Yes and Yes, for some odd reason she puts up with me.The question is did you know her before the trip or are you still with her.
Yes and Yes, for some odd reason she puts up with me.The question is did you know her before the trip or are you still with her.
Late on this but I think that's a very smart approach. If our daycare and offices open at similar times, I'm debating send the child but staying home another few weeks. My guess is he may be exposed (or pick up whatever germs hes missed out on!) and then that limits us from spreading it to our offices right away.
This is what I have been thinking for my plans as well. I can normally be productive working at home and I don't mind it at all, but with the two young kids at home that is a different story. So we may also have the kids back in daycare for a few weeks while we continue to work from home. It gets everyone back to a more normal and productive routine while still limiting contacts for our family as a whole.
125 new cases and 2 deaths today
I think we’ll be passing lots of states soonCongrats on finally passing MN in total cases
I think we’ll be passing lots of states soon
We are testing more and more so numbers are going to go up. Are we doing the same amount of testing as other states? These numbers are so hard to compare because of the variables when it comes to how the testing is being done.
an article I just read says we have more raw cases than Minnesota. It also says Minnesota has tested 32,294 people and iowa 14,973.
Wheres the flattening there?
an article I just read says we have more raw cases than Minnesota. It also says Minnesota has tested 32,294 people and iowa 14,973.
an article I just read says we have more raw cases than Minnesota. It also says Minnesota has tested 32,294 people and iowa 14,973.
Anybody know what the criteria for testing is in each state, or does it vary by specific location? Considering Iowa's positive rate and the relatively small number of tests being administered in both states suggest pretty different testing requirements.
Anybody know what the criteria for testing is in each state, or does it vary by specific location? Considering Iowa's positive rate and the relatively small number of tests being administered in both states suggest pretty different testing requirements.
Is the criteria the same to get tested in Iowa as it is in Minnesota. To be able to answer that question if fairly hard. Are there more people in Minnesota that have just stayed at home and not needed medical assistance. There are so many variables and the limited number of testing makes it pretty hard to draw any type of comparison that means anything. We have a few more positive tests but yet Minnesota has 21 more deaths reported.