DAOutfitters208
WKR
I work one week in the office, one week at home, I work for a city government so we are doing that to limit the amount of people in the office. I don't like it much, but government tends to be way to cautious.
The number of patients at the hospitals in Kansas I work at have declined overall, there is a calm before the storm feeling. We are reducing hours but still getting paid as if we were working full time. I will admit its kind of nice not having the frequent fliers coming in all hours of the day and night to our ER's. My wife is working from home, she works in banking and finance.
I work on Long Island, we’ve been hit hard here. All our beds are full. One hospital I work at increased its beds from 90->188, all full. All the ventilators are being used. I’ve been doing a lot of tracheostomy’s. All my elective surgeries have been cancelled, emergencies only. Most of my neighbors have had it. I have to reuse my protective gear because there’s not enough to go around. We’re turning away people from the hospital even if they can barely breath, because there are people who can’t coming in everyday. And if you recover, we don’t really know if there will be any long term consequences for your lungs!
Coming from someone who sees what this pandemic really is, I would not take it lightly if god forbid it comes to your town. It’s worse than the media portrays it to be. They can’t see what’s really happening, only what an administrator tells them.
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I work as a captain of a charter boat out of sf, we are completely shutdown I definitly. Usually we would have run a dozen trips or so by this time every year and things would really be cranking up about now when the live bait becomes available. Not sure what is going to happen with this all but I’m not picturing people wanting to crowd on to boats to go fishing any time in the future let alone other things we do like bay cruises and tours which are a huge part of our income
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