrants Seltzer Aperient, Trade Card, circa 1900. Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

Vintage illustration of an ad for placebo pills to be used in barbiturates-withdrawal therapy, 1950s. Found Image Press/Corbis via Getty Images

Victorian advertisement for Rubifoam liquid dentifrice. 1897. swim ink 2/Corbis via Getty Images

Ayers Cherry Pectoral Advertisement. Getty Images

Advertisment for Harris Flu-Nips, which features the phrase Keep Out the Damp. Buyenlarge/Getty Images

A Victorian trade card advertises Ayers Cathartic Pills, safe, pleasant, and reliable. Buyenlarge/Getty Images

This 1880 ad is maybe the creepiest thing weve ever seen. Transcendental Graphics/Getty Images

As you can see, old advertisements for medicine were essentially just advertisements for dressed-up snake oil. A particular favorite is the ad for Harris Flu Nips, which bears an eerily prescient slogan: Prevention is Better Than Cure. Thats something a company says when they definitely dont have the cure.

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Dubious Old Pharmaceutical Posters That Will Make You Appreciate Modern Medicine - Observer

Medicine taken by millions could increase the risk of catching coronavirus, scientists warn – The Sun

MEDICINE taken by millions of people could increase the risk of catching coronavirus, scientists have warned.

Certain blood pressure drugs have the potential to change the shape of a person's cells and make it easier for the bug to infect them.

The pills - called angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor drugs (ACE) and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARB)- are used to treat diabetes or high blood pressure.

Figures show the most common in England are Ramipril, Losartan, Lisinopril and Candesartan, and were prescribed almost 65 million times last year.

According to a paper published in the British medical journal The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, the new coronavirus - named Covid-19, can latch itself onto human cells and infect them.

This could cause more severe illness, according to the scientists from University Hospital Basel, in Switzerland, and the University of Thessaloniki in Greece.

However the researchers have cautioned that their findings don't prove a link between the drugs and severe cases of the disease, so further studies are needed.

And a doctor has strongly advised anyone on heart medications not to stop or change these without discussion with their doctor.

The article claims that Covid-19 can latch onto something inside the body's cells known as angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2).

Some people with high blood pressure or diabetes have to take medication to increase the amount of ACE2 in their cells to control their conditions.

The research was carried out by looking at other studies of coronavirus patients with severe forms of the illness.

They found that the most common illnesses were high blood pressure (23.7 per cent), diabetes (16.2 per cent) and heart disease (5.8 per cent).

The team then studied how Covid-19 and its nearest cousin, SARS, attach to cells inside the body.

They theorised that blood pressure drugs could make this process easier for these viruses.

Dr Roth's team also suggested thatpeople with diabetes and high blood pressure might be more at risk because of changes in their genes which make them produce more ACE2 naturally.

They wrote: "We suggest that patients with cardiac diseases, hypertension [high blood pressure], or diabetes, who are treated with ACE2-increasing drugs, are at higher risk for severe COVID-19 infection and, therefore, should be monitored."

Dr Michael Roth, from the University of Basel, who led the research, said:"These data suggest that ACE2 expression is increased in diabetes and treatment with ACE inhibitors and ARBs increases ACE2 expression.

We hypothesise that diabetes and high blood pressure treatment with ACE2-stimulating drugs increases the risk of developing severe and fatal Covid-19

"Consequently, the increased expression of ACE2 would facilitate infection with COVID-19.

"We therefore hypothesise that diabetes and hypertension [high blood pressure] treatment with ACE2-stimulating drugs increases the risk of developing severe and fatal Covid-19.

"If this hypothesis were to be confirmed, it could lead to a conflict regarding treatment."

But doctors have warned that the findings were not proof of a link between the drugs and patients should continue taking their medication.

He told MailOnline: "This letter does not report the results of a study; it simply raises a possible question about whether a type of blood pressure and heart disease medication called ACE inhibitors might increase the chances of severe Covid-19 infections.

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"I strongly advise anyone on heart medications not to stop or change these without discussion with their doctor."

He added that stopping medication and requiring hospital treatment could add further strain to the NHS.

Dr Dipender Gill, who works at Imperial College NHS Trust in London added: "Evidence is currently lacking and it is too early to make robust conclusions on any link between use of ACE inhibitors and angiotensin II type-I receptor blockers with risk or severity of novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection."

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Medicine taken by millions could increase the risk of catching coronavirus, scientists warn - The Sun

Drive-Through Coronavirus Tests For UW Medicine Workers : Shots – Health News – NPR

Nurse Jeff Gates prepares to assess another patient in UW Medicine's drive-through coronavirus testing clinic in Seattle. Jon Hamilton/NPR hide caption

Nurse Jeff Gates prepares to assess another patient in UW Medicine's drive-through coronavirus testing clinic in Seattle.

Employees of the University of Washington's UW Medicine system can now get tested for coronavirus without leaving their cars.

The system's medical center in northwest Seattle has turned a hospital garage lot into a drive-through clinic that can test a person every five minutes. They typically get results within a day or so.

But the idea involves more than convenience. It's also about safety.

"Because of the way this virus could be spread, we want to make sure there's good ventilation," says Dr. Seth Cohen, who runs the infectious disease clinic at UW Medical Center Northwest.

Coronavirus has already caused at least 17 deaths in the Seattle area and infected at least 83 people.

So staff have placed three medical tents on the first floor of the center's multilevel garage, which is not enclosed. Signs and orange cones funnel vehicles to the testing site.

On the clinic's first morning of operation, a cold breeze was blowing through the structure. Cohen described it as "excellent airflow that you can feel."

When workers first drive in, they're greeted by Jan Nakahara, a nurse who usually works at the University's Hall Health Center.

"I'm going to have you pull up," she tells the driver. "Don't get out of your car."

These three tents in a parking garage at UW Medical Center Northwest make up a drive-through coronavirus testing clinic for symptomatic employees. Jon Hamilton/NPR hide caption

These three tents in a parking garage at UW Medical Center Northwest make up a drive-through coronavirus testing clinic for symptomatic employees.

For now, the drive-through clinic is limited to health care workers in the university's health care system. And they need to have a fever, dry cough, or other symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.

"If they had symptoms, they would go and fill out a survey online," Nakahara says. "And then if the screeners thought it sounded like it was a possibility of coronavirus, then they were given an appointment today."

The next stop at the testing clinic is in front of the three white medical tents.

Jeff Gates, a nurse at the medical center, approaches each car. Like Nakahara, he's in full personal protective gear, including a clear plastic face mask.

"Hello, my name is Jeff," he tells the driver. "We're going to be doing your swabs today."

Gates prepares to take two swabs through the open window, one from each nostril.

"I'm going to have you lean your head back just a little bit, try not to move on me," Gates says and inserts the first swab. "Sorry, I know that's uncomfortable."

Gates takes the samples he's collected and seals them in plastic tubes. They'll be processed by a lab a few miles away.

"We're going to be testing for both influenza A and B, RSV, as well as COVID-19," Gates tells the driver. "We'll get results back as soon as possible."

"Thank you," he adds. "I hope you feel better soon."

Then it's time for Gates to put on fresh protective gear and get ready for the next arrival.

"It's been going great," he says. "Very smooth. We've had probably seven people come through this morning."

The traffic here is expected to increase dramatically in the next few days.

For now, the clinic will continue to focus on health care workers because they will be essential if the coronavirus continues to spread in the Seattle area.

"We want to make sure that if our staff test negative we get them back to work as soon as we can," Cohen says. "But if they test positive we want to keep them out of the workforce to make sure they're not going on to infect other staff or patients."

The medical center plans to extend in-car testing to first responders who may have been exposed.

The university also expects to work with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to provide coronavirus testing kits that patients can use at home.

Home testing would be "fantastic," Cohen says.

But home kits rely on swabs that don't go nearly as far into the nasal passages as the ones testing clinics use. So scientists still need to verify that the home kits won't miss any infections, Cohen says.

As results from wider testing come in, Cohen says, the information should help public health officials assess the current outbreak.

"It will definitely give us a clue as to whether COVID has other epicenters within Seattle, including other institutions," he says.

So far, the drive-through tests have found lots of flu and a few cases of coronavirus, Cohen says.

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Drive-Through Coronavirus Tests For UW Medicine Workers : Shots - Health News - NPR

Hat’s Villeneuve named to Alberta’s wheelchair basketball team – Medicine Hat News

By Medicine Hat News on March 14, 2020.

Sam Villeneuve may not wind up playing a game for them this season, but at least he can say hes on the provincial wheelchair basketball team.

The 20-year-old from Medicine Hat was named to the team after a training camp last month, making him the first player to graduate from the local adaptive sport team to the Alberta side.

The only games I played was three years ago when we went up to Lethbridge to play a game, then Lethbridges team came down to Medicine Hat, said Villeneuve earlier this month, long before the global pandemic threw every sports future off track. Ive never played on many teams.

It feels good. Yes (I was surprised).

Villeneuve has disabilities such that he speaks slowly and cant easily catch a basketball. But the second-year engineering student at the University of Alberta proved at the training camp his skill set is more than valuable. He said out of two dozen players who attended, only 10 made the team.

In wheelchair basketball, players are classified with a point value between 1.0 and 4.5 based on their level of disability. The lower the number, the greater the disability. A team can only have a total of 14 points worth of players on the court at one time.

Villeneuve says hes a 1.5.

Im able to roll but I cant catch really well, he said. The pass has to be direct, right at me.

It hasnt stopped him. He tried wheelchair rugby after moving north for school, but it took an hour and a half on the bus to get to the practices.

So he found the Northern Lights club team, which holds practices right at the university campus in Edmonton.

I called them, about two and a half months ago, they told me to come out to a practice.

The provincial team was to practice in Red Deer next weekend, but thats unsurprisingly cancelled. So, too is the junior western regionals that were planned for Kamloops April 24-26.

But Villeneuve can still look longer-term in the sport.

Team Alberta, Im not really sure, but if I keep playing and training I could one day go to the Paralympics, he said.

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Hat's Villeneuve named to Alberta's wheelchair basketball team - Medicine Hat News

Air Canada jets out of the Hat – Medicine Hat News

By GILLIAN SLADE on March 12, 2020.

gslade@medicinehatnews.com

Air Canadas flights in and out of Medicine Hat will stop indefinitely on April 1.

Jeff Huntus, Medicine Hat Regional Airport manager says Air Canada has been operating out of the local airport since before 1998 through various contracted carriers.

Its not good news but its the reality of the airline business, said Huntus. I think there were some problems with load factors. It wasnt a well performing route for them and with the coronavirus affecting air travel I think advance bookings just fell dramatically.

Air Canada did not respond to a request for an interview Wednesday.

In May 2019, Air Canada reduced the number of flights between Medicine Hat and Calgary from six a day in 18-seater aircraft to just two a day in larger aircraft with 50 seats, the Dash 8-300.

At the time a spokesperson for Air Canada said its regional flights would be operated exclusively by Jazz Aviation LP as part of our new agreement with Jazzs parent company Chorus and the former smaller aircraft were being phased out.

While not getting into specific numbers Huntus said there has been a noticeable drop in airport traffic since coronavirus. That is not unique to Medicine Hat and Huntus does not believe Air Canadas decision was made based solely on COVID-19.

They have challenges in a number of locations, said Huntus.

For now, WestJet is not making any changes to its schedule in Medicine Hat, a WestJet spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

WestJet has acknowledged the impact of COVID-19 on the airline industry and this week said it would be undertaking immediate cost reduction initiatives, including a freeze on discretionary spending and offering voluntary-leave options.

Last spring, Huntus said the larger aircraft that Air Canada was switching to is faster, reducing flights to Calgary by 10 or 15 minutes. He said any talk in the community about how often flights were cancelled had more to do with the number of people flying out of the airport. There were also the inevitable cancellations due to weather which is beyond the control of airlines.

Huntus had previously said he hoped that Air Canadas decision to switch to larger aircraft, in addition to WestJet flights, would give more options to passengers and could reduce fares.

Huntus acknowledges that competition is good for consumers, but notes Medicine Hat Regional Airport still has a very good air service to Calgary with WestJet.

In a press release, the Medicine Hat and District Chamber of Commerce also commented on WestJet continuing its service.

We hope that both business and leisure travellers will support this services so we can have continued air service from Medicine Hat in the future, said Chamber president Tracy Noulett.

Noulett noted businesses would like to see more options to accommodate daytime business travel, flights to Edmonton and lower fares.

Once the dust settles well ramp up our air service action program again and try and find new operators for the market, said Huntus. If the numbers are right, theres no reason they (Air Canada) wouldnt come back.

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Air Canada jets out of the Hat - Medicine Hat News

DCH, Family Medicine Clinics offer tips to stop spread of virus – theperrynews.com

The Dallas County Hospital and Family Medicine Clinics implemented a visitor-restriction policy Wednesday, and they have received many questions surrounding the COVID-19 precautions and protocol have been asked over the past 24 hours, according to a statement released Thursday.

The DCH has issued the following tips and guidelines to assist the community during this time.

How to prevent illness:

Clean your hands often with soap and water for 20 seconds. If soap is not available, use a hand sanitizer containing at least 60% alcohol. Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth with unwashed hands. Avoid close contact with people who are ill and distance yourself with other people in the community. This is important for people who are at a higher risk of getting sick. Stay home if youre sick, except to seek medical care. Cover coughs and sneezes If you ARE sick you should be wearing a face mask when you are around other people. Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces daily.

What to do if you are sick?

Stay home except to seek medical care and avoid public places or transportation. Call ahead before visiting your provider to make an appointment If you believe you may have contracted COVID-19, please notify your healthcare provider at the time of your call. This will help the healthcare team take the next steps to keep others from being potentially exposed. Call Dallas County Hospital and Family Medicine Clinics or your family provider with any questions on symptoms, travel, or more information on how to care for a person who is sick and has traveled.

For more information or updates on COVID-19, please visit the website of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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Here’s How the Married to Medicine Doctors Are Reacting to the Coronavirus Outbreak – Bravo

The Married to Medicine doctors and their significant others have been sharing their thoughts and how they are responding to COVID-19, more commonly known as coronavirus, on social media.

Amid concerns and uncertainty over the coronavirus outbreak, Dr. Heavenly Kimes' husband, Dr. Damon Kimes, provided some words of wisdom and comfort on his wife's Instagram.

Dr. Heavenly shared a video of her husband, who is an emergency medicine physician, giving some guidance on how to cope during this difficult time. "I really feel like this is an opportunity to slow down for a second and think about what's really important: our families, our loved ones. For those of us that are physicians, we're obviously thinking about our patients," Dr. Damon said. "This has sort of gripped our country with fear, anxiety, worry. I don't think we have to worry. I think we need to be vigilant. I think we need to do the things that would prevent us from getting illnesses in general, including coronavirus."

Dr. Damon also gave fans "a word of encouragement," sharing his belief that a treatment for coronavirus will be discovered eventually. "I think, in the meantime, we need to do things like, just simple things: Wash your hands. Stay away from crowds. This is probably not a time for travel," he said. "I think we need to try to stay home as much as we can and allow this disease process to run its course and go away, but we can help that."

He also said that he believes prayer can be "powerful." "We can pray about this, we can do the things that we probably should have been doing before, such as spending time with our families. I know even for me, I've been sometimes too busy and working and focusing on other things. But what this has done for me is allow me a chance to just stop and think, think about what's really important," he shared. "If there's somebody out there that you love, tell them you love them, tell them they're important. Not being able to go and do everything that you want to do makes you realize just how important all of that is."

Dr. Damon ended the video by sharing that everyone should be extra vigilant about their health during this time especially those who are over the age of 60 and those already living with medical conditions.

Mariah Huq, whose husband, Dr. Aydin Huq, is an ER doctor, revealed on Instagram that she has asked him to take off his worn scrubs and place them in a hamper in the back of the car before entering the house. "When you're#MarriedtoMedicinein REAL life during an outbreak and your spouse works Frontline in the Emergency Room you have to create Quarantine zones to protect your kids!#NoScrubsin the house!" Mariah captioned a photo of herself showing off the trunk of her car while wearing a face mask. "Sending prayers to all Healthcare workers during this mess! Stay Well."

Dr. Contessa Metcalfe also recently shared a video on Instagram in which she and her husband, Dr. Scott Metcalfe, disagreed on how one should go about their lives amid the coronavirus outbreak.

The World Health Organization (WHO)recommends washing your hands frequently, practicing social distancing, avoiding touching your eyes, mouth, and nose, practicing respiratory hygiene, seeking medical care early if you have a fever, cough, and difficulty breathing, and staying informed and following advice given by your healthcare provider.

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Here's How the Married to Medicine Doctors Are Reacting to the Coronavirus Outbreak - Bravo

City Notebook: Difficult to avoid people when we need each other – Medicine Hat News

By COLLIN GALLANT on March 14, 2020.

cgallant@medicinehatnews.com

Were all in this together, but also alone. Its an interesting concept and, while maybe not the most immediate concern of a health scare thats gripping local communities in our hyper-connected world, the social aspects of stemming the spread of the coronavirus are undeniable.

Avoid handshakes, limit visits and unnecessary travel.

Self-isolate for 14 days is recommended. If its possible, working remotely at home could slow the spread and help the health system avoid what could be an overwhelming wave of cases.

The course of action has major implications for businesses and society in general, but also in how we interact with each other.

If it continues for any great length, its easy to see the measures as isolating, if not alienating.

A crisis like a flood involves a call to physical action. This could easily be misconstrued as a call to do nothing.

And how are we to bolster community spirit when there is little opportunity for that community to gather. Can we come together when the key is maintaining a separation?

The head of the City of Calgarys emergency management department Tom Sampson provided food for thought on Friday.

Were using the wrong terminology, he said in a social media post. Were talking about social distance when really this is a time when we need to be as close to our friends, our families as we possibly can be.

So, lets use physical distance, meaning stay close with your friends, but not physically close.

In a busy world, weve already lost much opportunity to gather and interact. We lament life that has become for many a treadmill of driving to and from work, shopping and home.

As the world has gotten smaller, through technology and travel, so too it seems have our close social spheres.

The online universe has brought shopping, new movies and even fast food to our homes at relatively little effort.

The current course of action could easily reinforce it.

But perhaps well arrive at the other side of this knowing the full value of a handshake, a pat on the back, a kiss on the cheek of an elderly relative, an elbow in the ribs after a wise crack.

Perhaps well rediscover the art of conversation, how to make our own fun, how to be productive, self-disciplined, and how to support those around us.

Perhaps. I hope so.

Hotel

Encouraging news broken by the News this week is that the final design of the Iron River hotel project is now before city planners ahead of a final council decision

The developer headed by downtown rejuvenation booster Aaron Burghardt says theres still a lot of work to work to do, but plans are progressing

The design is by FWBA Architects, whose stylish Second Street office was a Burghardt project. Another feather in the cap of the firm is that theyre also working of the new public works building for the County of Forty Mile in Foremost.

A look ahead

The Intermunicipal Collaboration framework hammered out by Medicine Hat, Redcliff, and Cypress County will be unveiled at the citys council meeting on Monday. Another key matter is a final vote on the Tri-Area Intermunicipal Development plan that all three parties must pass, respectively.

100 years ago

A proposal to build rail service between Medicine Hat and Leader, Sask., was unveiled by Canadian Pacific officials, the News reported this week in 1920.

It was stated the 80-mile line could go ahead while the proposed Hat-to-Hanna line of the Canadian Northern Railway system was in doubt.

A forum calling for proportional representation and an end to the first-past-the-post electoral system would be held in Medicine Hat.

Following the opening of new Centre Block of Parliament buildings in February, built after a devastating fire four years earlier, the total construction cost was revealed to be $6.95 million.

Jas. Armstrong, the incumbent reeve of the M.D. of Excelsior was defeated in a by-election, officials in Dunmore reported. Three successful council candidates were Jas. Frinch, of Gros Ventre, Ole Jensen, of Roseberg, and J. Sallows, of Coleridge.

New federal Liberal Leader W.L. MacKenzie Kings call for an early election was defeated by Union government members.

A date for a gopher-killing day would be set by the newly formed local branch of the United Farmers of Alberta.

Collin Gallant covers city politics and a variety of topics for the News. Reach him at 403-528-5664 or via email at cgallant@medicinehatnews.com

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Fort Collins medical group: Call before visiting clinics if you have respiratory symptoms – Coloradoan

After touring the Colorado State University Infectious Disease Research Lab, Sen. Michael Bennet estimates coronavirus vaccine is 18 months out Fort Collins Coloradoan

Associates in Family Medicine is asking all patients with respiratory symptoms or fevers of unknown origin to stay away from its clinics to prevent the spread of the new coronavirus.

Instead, they should call ahead to their doctor's office.

Joseph Prows, a doctor on the Northern Colorado medical group's COVID-19 response team, told the Coloradoanthe company is operating under the assumption that "anyone who is sick (with respiratory illness), until proven otherwise (not to be COVID-19), needs to isolate" due to providers' limited ability to test for the disease as well as vulnerability of high-risk patients.

Larimer County's first presumptive positive case of coronavirus was confirmed Monday a woman in her 50s who has been diagnosed with pneumonia, one of the more serious complications of the disease.

This content is being provided for free as a public service to our readers during the coronavirus outbreak.Please support local journalism by subscribing to the Coloradoan.

Larimer County Department of Health and Environment spokesperson Katie O'Donnell told the Coloradoan that county health officials do not expect a dramatic uptick in cases.

"Our (coronavirus) risk is really, really low here," she said. "It's cold and flu season, so we're seeing a lot ofnot COVID-19 coronavirus just colds and flu."

O'Donnell echoed Prows' advice to stay home if you're sick to prevent spreading any respiratory illnesses not just COVID-19.

"If you're symptomatic at all, you shouldn't be out and about," she said.

The health department is not handling tests for the new coronavirus, she added. All tests are sent directly to the state, which currently has the capacity to run 160 tests per day. Test results can take up to 48 hours.

Prows hopes offices like his will be able to test for the virus in coming weeks, and Associates in Family Medicine's response will evolve "day by day," he said.

Associates in Family Medicine operates nine medical offices with more than 50 providers in Fort Collins, Loveland and Windsor.

Signs will be posted at all Associates in Family Medicine offices reminding patients with those symptoms not to enter the office and directing them to call ahead.The company is working to set up a dedicated phone line for those calls, Prows said. Until that is established, patients should call their regular doctor's office phone number before coming in.

The company is also rolling out the ability to do telemedicine visits by phone or by video conferencing as early as Tuesday, Prows said.

"We must slow this down," he said. "We have finite resources."

Insurance and coronavirus: Governor instructs Colorado insurance companies to waive fees for coronavirus testing

Symptoms of COVID-19 can range from mild to severe; the virus can also be asymptomatic, meaningsome people don't have any symptoms at all.

Themost common symptomsmirror the fluand include fever,tiredness and dry cough. Some people also develop aches and pains, nasal congestion, runny nose, sore throat or diarrhea.

About 1 in 6 people becomes seriously ill and develops difficulty breathing, according to the World Health Organization.If you experience fever, cough and shortness of breath,call yourdoctor.

If you'vetraveled from an area with local spread of COVID-19in the last twoweeks, and have not been in contact with Larimer County Department of Health and Environment, notify the department by calling970-498-6775 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

During other hours, leave a message (including your contact information) at970-498-6792or complete the department's online form, which is available at http://www.larimer.org/health/communicable-disease/coronavirus-covid-19.

More: Map: Where in Colorado has coronavirus been detected?

Sarah Kyle is a content coach at the Coloradoan. Contact her at sarahkyle@coloradoan.com.Support her work and that of other Coloradoan journalists by purchasing a digital subscription today.

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Health care at brink of collapse in Idlib as hospitals lack medicine to save lives as coronavirus fears loom large, warns Islamic Relief – Syrian Arab…

Hospitals in Idlib are overwhelmed, under-resourced and lacking in essential life-saving equipment and medicines to treat even basic illnesses such as flu and diarrhoea, warns Islamic Relief as the crisis in Syria enters its tenth year.

The conditions are so awful that aid workers from Islamic Relief fear that mass homelessness, chronic illnesses such as heart disease and diabetes as well as infections such as pneumonia combined with conflict related trauma injuries will bring the health system to its knees.

To make matters worse, fears are growing that the shattered health system would not be able to cope with a possible outbreak of the coronavirus and that hundreds of thousands of displaced people would be especially vulnerable to the disease.

Ahmed Mahmoud* Islamic Reliefs Syria Country Director, said: The situation in Idlib is dire, people are exhausted, hungry and afraid. The health system has been shattered by the violence and mass displacement and it is already struggling to cope. Were very concerned that if the coronavirus reaches Idlib this humanitarian catastrophe will only get worse.

There are already mass shortages of beds, ventilators, medicine and proper equipment. Peoples immune systems have been systematically worn down by the violence and years of malnutrition and poverty. With so many people crowded into squalid and unhygienic camps the conditions are rife for an outbreak that we simply do not have the resources to handle.

Eyewitness accounts from Islamic Relief aid workers, and supported doctors and nurses in Idlib paint a grim picture of the humanitarian suffering following intense and indiscriminate fighting that began in early December. Since then up to 1 million people have fled their homes, tens of thousands more endure miserable conditions out in the open and at least 500 civilians have been killed.

While the ceasefire in hostilities announced by Turkey and Russia in early March has brought a short-term reprieve for the millions of civilians caught in the Idlib conflict, Islamic Relief fears it wont ease the humanitarian situation for the people on the ground hundreds of thousands of whom are unable to return and are now trapped in a tiny parcel of land close to the Turkey border.

Islamic Relief has been told by its staff and partner agencies on the ground:

In one harrowing case, Mohammad, a male nurse working at an Islamic Relief hospital in Idlib said he was unaware that he was treating his own dying brother due to his injuries.

The ugliest thing I have ever experienced, is when a badly-injured patient came in and because of the airstrike his face was covered in dust and smoke. Only when I started providing first aid, did I realise it was my brother. I tried to remain calm and be professional to help him but shortly after he died. I was numb I didnt know what to do, where to go, he said in a video testimony filmed by Islamic Relief.

Then a woman started screaming for Gods sake please help us and I told myself I will have to mourn my brother later.

Ahmed Mahmoud,* Islamic Reliefs Syria Country Director said: The civilian population in Idlib as well as medical and aid workers have been systematically terrorised and have found themselves pummelled constantly since December.

The recent ceasefire cannot reverse the critical damage done over the last nine years it just risks sweeping the crisis under the carpet and allowing people to forget about Syria once again, even though the needs are huge and growing.

Were seeing women and children waiting outside in the cold outside hospitals as people struggle to cope. In some places patient numbers have tripled in a month. The system has been brought to the very brink of collapse.

Dr Ishan, a cardiologist working at a major hospital in Idlib supported by Islamic Relief, said that the recent attacks have made many people too scared to access medical care.

The hospital has been attacked several times. Earlier this month, several bombs exploded about 30 metres from the hospital, which broke the windows and doors. I believe the hospital was targeted as the bombs exploded so close to the hospital and in quick succession. Some patients with acute coronary syndrome were too scared to come to hospitals as they are being targeted.

Islamic Relief is one of the biggest providers of medical assistance in Idlib, offering support to 80 health facilities, paying the salaries of more than 150 medical staff and operating four Emergency Mobile Health Units, a fleet of trucks that have been converted to surgical operating rooms that are in high demand whenever bombs start to fly.

But the support is simply not enough, and Dr Ishan warns that more people will die needlessly unless the situation changes. We get lots of heads injuries, but we dont have a CT scan or a neurological surgeon. As a cardiologist its hard as a lot of the cardiovascular equipment that I need is not available. We urgently need more assistance the system is under unimaginable strain.

Even infections such as pneumonia, flu and diarrhoea deadly for the very young and old where living conditions are dire often go untreated because of a lack of essential medicine.

Recently a father came in with his young daughter who was suffering from hypothermia, but it was too late to save her, and she died. Living out in cold camps is killing people. I cant even begin to describe how I felt when the girl died, said Dr Ishan.

Mahmoud said: In nine years, weve never seen this many displaced in so little time and the consequences of this are going to be felt for years to come. Families are now living in a rocky mountain area and ramshackle camps that are not fit for people. They are attaching plastic sheets to two rocks for shelter. Some are still sleeping in the open. They have nowhere to return to. Theyre exhausted, scared and hungry and feel the world has abandoned them.

There are so many illnesses that could have been avoided but people cant afford food, let alone antibiotics. Our staff are seeing a big increase in the number of patients with diabetes who have had their limbs amputated. They dont feel their wounds and they heal a lot slower or get infected and then have to be amputated.

The makeshift camps are filled with a truly alarming number of widows and children. They are grieving and emotionally exhausted by everything thats happened. People are telling us on a daily basis that they cannot take any more that all that is left is to wait for death.

While Islamic Relief has long tried to provide mental health and psychosocial support, the devastation has forced operations to shift to provision of basic supplies such as food, water and shelter. In the current wave of displacement we have provided food to more than 220,000 people and tents and blankets, mattresses and plastic sheets to more than 10,000 people, but much more needs to be done. Last year, we reached more than two million people in the north-west although our teams forecast the needs will be even larger in 2020.

Once dignified people, theyre fleeing for their lives, elderly men describe having to crawling on their hands and knees in the mud to make it to safety and leaving all they have ever known behind in fear. This is not living this is a mass stay of execution for millions of people.

What the people of Idlib need most is a permanent and enduring end to the war as well as access to sustained humanitarian assistance including food, water, shelter, medical care and education for the children.

Islamic Relief is calling on the international community to:

ENDS

Islamic Relief has worked in Syria since the onset of the crisis and in 2019 was a lifeline for over 2.3 million vulnerable people in the country. Spending more than 30 million on humanitarian programming in the country, our assistance includes:

Video footage and photos are available at the following links.

Syria Material 1: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17324&k=eb1fddfd6aPassword: syria1interviews

Syria Material 2: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17327&k=e7681b2ea2Password: syria2footage

Syria Material 3: https://www.irdigital.org/?c=17326&k=712f22d76cPassword: syria3photos

For more information and interviews inside Syria, please contact:

Louise Orton, louise.orton@islamic-relief.org.uk or call +44 7939 141 764

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Islamophobia, Trevor Phillips, and free speech – The Guardian

If Trevor Phillips is guilty of anything, its sophistry (Labour Islamophobia row: Warsi accuses Phillips of flawed view of race and racism, 10 March). He claims hes only acknowledging difference in his statements on Muslims, reported statements such as Muslims are not like us and are becoming a nation within a nation. But the content of said comments clearly betrays the attitude of someone using difference to discriminate unfavourably against one particular group, based on assumptions and generalisations.

To hide behind the idea of free speech compounds the error. Its no surprise to see hes comfortable doing interviews with Toby Young to promote the so-called Free Speech Union. Young is another public figure who seeks to defend his right to say anything free from consequence, as a matter of personal liberty. Surely Mr Phillips would agree that words have power you need to choose them carefully. To misunderstand that is to misunderstand the true nature of freedom. Colin Montgomery Edinburgh

The point Trevor Phillips has been making for the last full decade is that communities of race and of faith are two different sorts of identities, properly generating two different kinds of moral and legal rights and obligations, which are not simply to be collapsed into each other. This claim is dangerous, unsettling, and offensive for many who are rightly worried about very real discrimination, and in eliding race and faith thought they had the best way to address it. None of this establishes, however, that Phillips argument is wrong.

Stigmatising Phillips work through selective quotation and a collective tut-tut is a gift to fascists. It is not a step towards freedom from discrimination. It just moves us further towards explosive silence, towards camps defined by what you are allowed to say within them. You cannot win against fascism by suppressing reasoned disagreement within liberal thought.

Trevor Phillips is not Enoch Powell. He does not speak in order to win power over a racist mob. And if he fears for diverse unintended consequences of eliding race and faith, his view, while unsettling, is not without argument. People could address those arguments and perhaps think about them, rather than pointing to their evident dangers.David RobjantCople, Bedfordshire

Trevor Phillips and the Conservative party are under the spotlight because of alleged discrimination. One definition of discrimination is that it is recognition and understanding of the differences between one thing and another, such as between right and wrong, left and right, different social groups or between one religious faith and others. Rather than criticising individuals or groups for being able to distinguish the differences between one thing and another, society should applaud those who are intelligent enough to be able to discriminate between things, so society can take necessary action to address issues.

One failing of pluralism is the inability to accept irreconcilable differences between social groups or ideologies, and the fact that one may be right and the other wrong, rather than demonising those individuals or groups who are able to distinguish and discriminate as required.Jonathan LongstaffBuxted, East Sussex

The implication of Trevor Phillips comments is that the separation of some Muslim communities is the fault of those communities.

I was a sixth-form student in Accrington in 1969-71 and I joined the Labour party. I was shocked to hear the discussions of housing and the incoming populations from Pakistan and India. It was clearly the view that to house these incomers in predominantly white communities would cause problems and tensions, possibly violence. Rather than challenge the racism (in my experience, not nearly as widespread as many people claimed), many politicians, Tory and sadly numbers of Labour councillors organised housing segregation to avoid conflict. In reality they simply created separation and conflict as the children of the incomers grew up and were confronted by marginalisation and discrimination, often including police harassment.

You cant fight racism by conceding to it. Instead of demanding change from our Muslim neighbours, Trevor Phillips should condemn racism of all kinds and particularly the demonisation of Muslims. He should take a leaf out of Jeremy Corbyns book and call for support for the protest against racism on 21 March.Pete WeardenBournemouth, Dorset

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Rising Up With Sonali Is Sanders The President We Need In a Covid-19 World? – Free Speech TV

In the face of the Coronavirus/Covid-19 pandemic, the USs extreme wealth inequality, lack of nationalized health care system, lack of a federal paid sick leave law, and other related issues have shown the nations severe vulnerability.

In a New York Times article, Farhad Manjoo wrote, Everyones a socialist in a pandemic. But the laugh catches in your throat because the only joke here is the sick one American society plays on workers every day.

In this dangerous new world, we just happen to be in the middle of a critical primary election where one of the two front runners is a self-described democratic socialist who has been touting Medicare-for-All as the central plank of his domestic policy.

Sonali Kolhatkar asks Richard Wolff professor of economics emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst Is Bernie Sanders the President we need in a pandemic like this?

Wolff is an author of a number of books including Democracy at Work: A Cure for Capitalism, Occupy the Economy: Challenging Capitalism, Imagine: Living in a Socialist USA, and Capitalisms Crisis Deepens: Essays on the Global Economic Meltdown.

His latest book is called Understanding Marxism.

Bernie Sanders Coronavirus COVID-19 Free Speech TV Richard Wolff Rising Up with Sonali Sonali Kolhatkar United States

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Liberals and conservatives have been getting it wrong about free speech on college campuses – GOOD

When it comes to understanding disputes over free expression on college campuses, such as speakers getting disinvited or having their speeches interrupted, conservatives tend to blame liberal professors for indoctrinating students and ostracizing those who don't agree with liberal viewpoints.

One prominent conservative organization, Turning Point USA, has gone so far as to create a database of faculty it says "discriminate against conservative students and advance leftist propaganda in the classroom."

Liberals, in contrast, argue that concerns about free speech on college campuses are overblown. They also accuse conservatives of co-opting the language of free speech proponents in an effort to falsely position themselves as victims.

Our research indicates that each of these narratives is flawed. We are researchers who study political behavior, as well as strategies for business.

via Gettysburg College / Flickr

For the past year, we have been studying free expression issues at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a campus that has had a number of flare-ups related to free expression in recent years. We wanted to look beyond single episodes and better understand the typical student's experience concerning free expression.

We found that students who identify with the political right do indeed face fears of being ostracized that students who identify with the left do not. However, we also found signs that right-leaning students worry at least as much about reactions from peers as from faculty.

Much of this plays out silently in classrooms at Chapel Hill and we believe at other colleges and universities throughout the nation.

It's not about professors

For our research, we sent surveys to all 20,343 students the entire undergraduate population at Chapel Hill. Two-thousand of these students (randomly selected) were offered a $10 incentive to participate in the survey. This feature helped ensure we heard from a representative cross section of students.

We received 1,087 complete responses. About half of those respondents were those who got $10 for their participation.

For each student who responded, we randomly chose one class from their schedule and asked for that particular class how many times during the semester they kept a sincere opinion related to class to themselves because they were worried about the consequences of expressing it.

We found a large liberal/conservative divide 23% of self-identified liberals said they censored themselves at least once, while 68% of self-identified conservatives did so.

You might presume that behavior by instructors is to blame for this stark difference. But the evidence we gathered does not seem to support this view.

We asked students whether their course instructor "encouraged participation from liberals and conservatives alike." Only 2% of liberal students and 11% of conservatives disagreed that the instructor did so. Similarly, only 6% of liberals and 14% of conservatives disagreed that the same instructor "was interested in learning from people with opinions that differed from the instructor's own opinions."

These are low numbers and the splits are small. They are simply not what one would expect if the narrative that liberal instructors try to indoctrinate their students were broadly true.

Fears about peers

In contrast, students reported substantially more anxiety about how their own peers would respond to expressing sincere political views and the divides between liberal and conservative students are larger. Seventy-five percent of conservative students said they were concerned that other students would have a lower opinion of them if they expressed their sincere political views in class.

But only 26% of liberal students had this concern. Forty-three percent of conservative students were concerned about a negative post on social media. Only 10% of liberal students had this concern.

Pressures that disproportionately affect right-leaning students were evident outside the classroom as well. We asked how often students hear "disrespectful, inappropriate, or offensive comments" about 12 social groups on campus. Students even those who identify as liberal acknowledged hearing such comments directed at political conservatives far more often than at any other group.

We also examined whether liberal or conservative students might be more inclined to employ obstructionist tactics, such as blocking the entrance to a public event that featured a speaker with whom they disagree. To do this in an evenhanded way, we presented students with a list of ten political opinions. Then we asked them to choose the opinion that they find most objectionable.

We chose a slate of opinions that really exist at UNC, such as ones concerning affirmative action, LGBT rights, and Silent Sam a Confederate monument that is subject of a long-running campus controversy

After students chose which opinion they found most objectionable, we asked whether it would be appropriate to take various actions toward people who hold that view. Nearly 20% of liberal respondents indicated it would be appropriate to prevent other students from hearing a campus speaker express the disliked view.

But just 3% or less of moderate and conservative respondents indicated that doing so was appropriate.

In order to better understand the typical experience of a university student, we believe it's important to go beyond singular dramatic confrontations.

The deeper story about free expression on campus, as our study shows, is not just about the shouting that takes place during high-profile incidents on campus. It's also about what students say and feel compelled to keep to themselves in lecture halls and classrooms throughout the school year.

Timothy Ryan is an associate professor of political science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Mark McNeilly is a professor of the practice of marketing at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. This was first published on The Conversation "What liberals and conservatives get wrong about free expression on college campuses"

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Lack of Paid Sick Leave Makes It Difficult for Many Workers to Comply with CDC Advice to Stay Home – Free Speech TV

As the number of coronavirus cases in the United States passes 1,300 cases with 38 deaths, more than 30 million workers lack access to paid sick leave.

President Trump addressed the nation Wednesday night, saying he will expand sick leave as part of emergency response to the virus.

But the same day, Republican senators blocked an attempt by Senate Democrats to quickly pass legislation requiring employers to grant paid sick leave.

Meanwhile, Democrats in the House of Representatives will debate a package of bills Thursday to give workers 14 days of paid sick leave and up to three months of paid family and medical leave.

Labor Department data says that one in four workers have no access to paid sick leave, including two-thirds of lowest earners.

The U.S. is one of the only wealthy countries that does not require employers to offer its workers paid sick leave.

Democracy Now! speaks with Elise Gould, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute;

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union; and economist Robert Pollin, co-director of the Political Economy Research Institute at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Democracy Now! produces a daily, global, independent news hour hosted by award-winning journalists Amy Goodman and Juan Gonzlez.

Our reporting includes breaking daily news headlines and in-depth interviews with people on the front lines of the worlds most pressing issues.

On DN!, youll hear a diversity of voices speaking for themselves, providing a unique and sometimes provocative perspective on global events.

Missed an episode? Check out DN on FSTV VOD anytime or visit the show page for the latest clips.

#FreeSpeechTV is one of the last standing national, independent news networks committed to advancing progressive social change.

#FSTV is available on Dish, DirectTV, AppleTV, Roku, Sling and online at freespeech.org.

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The Thom Hartmann Program Why It’s Reasonable To Fear Coronavirus Why It’s Reasonable To Fear Coronavirus – Free Speech TV

This isn't hysteria, fearing what the coronavirus can do, is perfectly reasonable, find out why here.

The Thom Hartmann Program covers diverse topics including immigration reform, government intrusion, privacy, foreign policy, and domestic issues. More people listen to or watch the TH program than any other progressive talk show in the world! Join them.

The Thom Hartmann Program is on Free Speech TV every weekday from 12-3 pm EST.

Missed an episode? Check out TH on FSTV VOD anytime or visit the show page for the latest clips.

#FreeSpeechTV is one of the last standing national, independent news networks committed to advancing progressive social change.

#FSTV is available on Dish, DirectTV, AppleTV, Roku, Sling and online at freespeech.org

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