26 April 2020 – Sunday – #42

A few milestones. The world is approaching three million confirmed cases of Covid-19 and has passed 200,000 deaths.

In better news, Nicole got to take her four year old daughter outside for the first time since the Spanish lockdown started in mid-March. She sent me a photo to prove it!

26 April 2020, the first day children allowed outside in Spain.

As many parts of the world move toward a relaxation of Covid-19 lockdowns, I want to do a whirlwind tour today of what’s happening in Covid-19 science and technology.

First, it’s important to note that, while doctors and scientists understand a lot about how the Covid-19 virus enters the body, they are still figuring out what happens after. Nearly six months into the pandemic and the news this week is that even in a mild or unnoticed case of Covid-19, some patients develop blood clots that result in strokes. Covid-19 devastation is so varied that we’re bound to find out new problems over the next few months.

The most severe cases appear to result form Covid-19 triggered cytokine storms that damage tissue and organs all over the body. Here’s list of documented problem areas so far:

  • Lungs
  • Heart and blood vessels
  • Kidney
  • Liver
  • Intestines
  • Brain
  • Eyes

So, once a Covid-19 infection starts, its open season on vital parts of the human body. Medical response to severe cases often takes a multidisciplinary team because of the range of organs attacked.

There are two basic ways forward on the science and technology front. One is using testing and tracking to attenuate transmission, the other is a therapy to resolve or prevent infection. Most of today’s entry is about testing and tracking because that’s the phase we’re heading towards in the next month or so.

On the testing front, many countries are far, far behind on their Covid-19 testing programs. I don’t know how many tests are needed, but the range is somewhere between 5 per 1,000 people per day (the rate that turned around the Covid-19 outbreak in South Korea) and 70 per 1,000 people per day (the rate Paul Romer estimates will contain Covid-19 without any restrictions). To make the world safe, the entire planet needs to test at these rates. The US is currently performing 300k tests per day, or not quite 1 per 1,000 per day.

At a basic level, we still don’t have great data on infection rates in the US and other countries. The recent ballyhooed studies in Santa Clara County and Southern California that reported higher than expected infection rates have not done well going through peer review. In San Francisco, USCF is teaming up with local neighborhood organizations to test the entire Mission district. Until there are higher levels of testing, these studies are the only way to understand infection rates, and they’re hard to do correctly.

Infections rates help with forecasting, but they also indicate whether a population has achieved herd immunity. With most infections, when 60% of the population achieves immunity either by infection or preferably by vaccination, infectious outbreaks end. With Covid-19, the science isn’t clear yet how long immunity lasts after exposure and whether 60% immunity will protect the herd. Better infection rate data will help understand that.

I reported before about efforts to increase Covid-19 RNA testing by eliminating the need for reagents to extract viral RNA. Paul Buchheit, the guy responsible for your Gmail, has proposed a ubiquitous daily testing scheme using kiosks equipped with Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) scanners for Covid-19 testing. I kind of understand SPR, but let’s just say that we know SPR has been used for at least 10 years to detect viruses.

In theory, a Covid-19 SPR scanner takes a small saliva sample and spits out a Covid-19 test result on the spot in ten minutes. Buchheit’s goal is to deploy millions of SPR testing stations around the US by the end of 2020.

“We’re planning to start operating the first scanner within a month. It’s a fully automated system, similar to a kiosk or turnstile. If all goes well, there will be millions of scanners deployed by this fall, ensuring that every school and essential business can reopen while remaining safe and virus-free.”

Paul Buchheit

I love this idea and I hope Buchheit pulls it off. As with other Covid-19 advances like treatments and vaccines, though, it’s one thing to find a solution, it’s quite another to deploy it at scale, especially in the absence of a US federal government or world body that can coordinate the effort.

As tests generate heaps of data, the data themselves become an asset in attenuating Covid-19. Big data provides opportunities not available five years ago. As I wrote about earlier, CMU and UMass Amherst are training machine models on search queries and other data to forecast Covid-19.

But there are also straightforward applications of testing data today. The bioinformatics company Hc1 is aggregating Covid-19 lab data to provide near real time dashboards of testing results at higher resolution than public health reporting. This gives government and private planners county level resolution of Covid-19 outbreaks.

“As the antibody tests come online we’ll be able to see who might have had the infection but was never symptomatic, for example, or who might have immunity. So we’re certainly taking the long game and building a road map to inform not only the surge and the apex of this but also how do we start looking at the recovery and what happens with respect to outcomes.”

David Dexter, CEO, Sonora Quest Laboratories on Hc1 lab test aggregation service

The Israeli company Medial EarlySign is revamping its influenza forecasting service to work with Covid-19 data. Medial will help healthcare systems organize resources to respond over the course of the pandemic.

“We think we can do a pretty good job scanning the entire population of a health system and bringing to their attention which [COVID-19] patients are most likely to die, be hospitalized, need a ventilator, etc.”

Jeremy Orr. CEO, Medial EarlySign

China, Germany, Vietnam, Taiwan, and South Korea have demonstrated that testing is key to controlling Covid-19 outbreaks. Testing is ramping up quickly elsewhere and may attenuate Covid-19 as early as this year. Aggregation of testing data will deliver more miles per test, as it were, reducing the frequency of testing needed to control Covid-19.

In the longer term, we want a treatment or a cure. Derek Lowe provides a nice summary of the three main thrusts of Covid-19 therapy development, existing drugs, monoclonal antibodies, and vaccines. Repurposing existing drugs is the quickest path to a treatment because it avoids a series of trials and because manufacturing is already understood. Repurposed drugs are unlikely to provide a cure, but they are the best bet for a treatment in the next six to twelve months.

“Don’t expect cures – the odds of something working that well when it was developed for some other use entirely are extremely small. Wandering through the shelves of the auto-parts store and throwing things out into the parking lot at random is unlikely to fix your broken lawnmower, for similar reasons. If you’re very lucky, you might find something that can be jammed on with a hammer and aligned with duct tape, and that’s pretty much what drug repurposing is like even at its best.”

Derek Lowe on drug repurposing

As Trump’s hydroxychloroquine con illustrates, it takes time to perform studies needed to know a drug or vaccine works. As much as a pitch man like Trump wants us to believe otherwise, there’s no way around that.

On the vaccine front, Johnson and Johnson has announced plans to deliver a Covid-19 vaccine in the first quarter of 2021. The quickest previous vaccine development took five years, so Johnson and Johnson needs everything to go right to hit its aggressive one year target. I hope J&J gets there, but there’s no historical data that says you should plan based on that delivery date. Most experts I’m reading think a Covid-19 vaccine is possible in three to five years.

As noted above, cytokine storms appear to trigger inflammation and damage throughout the body. The FDA is fast tracking therapies that potentially manage cytokine storms in Covid-19 patients. A non-peer-reviewed German study shows that high levels of cytokine interleukin-6, or IL -6, were associated with patients who needed ventilator support or had Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS). Drugs like the IL-6 receptor blocker tocilizumab, which is used to manage cytokine storms in other disorders, are under study for use in Covid-19.

Technology has helped us during the Covid-19 pandemic in another way. We’re’ using it to stay in touch and keep our sanity. Or to lose our sanity in a flurry of frustrating Zoom interactions.

One UC Berkeley student is using Minecraft to imagine his shelter-in-place graduation. Inspired by a sarcastic remark on Facebook, Bjorn Lustic started building a model of Memorial Stadium for a remote graduation. The project has blossomed into 500 students using satellite data to build a Minecraft replica of the entire UC Berkeley campus.

UC Berkeley imagined in Mindcraft.

On a different note, congratulations to Prime Minister Boris Johnson on his return to 10 Downing. I may disagree with his politics, but it’s heartening to know he made it through a particularly difficult case of Covid-19.

To keep you inebriated entertained today, here’s your quarantini upgrade, the American 45.

The American 45 – please do NOT drink bleach.

I write Covid Diary BCN for my own sanity. If it helps yours, please share it on your social media feeds and email it to your family and friends. Thanks!

25 April 2020 – Saturday – #41

It’s been hard on my Spanish friends staying inside. Now I’m realizing, though, that my friends may not be as creative in dealing with the lockdown as I’d expected. If they were really creative, they’d be in one of the Spanish Police tweets showing how people walk their “pets” to get a little fresh air.

My favorite is the guy walking his bowl of goldfish. Actually, don’t do this. It’s a slippery slope to a 600 euro fine.

I need a break, so it’s going to be mostly a fun diary entry today. However, I want to mention this one serious Covid-19 development. Yesterday, I noted that Covid-19 patients sometimes develop blood clots. It appears that these clots are causing strokes in patients in their 30s and 40s who sometimes don’t even know they’ve had Covid-19.

“Our report shows a seven-fold increase in incidence of sudden stroke in young patients during the past two weeks. Most of these patients have no past medical history and were at home with either mild symptoms (or in two cases, no symptoms) of Covid.”

Dr. Thomas Oxley, Mount Sinai Health System, neurosurgeon

If you or someone you know shows symptoms of stroke, don’t hesitate to seek immediate medical help. Here’s a simple test if you’re worried whether someone is having a stroke: ask them to smile. If they’re having a stroke, their smile won’t look right. If they aren’t, you get to enjoy their smile.

I bashed Trump pretty bad yesterday, so I’d like to acknowledge some of the things he’s done to improve the economy during the Covid-19 pandemic. First, he’s convinced people to drink bleach to protect themselves from Covid-19. After his suggestion that ingesting bleach stops Covid-19 (please do NOT drink bleach, by the way), a Maryland poison hotline received 100 calls about bleach and a New York City poison hotline saw it’s calls double to 30 in a day. So, credit where credit is due. Great job pumping up the poison hotline business!

Second Trump has created a market for an entirely new domain name category. DomainTools has measured growth in “reopen” domain names after Trump’s “LIBERATE” tweet tirade at the beginning of April. The run on domain names started after Aaron Dorr, a gun activist, bought the first handful of reopen domains to organize protests. Dorr set off a race to buy reopen domains, some for nefarious uses like phishing attacks, others to take the domain names out of circulation, and still others to speculate on sales of reopen domains. If you’re not too tired of exponential growth curves, here’s one for sales of reopen domain names.

Registration of “reopen” domain names after Trump’s “LIBERATE” tweets.

Meanwhile, in Germany, where people take tests for Covid-19 instead of drinking bleach, German football league plans to reopen soon. The DFL suspended games 13 March, but plans to start games again on 9 May. It’s seems incomprehensible after reading Covid-19 news from Spain and the US to even contemplate professional sports games, but that’s the advantage of plentiful testing and early lockdowns.

Dr. Tim Meyer, who heads the DFL’s task force, looking into how games could safely return, said there are three pillars when it comes to safety: Monitoring the infection of the professionals who test positive, ensuring the safety and cleanliness of the venues, and also regular testing. Meyer said they would need about 14,400 tests over a 10-week period to complete the season, with any leftover tests going to the community.

CBS Soccer News

I’m still thankful to Joan Miguel for inviting me to a Barcelona game so I could watch Messi play live for the first time. Weren’t those the days? I remember bicycling to the stadium and back without gloves, hand sanitizer, or a mask. I’m just hoping it wasn’t also the last time I see Messi live.

Who says the housing market is dead? Bill and Melinda Gates just purchased a $43 million home in Del Mar, California. It’s an indication that life for the 1% during the Covid-19 pandemic is a little different from the rest of us. Of course, kudos to the Gates Foundation for providing resources and guidance during the Covid-19 pandemic, resources and guidance that I would have expected from a functioning US government. The Gates are role modeling the very best 1% behavior. Others not so much. The 1% have been able to insulate themselves earlier and more extensively than essential and low wage workers. Some are hoarding ventilators and medicine.

My friend Frederick reports from Washington, Connecticut that local healthcare is telling New Yorkers who have fled to the countryside to please return to New York for their healthcare services instead of swamping the local system. He also notes that Manhattan residential real estate may be in for an adjustment as the 1% decide that waiting out the pandemic in the countryside is safer. Full disclosure: Frederick will be selling his countryside house soon, so this may be wishful thinking on his part. However, I’m happy to put you in touch with Frederick before countryside real estate prices skyrocket!

In the wait-for-the-peer-review department, remember that study of Covid-19 infections in Santa Clara County that claimed 50x-85x more infections than previously measured? Well, turns out the wife of one of the researchers emailed friends to get tested. The subject line of her emails read “COVID-19 antibody testing – FREE.” Hmm, could that have skewed the results? This is a good reminder that when you see a study that confirms your bias, take a breath before you post it on your social media, especially when it’s claiming orders of magnitude differences from what is previously measured.

I’m ending today with this Kinks Covid-19 parody that Dana sent me. Youtube is flooded with these Covid-19 music parodies. Thank goddess people are doing something creative during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Kinks Covid-19 parody.

Anyone else pick up that the ubiquitous Coronavirus graphic in this music video has pink triangles instead of usual blood red triangles? No, I didn’t think so. That’s why I get paid so much to write Covid Diary BCN.

I’m pretty sure the coronavirus triangles are pink because, you know, the gays caused Covid-19. Sometimes even I am amazed at our superpowers.


Actually, the only payment I get is your kind attention. If you liked today’s Covid Diary BCN entry, please post on your social media feeds and email to your friends. Thanks!

24 April 2020 – Friday – #40

I really wanted to start today’s entry talking about the toll the Covid-19 pandemic is taking on friends. However, my social media feeds are lit up about Trump’s suggestion yesterday that injecting bleach or disinfectants and then switching on a UV lamp could treat Covid-19. I don’t really want to spend any more precious time on Trump, but I feel obligated to say one thing. With the current president, the US government is broken. It is time to acknowledge that and move on.

If you need help moving past Trump, Susan B. Glasser has documented Silicon Valley’s attempt to help the flailing administration respond to Covid-19 in the New Yorker. There are plenty of other places to read similar accounts. Repeat after me: The Trump administration does not know how to manage Covid-19.

What [Silicon Valley execs] did not foresee was that the federal government might never come to the rescue. They did not realize this was a government failure by design—not a problem to be fixed but a policy choice by President Trump that either would not or could not be undone. “No one can believe it. That’s the No. 1 problem with the whole situation: the facts are known, but they are inconceivable,” Ries told me. “So we are just in denial.”

Susan B Glasser describing the efforts of Eric Ries, author of The Lean Startup and CEO of Long-Term Stock Exchange, and other Silicon Valley executives to help the Trump administration.

In case you still believe the stream of conscious press releases from the White House, here are three quick reminders of how broken the Trump response is.

First, food. There is plenty of food, but it’s in the wrong distribution channels, so farmers are throwing it out and people are going hungry. Not only did the administration cut SNAP, the food stamp program, it hasn’t lifted a finger to fix distribution.

Second, disbursement of stimulus money. The administration can’t get stimulus money to business or individual that need it and, when it does, the money may be confiscated by debt collectors instead of stimulating the economy.

Third, prisons and immigration detention facilities. The Trump administration has failed to coordinate prison releases of non-violent criminals or people who’ve been arrested, but can’t make bail. It also ordered immigration courts to keep processing claims, putting not only immigrants, but ICE and immigration officials lives at risk. The Executive Director of the ACLU explains how these incarceration systems are spreading Covid-19 needlessly.

ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero explains how prison systems spread Covid-19.

During AIDS, the gay community realized Presidents Reagan and Bush wouldn’t help. We protested, but we didn’t depend on them when we needed solutions to AIDS. Stop paying attention to Trump. Even in the face of Covid-19, Trump’s agenda continues to be to dismantle government, not make it work.

Just because the Trump administration is dysfunctional doesn’t stop meaningful progress. Two billion people around the world are in lockdown and many countries are measuring a decrease in infection rates. Test production is ramping up. This is all to the good.

Until we get a treatment or vaccine, a great way to control Covid-19 after the initial spike of infections is contact tracking. For contact tracking to work, when someone tests positive for Covid-19 RNA, public health officials track down and test all the people that person has contacted.

How officials from six countries are planning to contain Covid-19.

Contact tracking is difficult and labor intensive. In a weak labor market, it might provide a useful stimulus program, more useful right now than infrastructure or other WPA-like stimulus programs. Even with available labor to track all contacts, though, it’s a management nightmare to track the information and get it right.

Google and Apple have provided an app that potentially tracks all contacts, albeit with significant privacy concerns. Brad pointed out a different anonymized approach to tracking Covid-19 outbreaks, an approach that couldn’t have existed five years ago.

Epidemiologists rely on SIR and SEIR models to forecast the course of an outbreak. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and UMass at Amherst are applying Machine Learning to identify Covid-19 signals in new ways. They call their models “nowcasting” and, like many big data projects, make forecasts by training machine learning models empirically rather than using analytical models. You can see example Covid-19 forecast maps on CMU’s CovidCast site. If efforts like these pan out, it may be possible to spot problem areas even if contact tracking isn’t in place or breaks down.

I had conversations with two friends yesterday whom I don’t need to identify. Both expressed anxiety about lack of control. One had a personal disappointment that triggered a kind of meltdown about life in general. The other isn’t sleeping well, if at all. My own sleep patterns are off, but I’m getting adequate rest.

Other friends are navigating the changing work environment. If they have a job, they are doing the calculus of how long it will last. If they don’t, they are doing the calculus on how long they can last. Temporary roommate situations are not so temporary. Houses that should be fail safe investments are illiquid. Divorces can’t get started or resolved. All this will get fixed, but no one knows when. It feels to me like the enormity of Covid-19 is settling in with everyone I know. As one friend noted yesterday, if someone could just say when we could go outside, it would help.

These are the kinds of feelings that come up after a death or a natural disaster, except that there’s more certainty about timelines and outcomes. That seems like the thing we’re all freaked out about. No one knows when this joyride ends.

Yesterday, l teased an update about blood types, clotting, ACE inhibitors, testicles, and oral sex. The Trump idiocy has distracted me and left me with little time to investigate. First of all, anything I write about this is speculative at this point, based on preliminary, unproven studies.

Similar to early days of HIV, there are many Covid-19 interactions with humans that aren’t well understood yet. There are still HIV interactions that aren’t well understood, but they don’t matter much at this point. The unproven Covid-19 studies above are scattered clues about how Covid-19 might interact and I’m hoping there are scientists figuring out from these scattered clues how to trick Covid-19 into deactivation. My intuition is that the first three are connected, but I don’t know how.

Someone random on Grindr sent a warning about sexual transmission of Covid-19. Covid-19 transmits so well in the air and on surfaces, that I hadn’t looked for any information on sexual transmission. Sexual transmission didn’t even occur to me until I saw the study that testicles may provide a safe haven for Covid-19. The reality, though, is that if you’re intimate enough to have sex with someone who’s infectious, kissing is probably the most dangerous sexual activity possible. But who knows, maybe there is a hazmat suit fetish I don’t know about. At any rate, sex toys are still safe. Just wash them with soap first.

The only good news at the White House lately is that they have finally hired the president a coach to help him through his campaign rallies Covid-19 briefings. Thank goddess!

Trump’s new press conference advisor.

Thanks for your time. Stay safe. If this is useful to you, please pass it on to your friends!