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Podcast Episodes

The Juicebox Podcast is from the writer of the popular diabetes parenting blog Arden's Day and the award winning parenting memoir, 'Life Is Short, Laundry Is Eternal: Confessions of a Stay-At-Home Dad'. Hosted by Scott Benner, the show features intimate conversations of living and parenting with type I diabetes.

Filtering by Category: Coronavirus

#327 Dr. DeSalvo has T1D

Scott Benner

Dan DeSalvo, M.D. is a Pediatric Diabetes Endocrinologist

Dan DeSalvo, M.D. is a Pediatric Diabetes Endocrinologist at Baylor College of Medicine and a person living with type 1 diabetes. Dan shares his story and talks about how the Dexcom G6 is being used in hospitals for Covid-19 patients. 

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DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Scott Benner 0:00
Hello friends welcome to Episode 327 of the Juicebox Podcast. Today's show is with Dr. Daniel disalvo. Now, Dr. disalvo is a pediatric diabetes endocrinologist at Baylor College of Medicine and Texas Children's Hospital. He also has type one diabetes himself. Now, you know me, Dan came on the show to talk about how decks coms were being used in hospitals during the current coronavirus. But then I started talking to him. And I think we got to that part eventually, just I enjoyed Dan's conversation. So we didn't, you know, I don't make a bullet list and be like, talk about this, then this then this. I don't know how to do that. If you want that, go to another podcast, which I'm betting will be boring. Anyway, this one is interesting and fun. And you'll still learn about how Dexcom is used during the current Corona crisis in hospitals. So you know, all the information gets out. But you're not put to sleep by a boring host and stagnant questions that have been written down on a piece of paper. This episode of The Juicebox Podcast is sponsored by the Contour Next One blood glucose meter by touched by type one Dexcom and Omni pod. Now you can go to Contour Next one.com right now to find out if you're eligible for an absolutely free meter. Why would you want to do that? Well, one reason is, it's absolutely the most reliable and accurate meter that I've used in well over a decade. So that's a pretty good reason to check into it. I'm also going to ask you to check out touched by type one.org. In these trying times, organizations that are doing good work for people, they need your help. So check out touch by type one.org. And of course, you can get a free no obligation demo of the Omni pod tubeless insulin pump at my Omni pod.com forward slash juice box. And to check out the people who put these continuous glucose monitors in the hands of the people helping those who are suffering from COVID-19. Check out dexcom.com forward slash juice box.

Podcast something here. But first, let me remind you that nothing you'll hear today on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise, please always consult a physician before making any changes to your health care plan or becoming bold with insulin. I'm going to read to you now from Dan's professional statement. It says Dr. disalvo joined the faculty in pediatric diabetes and endocrinology at Baylor College of Medicine Texas Children's Hospital in July of 2015. Previously, he was a postdoctoral fellow at Stanford University, where he was an active researcher in diabetes device technology, including closed loop artificial pancreas systems. His overarching goal is to provide compassionate and comprehensive treatment to children entrusted to his care, and to advance the field through clinical research. It says some more here, but what I'm going to tell you is as a serious guy who knows how to have a good time while he's given an interview. And now, Dr. disalvo.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 3:35
My name is Dan DeSalvo. I'm a pediatric endocrinologist at Texas Children's Hospital and I'm on faculty at Baylor College of Medicine. And I have been pediatric endocrinologist for I guess about seven years now. And my inspiration started when I was 19 years old as a sophomore at Baylor University in Waco, Texas. When I was diagnosed with Type One Diabetes, it was through that personal journey, and his desire to help others that I sort of had this epiphany about halfway through my sophomore year, where I realized I wanted to become a doctor for kids with diabetes, not realizing the journey that would lie ahead. I switched over to pre med and never look back. And here we are 20 years later after my diabetes diagnosis. And now I have the incredible joy and privilege of being a pediatric endocrinologist where I can walk with and Shepherd families on a diabetes journey. And I feel like I learned as much from them as they probably do for me. And you know, I'm really glad to talk to you Scott because a lot of my patients actually listen to your podcasts, read your blogs, and I've really found a lot of inspiration, hope, practical kind of tips and tricks, and also community so thank you for the work that you're doing.

Scott Benner 4:49
diagnosed in college. What were you thinking of majoring in before you made the switch?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 4:56
So I was actually a political science major and I was thinking that I Maybe he wanted to go to law school, didn't know exactly what I wanted to do. And really, it was through my my diabetes diagnosis that sort of led to this, as I called it an epiphany. My best friend, or one of my best friends growing up was Eric paslay, who I think has been on your show before. So Eric paslay is a country music singer now. But growing up, he was just a good friend of mine who had type one diabetes. And so I learned a little bit about diabetes from Eric, and, but really had no idea that that would be what I would want to do with my own life until my my personal diagnosis, it's kind of a funny side story is that I had, I had for a moment, I thought maybe I wanted to go into medicine. And when I was a senior in high school, there was an internship where I spent about a week in a pediatricians office. And at the end of the week, I decided, you know what, medicine is just not for me. But, but I'm happy to say that, you know, through my personal journey, I've decided to go on this path. And I cannot be more grateful for the opportunities that has provided me in terms of being able to edify my own knowledge, but mostly just be able to, through my clinical practice, pass it on to others, and also, as a clinical researcher, helped to really advance the field of diabetes.

Scott Benner 6:16
Before I asked my my big question, was type one. A surprise? Like, were there people in your family who had it? Or did it come out of nowhere?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 6:27
Scott, it was a total surprise. I, you know, I was that kid who never miss a day of school, always won the awards for for attendance, no family history of type one that we're aware of, in my family, some type two. But no family should type one. And yeah, I bet the summer after my freshman year of college, I went on a medical mission trip to Africa actually was just a mission trip, not a medical mission trip on a mission trip to Africa. And on the tail end of that got really sick. And when I came back was just continuing to lose weight, had to excessive thirst and urination, this similar story to so many have the diagnosis of diabetes, but was kind of in denial. And finally, it was my roommate, who was a really light sleeper, who every time I woke up was waking up. And finally I said, Dan, I don't know what's going on. But you've got to go find out what's going on, you know, what's wrong with you. So I went to the Student Health Center at Baylor was diagnosed with diabetes, and spend a couple of days kind of learning how to manage diabetes had a sister who was in college, about two hours up the road in Dallas, who actually came down to Baylor where I was, and such an amazing advocate would actually come to my classes with me, because she was so worried about me, you know, having a low blood sugar, this was all brand new for us, and would help me kind of talk to my professors about this in diagnosis and what to expect. So having advocates like my sister, Sarah was was really impactful. And it wasn't long before I became my own self advocate and develop my own knowledge base. But, you know, to answer your question, this was totally out of the blue. And while initially shocking, really led to, you know, learning so much building community with other people at Kent on campus who had diabetes, and ultimately leading to this sort of career calling for me

Scott Benner 8:20
so what would you How would you describe your, your goals for patients? I mean, we talk all the time here it's interesting the threw me off a little bit by saying that you knew the podcast but you know, we talk all the time here about giving people great tools, good information, so that they can make better decisions so they don't get caught sort of in the backsliding vortex that is being confused by diabetes. And and I hear back from a lot of clinicians who are like keep talking about this please this is how we do it. You know, we share the podcasts with people but I hear back from far more people who have successes after listening go back to their doctors and then are honestly yelled at like scolded in the office, even when they show data, even when they pull out a Dexcom graph and say look, no I don't have meaningful lows. You know, I've only been under 65 2% of the time you know in this 90 day period I'm getting this a one c you know legitimately the doctors you know what I always surmise is either they don't understand or they're just scared and they've never seen anybody with a good a one c before someone make a change that quickly and and that does happen people will listen and in the span of one a one c measurement sometimes dropped their their number a point or some people too, and it scares Is that what it's happening to them? Can you can you kind of put yourself in their shoes if you see somebody with an eight nine who all of a sudden has a six nine, and they tell you I heard this on a podcast. What would that sound like to you as a doctor if somebody came in and said that

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 9:59
Yeah. So a couple of things on that, Scott, first of all, you asked about sort of my my personal mission for caring for patients. And it's really, to help empower them to live well and die with their diabetes, to really take ownership of it. And I'm not only looking for improved clinical outcomes, but also less burden of diabetes. And I think part of that is, is being really tight in the community, and having a sense of purpose. And I think that's where the diabetes online community, your blog, your podcast, has really helped inspire them. I also think it's those nuggets of truth in terms of being able to have the self initiation to manage diabetes, having the confidence and the skill set that comes with time. And I think hearing other stories, what you've done with art in with so many of the parents who brought on what so many of the young adults, living with diabetes, their stories, I think, is really helping helping to empower others. You know, I think my sense, as a, you said, at the, at the onset and a younger physician, it all kind of takes the the what how I view this, for maybe some of my really amazing experience overheard colleagues, I think were from where they stand is that the diabetes control and complication trial was published in 1992. And at that time, you know, which really was in many ways, now, the Stone Age is a diabetes, having a lower a one C was associated with a higher risk of having a severe hypoglycemic event. having a seizure or loss of consciousness passing out, right to be clear with the tools that technologies that we have now, that is no longer the case. In fact, if you look at the T Wendy exchange data, which is sort of a cross sectional look at a one sees and the US, having a lower a one C is not associated with a higher hypoglycemic risk. In fact, those with the highest day onesies have a higher risk for having severe hypo, probably, because in many ways, they're managing their diabetes in the dark, maybe they have a lot of struggles with, you know, maybe their adherence and sort of where they are in their diabetes journey, it could be from a tough place, maybe it's the social determinants of health that don't allow them to have access to technologies that others may have. But you know, what I've heard on your podcast, but I've certainly experienced in my, in my clinical practice, is that so many families who have a one sees that are dropping, dropping, at the same time having less hyperglycemia on their CGM, that's sort of the holy grail diabetes, right, there's, I think, three things. One, a lower average glucose associated with the low re one C, two more time and range, the percent of I use in the 70 to 180 range, or 70, to 140. And then three less hypoglycemia, percentage values below 70, or below 54. And that can be achieved that can be done with a dynamic approach today to diabetes, with the technologies and skill sets and the self initiation. So in my personal practice, you know, my goal is really to help help to lift up and inspire my patients and their families. And really, to be sort of, in many ways, a coach and a guide, my hope is, is that they'll reach the point where they're just as self empowered and self initiated, as you and Arden are. And I do see that with so many of my patients, and it is a journey, everybody's on a different pace of that journey. And for some, they require a little bit more guidance and coaching. But they do often reach that sort of Zen state and diabetes, where they've got it, and they've got the confidence to do it. And they reach a place where it's less burdensome. And it's just so amazing to see the kids living well and thriving as students, as athletes as musicians. without diabetes getting in the way,

Scott Benner 13:42
I honestly the feet, you know, I've been doing this now for quite some time. And what I'm seeing coming back from people is that it doesn't really matter, your level of education or social status, or any of the ways we you know, quote, unquote, measure people, everyone can figure this out. And it's not as difficult as we make it seem, or you know, as others sometimes make it seem I'm not saying that taking care of diabetes is simple. I'm just saying that there's some basic kind of tenants, if you follow them, through experience trues are you know, on earth, and all the sudden you see them, and then it doesn't matter the situation I always kind of chuckle sometimes when people are like, Hey, what are you talking about on the podcast? Would that work during a soccer game too, and I was like, it works doing everything. It's it's the idea of putting insulin where it's needed. It really is all it's about I joke all the time. If you all figure it out, I'm not gonna have a podcast anymore. It's timing and amount, put the right amount of insulin at the right place. That's it. It doesn't mean there's not much more that there's other variables. Of course, that can impact those things. But you start to experience those variables and then before you know it, when something goes wrong, you just know what to do. I don't know another way to put it like when something happens with Arden's blood Sugar, I don't stop, put my hands on my hips and start thinking, Oh, okay, well, you know, I guess so she was outside, actually, I just, I can look at that graph on that Dexcom screen, I think for a brief second about what's going on, and I know what to do next. And that just comes with repetition, you just have to get your 10,000 hours. And once you have them, it's I hate saying this, but it's kind of easy, at some point and easy, not that it's not impactful and horrible. And you know, all the other things that diabetes is, it's just your time involved in it becomes so much lesser that it's sort of just a throwaway to me like it. We don't really talk about diabetes around here that often. You know, it's just something happens. We adjust, we keep moving, we don't look back. I don't know why that can't be. Well, I'm gonna I'm gonna rephrase, I believe that can be taught to anyone. But I think it's the same thing. I think the reason the podcast works is because of the repetition, the conversations around the ideas, because it's not something you can just sit and tell somebody, you know, one time how to do and write them down a rule, which is, you know, everybody wants, you know, tell me when tell me how much that's that's not how this works. So given that, I believe you believe you believe in that, too. My thought on this end always is if I can do it here, right? Like if you've ever you've never heard me speak live somewhere. But I guarantee you, I can talk for an hour an hour and 30 minutes, and a large percentage of the people in that room will leave and their agencies will go down by a point a month. So what if I can do that? Because Doctor, Doctor it Can I call you doctor Damn. Doctor Dan, I'm almost a more like an idiot. I know college barely got through high school. Okay. If I can do this, why can those even those silver hair doctors? Why can't they like were anybody like, why is every wire? Why are there a mass of people just going with you didn't die today? And that's a good day. Like, why is that the? Why is that the bar we're trying to get over?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 17:04
Yeah, so. So you know, one is, is I think I think you're exactly right that your life experiences and sort of learning from cause and effect is something that can really help to inform the next way you do it right. So using CGM is what I call it heuristic learning tool, meaning something where you can sort of learn from cause and effect. Yeah, so with the breakfasts that you eat, or the activity that you that you do, or the you know, your favorite meal at your favorite restaurant, once, you know God willing, we can all go back to doing that, again, you know, really paying attention to it. And and the approach that you took with your insulin, the timing, how is delivered, you know, the adjustments you make with your temp basals are the carbs that you take, before exercise, make taking mental notes of that, and the next time trying to do it just a little bit better, and eventually reach that sweet spot where you can do it really well. You know, one of the joys I have is to be able to sort of watch families as they progress through this process. And you probably remember it well from monogamous first is when she was a little one and how daunting that was and how you wonder how you can ever do this. And then you start to gain a little bit more knowledge and a little bit more skill. And you eventually reached that, that that sweet spot where you realize I've got this, and I can do this, and I can really become an expert, I think with physicians, I you know, I think there, there are so many also who are nimble, and who do change and who were here during dcct, way back in the early 90s. Were before and who really had advanced, so to where, you know, we are now with leveraging technologies and taking an emic approach to diabetes. I think the nature of medicine, though is is that there are others who may be a little bit less resistant to change. They're still practicing the way that they were trained. And I think the other thing is, is as providers, we can all have the humility to sort of learn from our patients as well, you know, maybe there's a new tip or trick that they've learned. And if we kind of step back, and learn from that, it might be something that we can help to impart to another family as well, in the case of diabetes, and so i think that i think that's just a matter of being, you know, willing to sort of change to have an open mind to really advance one's knowledge and to be able to take the learnings from others. And you know, if it makes sense to help to realize that everyone is different, to be able to help to take those special tips or tricks or pearls so that others can can use those to improve their diabetes improve their quality of life as well.

Scott Benner 19:41
Yeah, well, I I just listened. I I agree with what you're saying. I I would like to put myself out of business here right Joe quit, you know, after I put my kids through college, but I would like to put myself out of business. I would like it that one day. This is how doctors across the globe talk to people about diabetes and I've had private comment sessions with some who will say, Well, you know, there's some people who don't get it. And I'm just thinking, I always think, no, you just, there's a way to explain it to them. You know, I, I fall back to a conversation I had a long time ago on the phone with someone, someone online connected me with this young mother, and she was struggling helping her daughter. And I got on the phone with her. And I was like, Oh, I can help her. And I started talking. And it became kind of evident to me that I was speaking with someone who had to drop out of high school to have a baby. And that maybe wasn't on track to go to college to begin with. If that, that, you know, I'm trying to be kind. And, and she just wasn't the she wasn't the brightest person I'd ever spoken to in my life. And I was explaining Pre-Bolus thing to her, the way I explained it to everybody forever, and she just wasn't grasping it. And in that moment, I had this horrible kind of dire feeling like, I have to get off the phone, I can't help her, I'm going to put her in a situation where she's going to hurt this kid, and you know, blah, blah, blah. And then I stopped and I thought, how am I gonna do that? How am I gonna just tell her Oh, well, good health isn't for your daughter, and and get off the phone. And so in that moment, I made up a story about a tug of war. And I put insulin on one side of the rope and carbs and body function on the other. And I started telling a story about this tug of war. And now I sometimes get notes from people who say, Hey, I was in an office the other day, and my doctor explained Pre-Bolus thing to me. And I said, Do you listen to the Juicebox Podcast? And the doctors said, Yes. And I thought, that's just such a wonderful thing. But it's because I didn't listen, I'm not trying to give myself credit, I'm trying to say that you can't give up on people that everybody has the ability to understand this, this is, it's not that difficult to understand. You just have to find the words that they need. And I think that, you know, Jenny and I were talking the other day on the podcast, and I said that sometimes, you know, it's not that we're bad students, sometimes you're not a good teacher. And and you know, that, that should be it, and I get the rest of it, man, like, I get the office hours, and you got to get people in, you got to get them out. And there's this minimum amount of time. Like, I can't imagine that that seems like a heart to me. But I don't think this is, um, I don't think this is how we're going to end up helping people with diabetes, I, you know, 15 minutes at a time every three months, I think the conversations where it happens. And and, and I think they can get it. I think everybody can get it at some point. I just I'm very excited by the idea that you heard about the podcast, and that you've apparently listened to it. That's really cool. I appreciate that. It's made it out like that to people. It's a very, it's very encouraging. When someone sends a note and says, Hey, I went in with my agency, I showed my doctor my graph, he looked at the graph and said, quietly, they always whisper for some reason you listen to the Juicebox Podcast, it looks like you do buy your graph. Like that's weird, man. You know, they mean like I, it throws me It gives me chills, you know. But anyway, I just think that people like you being out there, I find it very encouraging. I really think this concept of talking to people, like they can understand should just be commonplace.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 23:18
Anyway, I agree. Yeah, no, I agree with that. I mean, I one of my favorite parts about my job is I get to interact with such an amazingly diverse group of people from so many different backgrounds, cultural backgrounds, races, ethnic backgrounds, education, socio economic status. And I think you're right, and I think everybody can get it, I think it might take a different approach, and really meeting people where they are. But if we take the time, the effort, the energy to do that, then then we can get there. I mean, everyone, you know, all these parents, they love their kids, they want their kids to be healthy and safe and to thrive. And if we take the time as a team to teach them how to do that, it's helpful, I think, something that you hit the nail on the head with is, is that it can all happen in the walls of a hospital. So finding community, and whether that's online or with with a podcast, or, you know, we have a lot of different community groups at our hospital to get families together, I think there can be shared learning there that can really help with others so that, again, we can transport this knowledge and we're not just keeping it with one family, but we can really share it, among others. I think it's also helpful for the for the providers, so the diabetes care team, and it can be there as well. Because again, we learned so many tips and tricks around diabetes management around how to use which adhesive to keep the CGM on or, or the pods or you know, how they you know, whether it's Pre-Bolus seeing or managing diabetes and exercise. And we all have a lot of learning there. And again, that knowledge can be transported to the masses

Scott Benner 24:51
being agile like that is so it's incredibly important. It's just like you said if forever allowed to travel again, I'm supposed to head out west to talk to a group of doctors About how I talk to people about diabetes. And that's, that's a cool thing, because they're those are a group of people who are going to leave their ego behind, get in a room, and, you know, stupid maze gonna walk in and say, Look, here's what I've learned about how people hear this. And that's, that's very, very exciting to me. Because, you know, listen, I have friends who are doctors, and one of them told me once he put an age on it, and he said, I'll never go to a doctor over that age. He's like, because they just stop learning. And, you know, now all the sudden you're being, you know, you're being treated 25 years ago, and that's, you know, not valuable for people. And I'm like, Wow, so everything we you know, but are plenty of doctors who are older that keep up to and that's just,

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 25:48
I don't know, man. Absolutely. Yes. In fact that a lot of my mentors so people like Bruce Buckingham at Stanford, who I trained under, people like Laurie lafell, at Joslin build terrible in at Yale, who have been doing this for a long time are not only incredible mentors, but they are, you know, at the cutting edge of diabetes. And there's so many who, you know, might be might have started this journey a little bit before me, but are way advanced in their knowledge and constantly have that agility to change and are really at the cutting edge of this. And so yes, I mean, that I wanted to specifically call out a few of those who've had such an impact for me and my training and mentoring me my career. But there are so many people like that who are out there,

Scott Benner 26:34
it can't get lost if we're talking about the problem where you know, but it can't be lost in the conversation. There are plenty of people who stay behind didn't mean they learn this thing, and then they don't run forward and keep it for themselves. They stay behind to share it with somebody else. And that's how the idea. Yeah, you know,

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 26:51
yeah, and I think that that gets back to being one's advocate, as a patient as a parent, where if you have an interaction with the diabetes provider, where you don't feel like you're learning where you don't like they're supporting the, what you're doing and managing diabetes, when you know, it's working. There are others out there too. And I don't think it's always an age thing. I think it's partly just an openness, and being really adept at taking cutting edge approach to diabetes care, a dynamic approach with Pre-Bolus. Seeing and, you know, dosing based on trend arrows and leveraging technologies like CGM and closed loop systems, you know, that that's what you want to learn from, that's you want to be in your corner, so to speak. And so if you don't feel like you're getting that, then you know, there are others out there, hopefully, depending on where you live, who can can who can be of more support to you.

Scott Benner 27:47
I just want to be a cheerleader for organizations who are out in front and thinking in a modern way. And for the rest of them who through fear or whatever. The reason is that they keep good information from people, you know, Shame on them. You know, I just I don't have any time for it. Okay, yeah, we had you on for a reason. It wasn't this, although I'm really enjoying this. I wanted to talk to you a little bit. If you have type one diabetes, you need a blood glucose meter. Even if you're using the Dexcom, g six, or another CGM, you still need a reliable and accurate meter. It's easy to transport and use. And that meter for me, is the Contour Next One blood glucose meter. Now there are links right here today in your show notes, right in the podcast player, where you can go to Juicebox podcast.com, to find them. But what I'd like you to do is to go to Contour Next one.com and check out the meter. I mean, I know it's a blood glucose mate, and you're thinking what could it possibly do? Scott, you put a test trip in it, you poke your finger. I mean, they all do that. Yeah, they all do it, but some of them do it better. So right out of the gate, the Contour Next One, accuracy is insane. Top of the level, right at the top, right there, right at the pinnacle of the mountain. If you picture a mountain and up the side of the mountain, there's different blood glucose meters, in order of how great they are. Contour. Next One, right at the peak. I think you understand it's good because of my amazing description. Now, test trips offer a second chance, which means if you hit the blood and don't get it right, you can go back in, try again without ruining a test trip. It's got a great light that works at night. It's small and easy to hold on to without being so small or slippery. You don't mean that you can't handle it. I just love it. Absolutely 100% the best meter I've ever used. Contour Next one.com Check out the link at the top of the page. You might be eligible for a free meter. When you're done there, please check out touched by type one org wonderful people doing amazing work for people living with Type One Diabetes, they need to now more than ever touched by type one.org. And of course, if you'd like to check out the Dexcom g six dexcom.com forward slash juice box, and to get a free no obligation demo of the Omni pod tubeless insulin pump, go to my omnipod.com forward slash juicebox. All these links are in the show notes of your podcast player. We're at Juicebox podcast.com.

You know, I was talking to Dexcom. And they were discussing with me a little bit about how the sensors are being used during the current coronavirus crisis. And I found that idea in chanting and I wanted to know a little more about it, and they said you were the one I should talk to. So can you tell me how cgms are helping during this time?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 30:56
Absolutely. So you know, I think the main reason why CGM why the FDA is allowing CGM to be used during this unprecedented time with the public health crisis of COVID-19 is that it came out of the need to really preserve personal protective equipment or PP, and also to reduce the frequency of staff exposure with COVID-19 positive patients. So you can imagine without CGM, if someone with diabetes who also is connecting positives, you have to have pretty frequent blood glucose checks. And every time there's a bug, because check, the staff is having to dawn TP to wear peepee to walk into the room to check a glucose, that's another that staff exposure to the person with with COVID-19. And, and furthermore, you know, of course, with with blood glucose, it's just snapshots in time of what the blood sugar is doing as well. As opposed to CGM, which really is the full, comprehensive picture also with the trends and the alerts. And so in step CGM, with this ability to have this cloud based technology, where if the person with diabetes, who asked COVID-19 is using CGM, with the Dexcom g six system, the transmitter can transmit up to 20 feet. But also, if it's on a cell phone, which Dexcom is supplying Android phones, for the user to have the patient who's hospitalized via x com share a follow feature. Those CGM data can be tracked remotely by the healthcare team so that the nurse who's no longer at the bedside, can receive an alert for low or high glucose on her phone or her hospital issued device to that that the doctors, the medical assistants, whomever are part of that care team can receive those timely alerts. And also, depending on hospital protocols, you could use CGM, in some cases to supplement or even in place of a normally scheduled blood sugar depending on where that that level is. So again, you're reducing the need for PPV, reducing the staff exposure to patients. But you also have this this real time CGM, which can aid in glucose management medical decision making. So that's where it came was really out of the need to limit PE and staff exposure with patients. But I think that there will be a lot of lessons learned on how CGM as a tool can really help with keeping one safe and healthy during hospitalization. For someone with diabetes,

Scott Benner 33:34
that's a second thing. I thought when you were saying this, the first thing is I wondered what the process was like. And, you know, I guess the the FDA had to say yes to this in a quick fashion. I guess that that is interesting. But I'll I'll bug Kevin about that when I get him on. But the idea that all of a sudden, nurses and doctors are going to get to see this technology that they maybe don't know about. And I know it's easy to think of course they do. They're doctors, they live in hospitals, you know, this is this is their life. But Arden had a cyst removed, you know, just a little cyst. This is a short surgery she had to have a number of months ago, and you know, had all the conversations in the world with the surgeon. This is what Arden wears. we'd like it to stay on her while she's in there doctor was like, Oh, yeah, sure, sure. I got yesterday. That's no problem. I get to the hospital on the day of the nurse comes in the room to prepper the prep nurses like oh, yeah, that's no problem. If the doctor said it was okay, it's fine. Well, then the nurse, the next nurse comes in the one who's going to be in the procedure. And I start you know, now at this point, I've set it to the doctor, I've set it to the prep nurse, everyone's Yes, me to death for a month about this. So I'm now I'm just talking to the third nurse and I say, Hey, you know, this is great that you guys are doing the shoes. Oh, that's not hospital protocol. We can't do that. Just like that. I was like, Wait, what? No, no, I've been talking to the doctor and I started explaining it to her, showing it to her and she's like, Yeah, it's great, but we can't use that. a nother nurse walks in the room. And I just I wish you could have seen me down I pivoted right from the one nurse to the other Other ones, like the first one wasn't there anymore. I was like, Hi. And I started explaining again thinking like, let me take another stab at making this clear to somebody. Well, that nurse says, Oh, my friend has type one diabetes. That's cool. Let me see. Oh, she has this too. Oh, yeah, yeah, we'll use this. I'll keep her phone with me. Just like that. The tiniest bit of understanding, when I made that conversation go from, oh, no, there's a hospital policy. We can't do that to no problem. Give me your daughter's phone, I'll take him to the operating room with me. And that's the understanding that this kind of technology needs throughout the medical community, because a podcast shouldn't be one of the main ways that people find out about Dexcom. Like, why that hell does that have to be the case? Do you know what I mean? Like, and by the way, don't don't get me wrong, Dan, I need my ads. Okay. But, but I, but what I'm saying here is, what I'm saying is, is that this should be something people just think of not something that they're scared of, or say I don't know about this. So this is a great, it's a great opportunity for them to see it live fire, and really help spread the word to other people with type one. Because until it's thought of like that, you're still going to run into situations where insurance companies say stupid things like you're a one sees too low for CGM, as if those two things in any way have anything to do with each other. You're going to get me upset, Dan, I want people to have Dexcom. So so that that is that is very cool. So what you're saying to me is now we're keeping we're saving equipment or saving exposure, and probably giving people I would think greater care than they were going to receive. The other way. I've seen friends in the hospital with type one it it doesn't normally go very smoothly. Well, have you ever been in the hospital and been hospitalized with your diabetes and have the experience of having to manage like that?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 36:48
No, but you know, there was Adam brown from diatribe wrote a really, really interesting piece on this his experience in the hospital, somewhat diabetes, I've seen and you know, you're right, it's it can it can be there can be some challenges there. You know, that's one of the things that Dexcom is doing here is since Dexcom has or CGM has not been approved by the FDA for in hospital use previously only for in home use. There may be less knowledge or experience with it. So they're really doing a nice job of of providing training to those healthcare teams who will be deploying it. The other thing that hospitals are doing is looking to who are the experts, for example, diabetes educators, or maybe the the diabetologists, or their teams to help train the trainer so to speak, to help to teach and empower the the hospital staff to use these systems and also how to sort of set up and operationalize what that remote monitoring would be like. And then also, it requires a little bit of a new protocol. Right. So since in many cases, this will be the first time that CGM is being used by those care teams. What do you use for your low and high alerts? And what do you use for low and high alerts in a hospital setting may look a little bit different than it would be at home. For example, a hospital might decide that they would use a low alert of maybe 90 or 100, so that they can intervene in a little bit more timely manner, or a high alert of something more like 200 or 250. There have been some studies that have looked at sort of health outcomes as it relates to blood sugars. And actually in a hospital or especially an ICU setting, having a blood sugar that's more in the 100 to 100 to 100 range is associated with improved clinical outcomes, as opposed to running really tight like you might, when you're otherwise health and safety, health and safety in your own home. And so developing the systems and protocols is something that a soldier having to do. We've been talking for a while just as a industry about how we really need disruption in health care, right, so that we can do things a little bit more and a little bit more efficient. And I think technology forward way. And while COVID-19 has been such just a terrible tragedy for our country, the countless laws lives, lives loss, the impact it's had on our economy, how it's impacted almost every one of us personally in some way or someone we love has been so horrible. You know, one of the one of the silver linings, I think that may emerge is that we will see things like the plane these technologies and a a smarter, safer, more efficient way and move to telehealth where we can you know, instead of having families being disrupted from their their normal, you know, job or education having to do with traffic be able to do things by telephone, and diabetes, where we have cloud based CGM technology, where families can in some cases, download their pumps from home or at least provide a log of what their doses have been, actually lends itself nicely. So my hope is is that many of these lessons learned from this really horrible crisis can be used going forward too. deliver healthcare deliver medicine in a much smarter and better way for patients.

Scott Benner 40:06
It is normally in emergency times that medicine leaps forward, it's, you know, it's hard to think about, but wartime brings all kinds of revolution to medicine, because you put doctors in a situation that isn't perfect. You give them, you know, you give them less tools than they might normally have in a hospital. And all of a sudden, they've got to be MacGyver, and they figure something out. And some of that stuff ends up, you know, becoming commonplace in in practice. And I'm just, I'm excited about this, I'm, I'm imagining a nurse, getting an alarm on a CGM at 100, like you're saying, and intervening, and then watching the blood sugar bounce back up, and having that thought, like, wow, maybe I didn't need as much glucose drip as I thought I did here. And maybe next time, that'll stop them from driving some poor patients blood sugar to 250. Because, you know, because of fear, maybe you'll it'll teach the the fine tuning ideas around diabetes to them, you know, and, and then who knows where that goes from there? Like, where do they take that information? And where does it spread to next? This is the stuff to me, that's macro very, very exciting for people with diabetes. If you have no idea what's going to happen to that, that nurse in that, you know, made up situation, goes home becomes a, you know, the parent of a kid, but Type One Diabetes five years from now. And then that kid becomes a doctor like you 20 years from now, and blah, blah, blah, and where do we end up because of this? You know, I, I just I can tell you that where I am now, in my understanding of Type One Diabetes was held back by the direction I was getting from my daughter's doctor, I was seeing things. And I was having thoughts and desires about changing practice. But everything I heard on the doctor's office side, was telling me I was wrong. And I had to break out of that feeling that Oh, no, I am doing it. Right. This is just what diabetes is. I don't know man, like I'm very excited for people to not live the way some people do now in the way my daughter did for a number of years when she was first diagnosed, I just don't think there's a need for it. And I think that anything that moves us towards that is exciting. And this is particularly interesting and how it came about. Do you happen to have any numbers on how many people are actually wearing it? Who were infected with? COVID-19? Do you know?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 42:30
I do not know how many it is. And I can tell you I've been hearing from a lot.

Dan just disappeared.

Hello, this is Dan. I'm back. Yeah, what happened? I'm wondering as zoom kicked us out, I don't know.

Scott Benner 42:44
I sang while I was waiting for you to come back, which I'll take out. Because I can't say

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 42:48
you were slacking picked up with your last question, which was in regards to how many people are using it right now? And I don't know the answer to that I can tell you from speaking with my colleagues, from all across the country, we're all eager to use this in our hospitals just because of the reasons we mentioned, in terms of being able to preserve PP to reduce staff exposure, but also to have that helpful tool for aiding diabetes management. You know, to your earlier point, one of the things that is helpful with CGM, in addition to having the comprehensive glucose stream to having the the alerts, it's having the arrows also, and in many cases, this will be the first time that some of the hospital staff will see that. So you know, I always describe glucose as being like a vector or an arrow has both a current level, but also direction. Yeah, glucose that's 150. And headed down is different from a glucose that's 150 and double arrow up change by more than three milligrams per deciliter per minute. And so to be able to kind of, you know, and in the case of daily management, you know, and leveraging those trend arrows for daily diabetes decisions is so important. And I think that that can play an important role in a hospital setting as well with managing insulin doses, or insulin drips, or IV fluids and dextrose, concentrations, and so on. So it's another one of the things I think will be born from this. This use of real time CGM during the covid 19 pandemic.

Scott Benner 44:17
That's a great point I talked about stopping the arrows I consider not just the, you know, the direction and the speed, I call it the momentum, like you have to stop the momentum of the blood sugar. And you know, you know, talking to people about I don't know about a Pre-Bolus idea. I'm like, you know, you you count your carbs, your blood sugar's 90, you put your insulin in, but you don't Pre-Bolus now all the sudden the food starts impacting your blood sugar before the insulin has a chance to before you know it, your blood sugar is 180. It's 190. It's 200. It has momentum, you only have enough insulin in there to cover the carbs if you're if you're lucky. And you know, the glycemic load of this food actually matches up with your carb ratio that's set up Right. And so now, you're staring and watching this, this number go up and up and up, you don't realize you need the insulin for the carbs you need to be, you need the insulin to stop the momentum, and you need the insulin to bring the number back, you know, you're sitting on one third of the insulin now that you need, you know, one third of the picture. And, you know, most people stare at it and stare at it, they think, Oh, I counted the carbs, right, like they're back at that point. That's not, that's not even a tiny bit of the picture. It's, I couldn't do what I do for my daughter, and what she does for herself, and what the people listening to the podcast end up doing for themselves. Without the data that comes back from the Dexcom. Like, it's just it's no bowl, you know, like I, I, there's a lot of people I could have, as advertisers on the show, there's a reason I chose the ones that are here. I was wondering about your management, do you have like, like, what are your goals day to day for yourself?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 45:55
Yeah, you know, I think for for me, it's, you know, I live a pretty busy active life, professionally, but also as a father of two young kids. And so, certainly, for me, being able to watch my glucose and trend arrows closely is important. And, you know, I aim for pretty tight control. And so I have pretty tight thresholds on my low and high, you know, that works for me, it may not work for some of my patients, depending on where they are, and their diabetes journey. And so, you know, I pay, I pay pretty, really close attention to the trend arrows and a lot of what you're talking about in terms of, you know, stopping the glucose in its tracks, looking at the momentum of whether it ties or lows with insulin or carbohydrate, respectively. And really trying to sort of guide the glucose and, and sort of hone in on on that, that maintaining the time and range, and you guys seem strange that the range of, you know, for me, I'm aiming for 70 to 140, typically. And I also, you know, I do a bit of, you know, nutritional approach diabetes, for me as an adult works, you know, it's not, it's not necessarily advocate for my patients, but I tend not to eat breakfast on weekdays. And so I need to sort of ride my basal rate, usually, and within range glucose in the morning. And then for lunch, I usually fairly low ish carb lunch and get most of my carbs at dinner. And so I don't have to worry about blusher quite as much during the day. And then in the evening time is where I tend to have my largest meal. It's also when I exercise and so that can present some challenges with management. And so just like, the patients I care for, I'm always learning in my own diabetes on how to how to best manage it.

Scott Benner 47:39
Have you ever taken information from a patient and applied it to your own life?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 47:44
Oh, yeah, I mean, absolutely. I mean, they're their little tips and tricks that I pick up from them that I might use my own. You know, I'll give you an example. Sort of a concrete example is with the adhesive that I use for my Dexcom you know, I run cycle and swim, I lead a pretty active life. And I have two kids who like to wrestle with me. So, you know, for a while I was having some challenges and keeping an eye out for 10 days. And, you know, some patch, this was a while ago, but some patches adhesive that's available on Amazon and other places. And it's also hypo hypoallergenic. And so that was something I was able to use to really buttress down the CGM, the sensor transmitter to prevent it from coming off. And, you know, I've really not had any trouble keeping it on for 10 days. And I usually wait until it starts to maybe on the edges start to come up just a little bit, and then apply the adhesive. Okay. And with that, it's really works well. And so that's something also for my patients who, you know, they may be athletes, or, you know, Texas, it gets really hot in the summer, people do a lot of swimming, using these sort of things can be really helpful. So that's just one of many examples I can I, you know, I can share, you know, that I've learned from from patients,

Scott Benner 49:01
I just thought you have a even interesting, you know, opportunity for yourself. Do you think that having Type One Diabetes is a benefit for you in what you do? Or does it give you an advantage? I mean, if I'm looking for an endo what I I want them to have diabetes.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 49:22
You know, I think I think anyone can do this. And I think I think it really takes having a passion, but also having the kindness and just the the willingness to go the extra mile in terms of having the knowledge and skill set and diabetes management. I don't think you have to have diabetes to do that. I do think that living with diabetes does give you a way to really connect in a really powerful and impactful way with patients and families. And so I i do some time and I do oftentimes share that I have diabetes and and i don't really talk about how I manage my own diabetes as much But I do try to convey a message that, again, you can live well and die with your diabetes, you can become absolutely anything. You can become a professional athlete, a movie star, you can become a US Supreme Court Justice, a lawyer, a doctor, really whatever it is that you're passionate about, you know, I used to say there's only two things you can't do. One is become a commercial airline pilot. And the other is join the military. Well, the FAA has now a law now allows with a doctor's letter, the potential for someone to become a commercial airline pilot with diabetes. That was a huge win.

Yeah. And yet with Yeah, go ahead.

Scott Benner 50:39
I'm sorry to mean to cut you off. I had Owen Lieberman on the other week, and he was talking about this. And now I'm starting to see people holding their letters from the FAA. All of a sudden, in the last couple of days on social media. So it's happening, people are getting their their pilot's license back, and sometimes for the first time who have type one,

Unknown Speaker 50:57
it's super amazing.

Scott Benner 51:00
And, I mean, honestly, that's in no small part to Dexcom as well. I mean, that that's a that's a an ability for someone who doesn't understand diabetes, to be given a visual way to understand it, and then be able to make that leap like, Oh, you know, we just, you know, the government just thought people randomly get low. And that's what we were talking about earlier, doctors 20 years ago, we're telling you keep everyone see higher, you know, keep your blood sugar higher. You don't want to randomly get low. And now there's, there's real concrete ways to stop that. Listen, last night. Last night at 1130 Arden's blood sugar started to trend down. And I couldn't figure out why. So we're talking and I was like, hey, it's holding, but it's like it's at 70. And I'm like, if you look at the line, I don't think it's going to, I don't think it's going to hold up for us. So we started taking bazel away to see if we could get it to rise and it wouldn't rise. So we're talking, I'm trying to find out what's going on, she see she pulls out her period tracker, and there are days prior to her period where her blood sugar, just that she just doesn't require that much insulin. And so this is where we're at, right? So from 1130, last night, no light or three in the morning, I kept Arden's blood sugar up using the dexcom. And without it, I can't tell you how low I think she would have gotten because I was able to, with confidence, take away the basal insulin in a way that held her up in the 60s, which is, by the way, the best we could do for a couple of hours, even with food intervention and everything else. I'm just trying to imagine if we were blind there, I would just see a low number I would treat her and then that, you know, I think oh, it's gonna come back up again. But for for four hours last night Arden's blood sugar just didn't want to come up. And I had the comfort of knowing that that was true and being able to manage her through it. And, you know, eventually, obviously, it started to move again. And then we were able to re add the insulin and bolus with confidence. After four and a half hours of not eating any insulin, I was able to look at a trend and say, whatever that was, is over now. And you need your insulin again. And so because we were able to bolster confidence, she didn't get high, you know, all the sudden when her body had different needs. And she had a, you know, a reasonable period of time where she didn't have very much basal insulin. It's just It's magical man. Like, it just is, you know, so?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 53:25
I don't know I love Yeah, I think it's essential. I mean, yeah, for people who have busy professional lives, no matter what it is having that real time data on your phone or on your wrist. And I only know where you are, but where you're headed, so that you can actually, you know, as Wayne Gretzky said, it's not enough to know where the puck is, you got to know where it's headed. And really think 123 steps ahead. I think that that is absolutely essential for being able to do all the things we do to have that that information that helpful data, you know,

Scott Benner 53:55
the genesis of that story was Wayne Gretzky.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 53:59
His father was something he was his dad, right? I don't remember the exact details.

Scott Benner 54:03
His dad was teach him to play. And he always seemed like he was behind the game. And he told his son, you got to skate where you got to skate where the puck is going, not where it is.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 54:12
And it's just an analogy.

Yep. So So, you know, perfect for diabetes management, right?

Scott Benner 54:21
I tell people all the time, the insulin you're using right now is for later, it's never it's never for now, nothing you're doing with your diabetes. In this moment is for right now. It's always for later and more importantly, and it's a weird distinction that might seem like it's not a distinction, but it is if you really think about it, it's not so much the insulin you're using now is for later it's the insulin you used in the past is for now, and I know that seems like the same thing. But if you really kind of like really go into a Wavy Gravy plays and think about it for a minute then it's um, it's different. It's, it's more about it's about controlling the energy of the inside the power of insulin that's coming at you. It's about it's about being in It's, I know, I don't know, maybe you'll have to wrap your head around it. And other people will too when they're listening, but it's not so much about now for later, it's about before for now. And if you can wrap your head around them, this is kind of easy, you know? Anyway, Oh, dude, I'm really thrilled you did this, I didn't expect to have such a great conversation with you. I thought we were going to just be like, Hey, COVID-19 Dexcom That's cool. And then you'd be gone. But uh, but this turned into an excellent episode. And I'm really excited that we did this. I might have to ask you to come back on again sometime, and maybe talk more about your personal story, if that's something you might be interested in?

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 55:37
Absolutely, I'd be more than happy to. And Scott, thanks again for the work that you're doing to advance the cause that people living on thriving with diabetes for the community built and for getting this message out there. You know, again, it's it's so I think important for using real time CGM in this area of COVID-19. And I think that there will be many lessons learned from this, both in the hospital setting as well as with telehealth that will be propelled forward as we one day reenter normal life. It's hard to imagine that right now but we'll all be there and so my thoughts and prayers for everybody out there and hope you and your family stay safe well, and I'm adding sane to that list because it can be mind numbing sometimes to be stuck at home, but you know, my my best wishes for for all your listeners as well.

Scott Benner 56:23
I really appreciate that. Then, you know, we last weekend ended up I staked my entire family and we played poker. I played poker to get my own money, just to just to try to pass the time. I said to my kids, I'm like, Here's 25 for you. 25 I gave my wife $25 I took $25 like Alright, this pots worth 100 bucks. We played for seven and a half hours.

Unknown Speaker 56:45
No one wanted to give the money away.

Dan DeSalvo, M.D 56:48
Yes, we need distractions these days. Absolutely. I saw

Scott Benner 56:52
a woman online say that she spent four hours yesterday watching a truck get towed out of some mud. She said it's the most exciting thing that's happened to her. So Alright, man, wash your hands stay safe as well. I really appreciate this. Huge thanks to Dr. Sabo for coming on the podcast and sharing his story and telling us more about how the Dexcom g six is being used in hospitals to aid with the Coronavirus fight. Huge thanks also to the Contour Next One blood glucose meter for sponsoring this episode. Don't forget also, sponsors like touched by type one.org Dexcom and Omni pod. They make the podcast possible. So check them out, use the links support the show. I'm still here. I'm so bored. I don't know what to do. I mean, once I finish this, I'm just gonna go downstairs and like clean something or make something or put something away. All my options. Here's my here's my day. I sleep and then I wake up and take a shower and work on the podcast. cook something clean something. cook something clean something. Take out the recycling. cook something clean something. Watch Ozark and go to bed. That's it. It's the whole thing. It's my life. It's your life. It's our lives, but not for much longer. Hang in there people. Stay strong. Wash your hands. Cover your cough. You know what I'm saying? Don't be disgusting. Say


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#322 Justin is Recovering from Coronavirus

Scott Benner

COVID-19 with Type 1 Diabetes

Coronavirus disease (COVID-19): Juicebox Podcast conversation with Justin Wilhite. Justin had Covid-19, has Type 1 Diabetes and he's on the show to share his experiences.

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon AlexaGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio Public or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

COMING SOON


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The Juicebox Podcast is a free show, but if you'd like to support the podcast directly, you can make a gift here. Recent donations were used to pay for podcast hosting fees. Thank you to all who have sent 5, 10 and 20 dollars!

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#320 Dr. Naddelman returns to discuss Coronavirus

Scott Benner

Coronavirus COVID-19 discussion for 4-02-2020

You can always listen to the Juicebox Podcast here but the cool kids use: Apple Podcasts/iOS - Spotify - Amazon AlexaGoogle Play/Android - iHeart Radio -  Radio Public or their favorite podcast app.

+ Click for EPISODE TRANSCRIPT


DISCLAIMER: This text is the output of AI based transcribing from an audio recording. Although the transcription is largely accurate, in some cases it is incomplete or inaccurate due to inaudible passages or transcription errors and should not be treated as an authoritative record. Nothing that you read here constitutes advice medical or otherwise. Always consult with a healthcare professional before making changes to a healthcare plan.

Adam Naddelman, MD 0:08
Hello, everyone, welcome to Episode 320 of the Juicebox Podcast a few weeks ago on episode 314 right about that 314 Dr. Adam Naddelmann came on to talk about the state of the Coronavirus. Well, Adam is back. And it may only be a few weeks later, but the world feels five years different. Please remember that nothing you hear on the Juicebox Podcast should be considered advice, medical or otherwise to always consult a physician before making any changes to your healthcare plan. The beginning of this episode is about how things are changing. But a large majority of it is really just two friends talking about how this whole situation is making them feel.

I want to thank touched by type one, and the Contour Next One blood glucose meter for sponsoring this episode of the Juicebox Podcast. Go to Contour Next one.com. And at the top, you'll see a button that says get a free Contour Next One meter, click on that you'll find out if you're eligible.

So I went out to get groceries just now a couple hours ago. And I'm you know, I've got gloves on. I've got the schmutz in my pocket. You know, like I took I didn't have any to cover my face was always like a side took like one of those like scarves that go around your neck and just kind of pull up. So now I look like I'm gonna rob the place. It's funny how now no one cares about that. By the way, there are going to be amazing armed robberies, once people figure that out. And right. And so I'm in there, you know, the stuff that goes on my hands, I kind of clean the card off, I do what I can do. But by the time I get done, it's like a workout. because everything's just different all of a sudden, like nobody gets near each other. So there's waiting and you feel really rushed to hurry while you're taking the food. The you know, I had to do a checkout on a full cart of groceries like by hand because the the ones that had cashiers were taking for ever. And I got done and I walked outside, I was like, I don't want to eat this badly.

Like, I get it, like hooked up to something where I can just get my nutrition, what I've ever done a once a week, why would 100% take that, but what

I was seeing was what was really super kind of interesting, is let me submit the slide off a little bit is that, um, what I noticed is that all the little things that are built into our life for convenience, they're gone. At least Yeah, right. And yeah, they, and then suddenly, you're left with the actual like, process of going grocery shopping. I couldn't enjoy the music. I had my ears. You know, you couldn't you couldn't see. You know, you couldn't see a guy rolling his eyes and his wife and like give him that knowing look like yeah, I'm married to like, you know, like all that was gone. And if if you had a mask on, or you're covering your mouth in any way, and someone wasn't they looked at you with two looks. It was either Oh my god, that guy sick? Or, oh God, should I have a mask on to? And so everyone's in that, like they're doing that calculus while they're walking around constantly. And it's just I don't know, I was like, this sucks. This can't stay like this forever. Because, you know, all the reasons I like, you know, being alive are kind of stripped down to this. I feel like an old man was like, this is the way the world should be.

No, I know. So

you and I recorded a couple of weeks ago now. Is that about right? timewise.

I actually loved it was March 16. Oh, that was two weeks. Little more than two weeks, but feels like three months. But yeah, about two weeks ago. Have you been out of your

house? Are you going to work? How do you handle work?

Unknown Speaker 3:57
Yeah. Now, I'm still going to work where you are limiting, incredibly who's allowed to come into the office that we're seeing well visits, we actually have a screener at the door that's stopping people making sure that no one sick, no one's had a contact with a known positive case. Or traveled now and travel is not really an issue anymore. because no one's been anywhere now for the last month but and then if the answer to any of those questions is yes, then they don't come in. Right. If it's no then they come in. Now that's only for the people that actually even get an appointment. We're not letting anybody walk into the office at all. So you can't just like strolling because you want to, you know, begin an appointment. And we're primarily doing just well visits and the kind of sick visits that are not like infectious illnesses. So, you know, the kid who falls off his bed and sprains his ankle, that that kid can come to our office. But other than that we're really not bringing the sick kids in at all. We're doing all telehealth for the

Adam Naddelman, MD 4:57
our most practices, doing this

Yes, or even more stringent than that,

okay? Like some people are being like, Hey, you twisted your ankle. Go online.

Unknown Speaker 5:09
Google spray

Adam Naddelman, MD 5:09
now they're like, yeah, they're like, all right, either like, you know, try to create a mask out of three socks or, I mean, not a mask. I'm so used to saying that create a, you know, ankle brace and a three sock. Yeah. Or go to the ER, no, we're still seeing kids that are that we think are relatively low risk. If someone shows up and they're not sure about anything, we just put a mask on them right away. And the doctors are all wearing masks and goggles and gloves. Now for every single patient, including balls.

I'm looking at this, there's a couple of sites that are tracking things. Now. I've been using this one and Cove to 19 dot live. And it's got total confirmed worldwide cases at over a million.

Unknown Speaker 5:53
Yeah, the one I like the best is the john Haas is the one from Johns Hopkins. Okay. You've seen that one. But that's the that's their that actually the very first one. I was looking at that before there even any cases in the US. That one is amazing. But yeah, there are over 1,000,001. That's just confirmed cases. Obviously,

Adam Naddelman, MD 6:11
I switched to this one thing, I switched to this one, their numbers incredibly consistent with what I just saw, and the other one. And it's funny too, like, obviously, if you take away personal freedom, like China, I mean, they're probably not reporting all their deaths. Right. But it's an incredibly low number.

Unknown Speaker 6:31
While they, there, the measures that they took were much more draconian than anything we could ever do here. Yeah, they were dragging people South Korea to I mean, South Korea was more just extremely aggressive testing. And then quarantining people who were positive quickly. So they had the ability to test a crazy number of people and get the results back fast. Right? So anyone with any symptom gets tested, they're positive, they're immediately quarantined. Unfortunately, because the testing here lagged, for so long, there's so many people walking around that, had it in the last month don't even know it right? Or have it right now, and can't get that

Adam Naddelman, MD 7:09
because of that this is going to go on much longer than we were hoping it is, isn't it? Like this isn't just a month away from being over?

Unknown Speaker 7:21
Well, I think it's gonna depend on how you define over. You know, I think that's a big part of it. I mean, I, but yeah, I don't think this virus is going away so quickly, unless there's some dramatic breakthrough with treatment or with a vaccine, but even a vaccine would take probably six months to 18 months to actually get to Market. But yeah, there's no reason to expect it's going to go away, it's just a matter of trying to spread out the cases to give the hospitals a chance to handle the volume. And right now they're getting close to not being able to handle it in some places.

Adam Naddelman, MD 7:51
And so what we're seeing right now is just sort of like the, it's, it's the all at once, feeling like it's happening to so many people, you know, within a three or four week period, and that's why the numbers keep kind of like growing as exponentially as they are, but you're gonna still hear like six months from now, you're gonna hear somebody got this and ended up in the hospital on event, like, it's not gonna, it's not gonna lessen or change. The frequency is what is what will change like, you don't I mean, like, yeah,

Unknown Speaker 8:21
yeah, it's hard to know. I mean, like, it depends on how many people are actually positive right now that we don't know about. There's some people estimating it could be five to 10 times as high as what's being reported in the US, especially in areas where there's a lot of cases like in New York, okay. So think about it this way, right? Like, if that number was really, you know, like, I don't know what the exact number is, for the US now, it's got to be a couple hundred thousand, at least, you know, several hundred thousand because it's a million worldwide. But let's just say it's 10 times higher than that. There will be a point where there's some protection within communities, because so many people have had it, that a new case coming into the community can wreak havoc the way it is now, because it's similar to like if, you know, chickenpox shows up in your child's school, and 99% of the kids there has either had it or been vaccinated, it can't do any damage. Right, right. So there will be a point where you have enough kids protected from an illness, where if it comes into the school, it's not going to be able to do the same amount of damage now. So that, that leads to the argument that some people are trying to make that well, why bother with all the social isolation, just get everybody sick right now, and then we'll be done with it. The whole reason you can't do that is because the hospitals could not handle it. And you'd have a ton of people dying for no reason, right? They couldn't get the care they need.

Adam Naddelman, MD 9:39
It would also overwhelm, you know, we think of overwhelming health care workers as their time and effort, but you could also get them sick. And oh, yeah, we'll and you could lose a number of them too. And, you know,

Unknown Speaker 9:53
yeah, there's been over 100 in the US that have died, supposedly, that that was. Yeah, that's the way to tally that up. But I saw but now there's no question about it. You overwhelm the whole system. It's not just the ventilators in the ICU, it's the how many masks you have on the gown. Do you have on the gods? do you have? Do you have the right equipment to test people? Right? If you if you take, you know, 5 million people and get them sick all at once, there's no way any health care system could handle that. Yeah,

Adam Naddelman, MD 10:19
we're you're basically, I mean, I don't know, we're draining a pool with a small hose so that our yard doesn't flood, you know, you could just knock the side down, let all the water out. But that would ruin the lawn. And so you're just gonna let it out a little bit at a time so we can manage what's happening. And so this is all

Unknown Speaker 10:35
well, and the other big thing. The other big thing about that is the slower that initial, or the lower that initial peak is, and the more the wider it is, the more time it takes, the more opportunity you give all of these drug trials that are going on the vaccine trials, the you know, you give it all a chance to start to, you know, for the science to catch up with what's going on and with the hope that at some point, you can really flatten it by treating it in a way that actually decreases the amount of serious illness. Right. And

Adam Naddelman, MD 11:05
and you're starting to hear stuff like I don't have you heard like, some people are trying z packs and having success.

Unknown Speaker 11:11
Yeah, it's the data is not there, unfortunately. So that's the whole plaque whittle is the name of the medication, which is also called hydroxychloroquine. It's a it's a medication that's used for certain autoimmune conditions, like lupus, for example. Very good for lupus. So one of the early studies, there was a study done in China and one in Italy, where they took Black Widow and they added the thermax to it. And they were different doses and the data was mediocre. It wasn't great, but they thought maybe there was a chance. So they've rolled that out and a lot of the sicker patients in the hospital. But unfortunately, the the data that's coming back is not super promising. But people started hoarding platinum. all over the country. Of course, right away. It might work. There was one guy that ate his fish food or fish cleaner or something because it was made with hydroxychloroquine and the same chemical. Yeah. And he died. Unfortunately, he died his wife in the ICU, but so No, there's not a lot of data yet to support that. That's gonna be the thing that's gonna make this all change.

Adam Naddelman, MD 12:09
Yeah, it's I think it's what, you know, we've all grown up with the movies like you just think like there's gonna be a guy late at night in a dark room and he's gonna you know what it is chewy sweet tarts, kills the Coronavirus. I can't believe it took us you know, and then it all goes away. And that's just I don't see that happening. I'm assuming, you know, I heard some, you know, the one of the doctors that's featured in that pandemic Netflix series. He's company came out yesterday, and they feel like they're on to something for inoculation. But at the same time, he said, you know, bright lights, maybe nine months, if we're right to get it like all together. That's the other thing is it's the

Unknown Speaker 12:53
first human vaccine trial started in Seattle a couple of weeks ago. But that stage, the stage that they're at in terms of the testing of safety. So it's sort of like, let's make sure that doesn't cause any harm first, right? Like, once they finish that step, then it sorry, let's see what kind of effect it might have. But that's they said they're 12 to 18 months minimum, and they don't even know if it's effective yet,

Adam Naddelman, MD 13:14
right? It's just, you know, I have, obviously you do too, but I have that background from watching my wife, I know how long it takes from, hey, we think this is gonna work to it works. Here it is in a box

Unknown Speaker 13:27
name. You know, I mean, the only difference now I think is for probably the first time ever, you have all of these different labs in different universities in different companies that are all working towards the two goals, right, they're working towards finding an effective treatment, and they're working towards trying to find a vaccine. So some are doing vaccines, some are doing treatment, some of the bigger companies are trying to do both. And the interesting thing is for the first time, they're actually sharing a lot of their inflammation. Yeah, so like when someone thinks, Oh, this might be you know, a step in the right direction, they are publicizing that together, and they're working together. So I don't know that you've ever had a situation where essentially, the entire world is trying to figure this out all at the same time. So that has to make you a little bit optimistic, it shouldn't be that difficult to figure out a treatment and to figure out one that can be ramped up quickly, but their energy being attacked by a lot of different angles, and just what they're trying now first is the kind of possibilities that already exists. That's where that whole black window thing came from. Because there was some thought that it has some anti anti viral activity when you do test them, like has to stop. So they said, Yeah, you know, there's a chance my work, sometimes it works for the flow, let's try it and they just started giving it to people with the hope that it would work. Same thing goes with

Unknown Speaker 14:41
dinner Mac, you know, that's another medication that has some amount of antiviral activity, not enough to recommend it for cold. But they figured, hey, let's just try it. Right now. I think that is one reason to be optimistic. You've never had the whole world working together. That's because all the people who could benefit financially from making a drug like this weren't all at the same time. thinking, Oh, I could get this.

Unknown Speaker 15:02
That'll that'll straighten your right up.

Unknown Speaker 15:05
Yeah. That will that will change your thought process. Yeah, you know what, let's just

Adam Naddelman, MD 15:09
whoever gets the money's good. I just want the pill, or whatever it ends up being well, good, you know, a mother necessity and all that, you know?

Unknown Speaker 15:17
Yeah, let them be I will say I mean, unfortunately, there's just not that much right now that looks super promising. So you have to really try to get it away from the most vulnerable people. And that's when the distancing comes in?

Adam Naddelman, MD 15:31
Well, it's interesting, because, you know, there's a difference between what's really, I mean, like, always, there's a difference between what's happening, and what people want to be happening or what they share, you know, when they're talking online to each other. You'll hear some people say, like, we should, we should talk about how many people have recovered. That's positive news. And I think that's true. I think we should, I also don't think that doesn't make sexy television. So you don't hear about it as much. And it is a shame. I mean, when you look at the real numbers, as I'm, you know, I moved over to the site you're talking about, we have United States total recovered over 800 total deaths, 5600, but total confirmed 236,000. So, you know, that's, that's still it's a it's a reason to be encouraged. And it's also a reason, you know, if you're part of the 5600, it's a reason to think this is the worst thing that's ever happened. And I think both are valuable points of view, do you?

Unknown Speaker 16:25
Yeah, no, I agree. I mean, I think the two things that we really need are the ability to do a blood test to prove that you've had it. Right, that would be pretty cool. Which you can do that for things like the measles or moto or other viruses, right? They're called titers, where you do bloodwork and approve that you have antibodies to that specific virus. Okay. Supposedly, that's not that far away. That would be super helpful, because then you could say, yeah, you know, back in January when I was sick and not feeling great, I wonder if I had it? Well, turns out, you did. Yeah. So that all of a sudden changes a lot of things. Because it looks like from all the data that is out there so far, you it doesn't seem like you're going to get it again. So imagine, like if you could prove to healthcare workers, Look, you've had this, you can go take care of these patients, and you don't have to be afraid that you're going to get it again. Right. So that's one thing. The other thing is, like I said, all those people walking around thinking they might have had it, you can prove that they did. So if you can do that, and if you at the same time can actually rapidly test people to show symptoms, you could start to envision a world where you could let people get back to their life, right? Because you could say, at the very first night of symptoms, you must get tested. And if you do that, and you are then quarantined for two weeks, you're gonna ideally protect the people that could really get sick and are vulnerable. You could also do a test to prove all the people that have already had it. So they could say, look, I have my, here's my test. I already had it, I'm good. And you can continue to really protect the most vulnerable people. Yeah, you can. We don't have any we have none of those mistakes yet,

Adam Naddelman, MD 17:52
you will also be able to say, hey, you don't have it. This is your seasonal allergies. Go ahead and keep moving. You know, right. Yeah. So the tests, I keep hearing. I mean, listen, it's politics. Right. So I understand, like, we've got this many tests out here. But I was like, yeah, that seems like 25 million too few. Isn't that a lot? You know, like?

Unknown Speaker 18:13
I mean, the reality is, we are living in New Jersey, which is the second hardest hit state right now after New York. And if you think you have it is very hard to get a test unless you are really sick. And I have friends who work in the emergency rooms of children's hospitals up and down the East Coast. And they they say, I can't test you unless you're like about to get admitted to the hospital. Yeah, you know, so yes, there are pop up sites. Every once in a while you hear Oh, there's a site by the Quaker bridge mall is a site by, you know, whatever. But the problem is that they run out of tests as quickly. And so it's, you know, there's not, you cannot get tested right now, easily. Unless you are about to go into the hospital. I have a friend who was tested

Adam Naddelman, MD 18:57
in Ohio. And she said, first of all, not pleasant having the swab putting her nose. She had a bloody nose when it was over. And then she got a call that said that the lab spilled her sample and she had to come back again.

Unknown Speaker 19:10
Yeah, so the people don't realize the test is the one that did that is used most frequently is a nasal pharyngeal swab. So that's exactly what it sounds like, in your, in your nose and into the back of your throat. So it's not just like, you know, touch the inside of your nostril. It's, let's see if I can touch your tonsils through your nose. Which is what it is

Adam Naddelman, MD 19:30
on. Anybody was gonna ever speak to you. Yeah.

Unknown Speaker 19:34
Right. So it is not pleasant. But that's the kind of sample you have to get. The potential for bloody noses is the potential they lose it. You know, I've heard multiple stories about people getting tested, and they never even get the result because it gets lost. Right?

Adam Naddelman, MD 19:47
Yeah, I mean, it's not what it should be. Yeah, it's crazy right now. They are working on tests like fast tests that seemed like why they're coming around.

Unknown Speaker 19:57
I mean, we get stuff you know, I get emails from companies that claiming that they're going to have it soon. But it's not anywhere near like, Hey, I can drive by get my nose swabs and find out 10 minutes later that I'm positive or negative, like, I don't think that's anywhere close, when you guess what they did everywhere else in the world,

Adam Naddelman, MD 20:14
when you get contacted like that, because you're the either president of your practice, is that a salesperson trying to get the head of the line? Like, is that a little bit of sound shift going on? Sometimes?

Unknown Speaker 20:23
It depends. Yeah, I mean, a lot of times, it's what it's like blast, you know, that are going out to anyone who's in their system. Sometimes it's the sales thing. Sometimes it's, you know, usually the sales things come more from like the rats that we deal with, and they go right to our lab. But, you know, we would know if, like, if there was an ability to get people tested rapidly. That would be that would be the biggest story on the news. Yeah, it just doesn't exist right now. Right?

Adam Naddelman, MD 20:49
Yeah. No, I know. It's, I, I always think when people are, they'll say like, Is there a cure for type one diabetes? I'd say, you know, you don't have to track it every day. If it happens. You'll find it right.

Unknown Speaker 21:00
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's not like, Oh, my God, you found it on Facebook. Yeah, that did around. I can't believe you found it before you went. I

Adam Naddelman, MD 21:06
can't believe I live six years longer with this than I had to because I just didn't write it cured it. Yeah. You'll hear later. Yeah, it's hard not to be anxious, though. I mean, are you how are you doing with me? You're going out there you're going to work is? Is your wife leaving the house?

Unknown Speaker 21:21
Very, very, very infrequently. Yeah. Like, go to like the supermarket, buy 10 things and get out of there as fast as you can, like, that sort of thing. But like even at work, I mean, I am spending most of the day with the door closed in my office doing telehealth. Seeing a handful of well, patients.

Unknown Speaker 21:43
Nothing like what we would be typically doing right.

Adam Naddelman, MD 21:46
Do you miss it? Like the contact with people?

Unknown Speaker 21:50
Yeah, it's a it's very strange. I mean, I think for all of us, it's really strange, especially like, doing what I do where you spend all day long, talking to people face to face, right. So it's just weird when that I mean, now at least with telehealth, you can see some people. But it's, it's just bizarre, like, I think, the mental health aspect of this, not just for, you know, healthcare workers, but anyone who's in any kind of a position where you work with people face to face. Yeah, it's just weird to turn all of that off. We were meant to be social people. And it's just, it's bizarre.

Adam Naddelman, MD 22:22
I agree. I also think that if you exploded out into the future, you know, like, you hear people say, nobody's gonna have to go to work anymore. And I think well, then what are all those buildings for? What are we going to do with them? And, you know, what are the vines gonna grow over top of them? We're all just gonna live in our domiciles. From now on, what about people who don't like I'm at a house, they have a room where I make a podcast, some people live in a room this size, you know, so those people, you can't expect a human being to stay in a in a New York City apartment, every day all day long, forever and ever. Like, that's

Unknown Speaker 22:54
not Oh, yeah, I mean, I think clearly, like when this is over, however it ends, we're going to go back to work, and they're going to, you know, they're going to return to some semblance of normalcy. But I do think that it is made blatantly obvious, a bunch of things like a bunch of travel that people do for work is a total waste of time, you can accomplish it now on a computer. There are a lot of people that have been trying to get jobs where they can work from home, either because they're, you know, physically disabled, or they have some kind of condition where they can't get into an office. And they've been denied those opportunities. And clearly, they could do it from home. Right? So I think there's, it's gonna change a lot. But you're right. I mean, people are still gonna have to go like people, especially that are in service industries. How are you supposed to work in a restaurant or hotel from your house or a toast to cut hair? Or, you know, clean teeth, or see patients or whatever it is? You can't do that from your house? Yeah, 100% of the time now. And

Adam Naddelman, MD 23:50
I mean, there's some things like, don't get me wrong, I guess I want to go to a baseball game I've ever wanted to go to a baseball game so badly in my life as I have in the last three weeks. But they're, they're not going to just like sports aren't just going to become a thing that happens in front of an empty building. You know, they're talking about it now. But it's not going to give her the NBA talk about like, maybe we'll go to Las Vegas and just hold a tournament. My son's like, you mean, like an AAU tournament, like, you just all show up at the same place? I'm playing I'm like, I think that's what they're talking about, you know?

Unknown Speaker 24:21
And he's like, I mean, I think if anything, like you know, accelerate some of this eSports stuff that he put talking about, that you can play from your, you know, your from your couch. But no, I mean, look, I think at some point, you know, at some point, you're going to have a return to society, that's going to look a little different. But some of these things are going to either either they're going to come back or they're going to go away altogether, right.

Adam Naddelman, MD 24:43
You're gonna find out what you don't care about all the sudden.

Unknown Speaker 24:46
Yeah, yeah. Right.

Adam Naddelman, MD 24:48
I think I was. I saw somebody recently that I know. And their very first statement to me was, hey, are the divorce rates going up? And I said, Is this a personal commentary on how it's going

Unknown Speaker 25:02
I saw I saw something funny online, they just said in nine months, we're either going to have a lot of babies, or a lot of justifiable homicide, because parents are going to kill their children and they kill each other, like, people are just going bananas. I mean, there's only I don't care how big your house is. There's always so much room when you have like, you know, to get away large children. Yeah, like at some point, you need to get out, get away from each other.

Adam Naddelman, MD 25:25
And people are just getting, like I said this this morning, I said to everybody, listen, the weekends almost here, we have to find something mindless to just do. You know, like, that isn't just passing time, like we have to get together. And I don't care what it is. And I don't know how to figure that out. We're not leaving. I mean, maybe it'll be nice enough, we can go outside a little bit on our property. But we can't just keep doing this over and over and over and over again.

Unknown Speaker 25:49
I've been saying the same. It's funny that you say that, because I had been saying the exact same thing. Have you ever felt like time moves more slowly than it's moving these last three weeks? I mean, like you and I said, wasn't even three weeks ago, right? It feels like it's been six months. I mean, the days the hours, crawl by the days go so well. You know, you're stressed and anxious. And then the evening comes and you're like, Alright, well, now I guess, like we watch a different TV. And then what are you supposed to be doing differently? Yeah, in the on the evening, or, you know, on the weekend, we'll know the unbelievable

Adam Naddelman, MD 26:21
zero lie. I took the dogs out yesterday morning after I fed them. My neighbor's taking the recycling down to the street. And I said to her, why are you doing that? And she goes, I don't know what's out at other people's houses. And it's like, Oh, all right. So sometimes there's a mass hysteria that happens around recycling. And if you've ever seen this, someone gets the day wrong, puts the recycling out and everyone on the streets like oh, my God, it must be the recycling. Dan, I didn't know. So I just don't like Yeah. All right. So I took my recycling down. I come back in the house, I text my neighbor on the other side, I go, why did I just take my recycling down? And he goes, it's recycling day. And I said, It's Friday. And he goes, dude, it's Wednesday. And I went, oh, sorry to bother you. I was not kidding. I wasn't. I don't usually misunderstand what day it is. Friday to Wednesday, I had no context for what day it was. It just didn't matter anymore.

Unknown Speaker 27:15
But yeah, I mean, I think it's

Unknown Speaker 27:18
right. And I think people, you know, there's a certain rhythm to our lives that we've all gotten so used to where you, for most people, your work your five days, and then you have your two days off. I mean, a lot of us work weekends and evenings and things like that. But that's the general pattern of our society. And I just, I don't know how long we can go without any real distinction between what day it is some sort of schedule so many people. Yeah,

Adam Naddelman, MD 27:40
yeah. No, I had the strangest feeling. Like I said, leave in the grocery store today. Like I I'm not listen, I'm not depressed. I'm like, I haven't been overwhelmed by three weeks in my house. But I was like, what's the point of all this? If I can't talk to people? And like, what am I doing? I'm just staying inside, you'll have to go run and get a piece of chicken again, like, I can't be everything, you know,

Unknown Speaker 28:01
now I know. I know. I mean, like, I'm, I am relatively hopeful that we are going to start to see the case number and the real and the hospitalizations and all that start to kind of peak, and then start to, you know, head downward. And, and it's going to be a big sort of sigh of relief. Once you start seeing that. I mean, if you look at like what's going on in California, like, it's very interesting, when you compare California to New York, New York is very densely populated. Obviously, you have New York City, which is the most densely populated city in the country. And so they really had no way out of this, like they were going to get hit no matter what California enacted really tough measures pretty early on. And if you look, there's some evidence that it may actually be working like the cases, you know, these people that are getting sick or quarantined off and are not getting other people sick. Right. So that's how it's really starting to come down. And if you can get it down enough, then you can really start to think about what what's it going to be like when you know, the number of new cases per day is like, not, you know, a couple thousand Yeah,

Adam Naddelman, MD 29:04
that's it. That's no better, you know, proven then when you look at New Jersey, how the deaths in New Jersey are clustered in just towns. You know, they mean, like, it's, you know, like, Oh, do you live in Mars? 40 people died here. like, Wow, really? You know, like, that's, that's super interesting. And

Unknown Speaker 29:23
yeah, I think that just because they probably if you can go through Mars and test every person, you'd find that like, you know, 4000 people have it in Maurice for probably 10,000 people have it. And if you look further,

Unknown Speaker 29:37
further away, you get less of it.

Adam Naddelman, MD 29:38
You'll also find I bet the people in like New Jersey, obviously like we're basically a bedroom community for New York in North Jersey, right, like everybody leaves New York and goes to New Jersey and goes home. And, and so New York, New Jersey for the you know, my just won't be the same thing for for this situation, honestly, because the people so freely go back and forth. worth

Unknown Speaker 30:01
while you can do that, because the further north you get more and more if you're in Bergen County right now you might as well be in Manhattan. Yeah, pretty much the same thing right

Adam Naddelman, MD 30:09
now. I'm interested to see what happens to places like California that button it up quickly. I'm also a, you know, I was wondering what you thought about. You see the cruise ship that nobody will let port anywhere?

Unknown Speaker 30:22
Yeah. So Florida, apparently is going to take them now.

Adam Naddelman, MD 30:26
Last night, they were saying they were just going to take the Floridians off of it. Have you heard more since then?

Unknown Speaker 30:30
So this morning, I heard that the the governor of florida said we can hit that he had assurances from one or two healthcare systems in that area that they can handle the volume, the volume, I suspect that they tested the people on the ship. And they figured out who actually has it and they said, Oh, well, maybe that's not as bad as we thought. So they're going to grab, they're going to take off the people that are sick. Yeah.

Unknown Speaker 30:51
Yeah, I know.

Unknown Speaker 30:52
That was I you know what? I think honestly, it's like, if you're going on a cruise ship now. And that cruise gets stuck. I mean, I think there's a point of personal responsibility here. Like who in their right mind would get on a cruise ship right now? Yeah. with what's going on? What like when did that cruise leave? And where did it leave from? Right? That's what I don't get. Yeah, no one takes a three week cruise to Fort Lauderdale. Right? Right. So it had to have last in the last 10 to 14 days, like who in their right mind would get on a cruise ship right now I don't get it.

Adam Naddelman, MD 31:20
When we were a young family, we took a cruise. And Cole was in the pool. And then suddenly everyone was rushed out of the pool. But water was drained out of the pool, I noticed a little human poo in the middle of it that a guy went in, cleaned it out. And at that moment, I turned to Kelly and I was like, well, we're not doing this again. I've never been somewhere before where this happens. So let's not go to places for stuff like this

Unknown Speaker 31:46
happens. It's just I mean, I just think that industry is going to be in serious trouble. Like, I just can't imagine, once people can travel again, if you had a rank the types of trips you can take, I can't imagine people are going to say Sign me up for the next cruise. I mean, that's a statement against any particular cruise line or anything but just the idea of being on an enclosed, closed, basically a hotel at sea. With hundreds of people with potential for elements like this. It just doesn't seem rational. I keep waiting.

Adam Naddelman, MD 32:17
I wondering if, you know, one of the airlines is gonna not go out of business to like, at some point?

Unknown Speaker 32:22
They definitely Yeah, I think they definitely are unless they get they've managed to get the money from the government quickly,

Adam Naddelman, MD 32:28
in the past even fold it together at times in the past. Am I remembering that right?

Unknown Speaker 32:33
I think so. Like I mean, some of these airlines have been different things like remember Eastern Airlines. And like, you know, so who knows, I mean, so much of that industry is, I think is they operate on margins that aren't as big as you might think they are until you do something like this to them. And it's just devastating. Although I do find it interesting that when the oil spike happens a few years ago, you remember there was like they were they started charging people fuel tax, because gas prices were so high. I don't hear anything about them. Pulling the fuel taxes off. Now, gas costs $2 a gallon again.

Adam Naddelman, MD 33:05
You can't suddenly fly somewhere for $55. I mean, I listen in fairness, I you know, we were just slightly ahead of the this whole thing happening when I was getting back out of Florida when Cole was playing. And I flew home from Florida to Newark. Just me and nine other people on a jet. Yeah. I mean, there's no money being made there. You know?

Unknown Speaker 33:30
Yeah. They just say like somebody asked andrew cuomo about why they shut down the airports in New York. And he said, you know, it's first of all, it's a very difficult thing to do, because you need goods to come in and you need health care workers coming back and forth. But he this is what he said the other day. Apparently, the the number of passengers traveling in and out of the New York City airports in New York, JFK, LaGuardia down 95% Oh, yeah. Yeah. So like, whether they're open or not. Nobody's nobody's in the airport anyway. So what's different is probably the safest place.

Unknown Speaker 34:01
There's no crazy.

Adam Naddelman, MD 34:03
So what would you say if I told you that, um, last weekend, I got up in the morning and I was fixing something around the house. And I found myself missing a piece that I needed. And I thought like that, I thought, no one will be at like Lowe's. I'll go there. It'll be me and the guy working there. And when I got there, the parking lot was so full. I turned around and went home. Like, do you think do you think there's sort of like a, I'm starting to believe that there's like that we I think as humans we set like false timelines for things. Like you know, I'll understand this better in a month, a week a year, like we do that to ourselves for for no reason. I used to I talked about it on here all the time. When Arden was diagnosed, I thought, what a year and I'll understand it better. And then when I didn't understand it better in a year, I actually said to myself, but it probably takes two years. Like why doesn't it take 17 and a half months? You don't mean like so I wondered if it if people hadn't woken up on Sunday morning and been like it's been a couple of weeks. This is probably okay. Now, you know, like I was interesting, but I wouldn't. Yeah, it sounds like no.

Unknown Speaker 35:05
Yeah, you know, I don't know. I mean, I think a lot of people that do work outside, like, especially contractors that, you know, are mostly outdoors. Like, I'm sure you see this to driving around, but the landscape guys are all out and doing everything, right. So I think they maybe they have a little bit of a false sense of security, because they think I'm doing a project outdoors, I got to get my equipment for the day, you know, you hope that they're keeping apart from their coworkers, but certainly seems a lot different than people that are working in office buildings or, you know, getting furloughed by companies, because the companies are basically almost going out of business. Right? It does seem like that industry for whatever reason, maybe there's maybe these guys are outdoors a lot more. I don't know. Yeah,

Adam Naddelman, MD 35:44
no, I don't know. It's just, it threw me off. And then I actually, you know, I basically had a conversation with myself on the way home where, because the first thought in my head was, what are all these people do it here? And then I said, Oh, yeah, you're one of them. So at least caught myself in time and said, my cell phone. But you know, as I was being, you know, morally outraged about there, not being concerned. I was like, I just did the same thing. But maybe we all felt the same thing. Like how there won't be anybody there. This will be completely okay.

Unknown Speaker 36:14
But yeah, I've had a bunch of conversations with people asking like, Oh, you know, what do you think about doing this? What do you think about doing that? And I think the answer is just got to be the same. Are you going to be within, you know, six feet of a person for more than 10 minutes? Yeah, the answer to that is, definitely then don't do it. If you think Well, probably not, I'm not really sure, then you probably shouldn't do it.

Adam Naddelman, MD 36:35
You know, have you heard today, I went downstairs and Kelly told me, they're starting to talk about it maybe being more airborne than they thought.

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Unknown Speaker 38:39
So this has been going on since China was the first one really dealing with it. And you know, I heard some interesting stuff today that they really don't think it is airborne, okay, I think it's just really infectious. So you can get, I think you can get confused by that. Because, you know, airborne means, like, I live in a building and my ductwork connects to the apartment above me, I can get it from the person above me. That's really what airborne is. Okay, that's not, there's no evidence that this can do that. I think this is by droplet. So I sneeze and you walk into the path of my droplets, they land on your face, you can get it. If it's a particularly infectious agent, it's easy to transmit it that way. Sometimes it's harder, like this is a pretty hardy virus, you sneeze onto the surface, and it can live there for a while. It has to surface and you get it like we were talking about last time. But airborne really means like, I you know, I got it through my air conditioning then another person. Exactly like legionnaires Right.

Adam Naddelman, MD 39:42
Right. Yeah. So it's it's tough because it really is tough because I mean, look at you and I are talking about this. A lot of people listen to us talk about this. And we are you know, I'm me. I shouldn't be telling anybody anything. You're a doctor. But, you know, because of the internet. Everyone's got the ability and all that You have to do is misuse the wrong word. And then the person who understands the word correctly hears it and says, Oh, I heard it was airborne. And and that's it. It's, it's a little, it's a little dangerous. It's why I like, well, it's why I would like it if the information would come out, you know, in

Unknown Speaker 40:17
easily

Adam Naddelman, MD 40:19
understood segments on a Dale, it would be nice if somebody just came out and ran through it in a way everybody could understand instead of you having to pick through all this information and decide what's right.

Unknown Speaker 40:28
Well, and I think the Internet has made that obviously 1000 times worse, and social media on top of that, because you end up having to look at sites where the opinions of the people that you're looking at are match what you already believe. And sometimes those people may not be experts on what you're reading about. It's why the messaging that comes from the top has to be clear and concise and accurate and not speculation. Right? And there from from the beginning, from January, even going back to probably the end of December, you heard tons of speculation ads are going to be a big deal is gonna be like the flu. Why do we, you know, stuff that just wasn't based on in reality, instead of just saying we were not 100%? sure yet. This is what we're seeing this is what we think. But when you dismiss stuff. People like to hear that because they're like, well, that's that sounds great.

Adam Naddelman, MD 41:21
I can tell you as a person who communicates with people, I've done it in writing, and you think you make something 100% clear in writing, there's no way someone will misunderstand this, or take it wrong, and then they they do and then you'll look back to what you wrote and think No, this this is unmistakably clear. But it doesn't mean someone won't miss here. I thought when I moved to talking, that would completely go away. But it doesn't, you can't say, you know, we, you have to say he can't say we think this is going to be something that last 10 days, because what a person hears is this is only gonna last 10 days, they drop the I think, you know, the qualifier. It doesn't. I think people hear what they want to hear very often.

Unknown Speaker 42:05
Yeah, I think they bring their own beliefs into the conversation. And then those beliefs kind of shaped the words that they're bringing in. And there's also you know, it's very much in a person's best interest to believe what they would like to believe because it makes you feel better. Yeah. Right. So like, like, if I hear something on the news, and it sounds like oh, my God, they might actually have it back to you. I'm going to say, Alright, I have to be a little skeptical because these things take time. But Wow, that would be amazing. If they and then within five minutes, five people will text me Oh, my god, did you there was a vaccine? And the truth is, right, that's not exactly what they said. He just said, there's now a study about vaccines

Adam Naddelman, MD 42:41
ready to put this in context for people living with diabetes, every time you hear a mouse has been cured from type one diabetes. That really should make you think not, oh, wow, there's almost a cure for humans. But it should make you think as well, I should probably try to find a way to become a mouse. Because, you know, like, there's, there's so you don't realize sometimes like what I asked you about the sales earlier, because there's a thing I call cure season around type one, where researchers float their research, looking for more money to continue their research. And the way they get that money is by saying, oh, we're hot on the trail of a cure, you know, and, to your point, when you hear that you or your kid or somebody you love is living with it, you think, oh, gosh, and it does it lifts you up a little bit, you know, makes you feel like you're close to something, which I've always found to be unfair. I don't like it when people do that. And so, you know, when we hear this information, like, Oh, it's gonna go away or back when he said, there's only 15 cases there'll be none. Soon. I was like, that's not even how math works. Yeah. But for every person that heard that and thought, That's not right. There was an equal amount of people heard that and thought, Oh, great. This will be over a week.

Unknown Speaker 43:55
Yeah, it's really a kind of an interesting study and so many different things. But one of them is definitely this like mass kind of communication and messaging and just leadership, I think, and there's a real benefit to being optimistic and sort of aspirational. And trying to get people to understand that there is going to be another side of this, like, we're not going to be stuck in this forever. There is a way out of it. Just because we can't see that way, for sure yet doesn't mean that you know that there's not a way but it's, there's a fine line between optimism and that sort of can do spirit and like we all need to pull together. And just talking in a way that is purely what you hope might happen. And have you have no basis for making those statements other than this is just what you wish for. Right? And I think like, you know, if it's a fifth grader making comments like that you excuse it, because you're like, Oh, look, I understand you really want to go back to school and do with your friends. And it's good to say, Oh, no, we're you know, we're going to be back on May 1 and to believe that that's fine. But if you're like the superintendent, and that's how you're talking to your students, you probably aren't going to keep your job as superintendent much longer. Cuz you're just not being rational or truthful, right? And I think, you know, the best leadership skill is actually telling people the truth. They'll respect you more, if you just, you're honest with them than if you are just making stuff up because it makes everyone feel better.

Adam Naddelman, MD 45:13
Yeah, I'm seeing that in a couple of places where places they just kept setting these arbitrary two week dates, like we'll see in two weeks. Finally, they're like, Listen, we'll let you know when it comes back. Okay, like, let's stop. Yeah, let's stop pretending it's gonna be two weeks from now. Yeah, I'm a, I'm a big fan of speaking to people like that. It's also important to remember that everybody doesn't feel or hear the way you do. Like, for me, if I told you how I thought about this, you'd laugh. It's ridiculous. It's either gonna be okay. Or it's not. That's literally how I think of this. It's either is or it isn't. If it is, yeah, right. If it's not, what am I gonna do about it? But I don't have anxiety. I don't live you know, I don't live with anxiety. I don't live with that kind of stuff. I have perspective. I tell people all the time, like you give your kid an incurable disease, it'll change your perspective on the world. You know, like, I can't sit around and worry about things. I don't have sway over, you know?

Unknown Speaker 46:08
Yeah, I think one of the challenges with this is that there's no, like, there's no escape from it. Like, if you turn the TV on, and you want to just watch the news about anything else you can't find, right? It's impossible. I was driving today. And I was flipping through the stations and I, I don't even know what channel it was. But they were clearly playing a segment that had been recorded, like four weeks ago, about some some guy's book that, you know, he wrote, and it was whatever it was. But I'm literally just thinking there is no chance they don't this, like last week, this has to be from a month ago. And the difference, just like they found it like oh, this is a great theoretical topic to be talking about what an interesting book, I'm thinking of myself, every person who's thought to this channel, just just turn it off. Because it seems like it's divorced from reality. Or reality. Now is this all the time, all you talk about with people that you like, even if you do a zoom, happy hour, and you're hanging out with your nine friends, it can be friends from college or friends from down the street? This is all you talking about? All the time, there's no escape.

Adam Naddelman, MD 47:06
Yeah, there's a real there's a line where you can feel it change. Like it just ended. I don't want to say it's never the same again, just that reality is, is is colored differently now. Because you have this new experience. Before today, what's happening has only been in most people's minds, the the plot of a movie, you know what I mean? And now it's, it's they they're seeing it happen. Now they recognize this tree and others researchers who were probably walking around going I've been I've been tried to say this too, and nobody's listening to me. But you know, I think it's good. You know, not everybody needs to walk around with that, that wait all the time. But I think forever moving forward, it'll, it'll color the way you feel until you generation out of it and get to that point where you know, you find people were like, don't remember 911. Because they Yeah, well, it happened or something like that.

Unknown Speaker 47:55
I think that's the closest parallel for us that we can think about is 911. But the difference or 911, like my feeling about, I was just talking about this with somebody else, like, on 911. I remember trying to get in touch with my wife, it was working in the city. And I remember like I was on my cell phone, and I was talking to one of my co workers. And I went outside onto my deck. And as I was standing on my deck, this is probably like, maybe 45 minutes after the second tower got hit right before the towers fell. But after the second one got hit, and I'm standing outside and I'm talking like what in the world is going on. And all of a sudden, I saw, like, three fighter jets fly overhead that were clearly coming from the south to go fly over New York. Right. And they were I've never seen anything move so fast in my life, right overhead. And I remember thinking to myself, This is insane. Like, are we literally the whole country under attack, and they were all the stories on other planes. And there's, you know, there's all that that sense of like, you don't know what's going to happen, right? This is that, but it's been going on for three weeks. Like, right, I mean, in all seriousness, like we are hearing every day about constantly. Yeah. And you're like, well, who's the next famous person you're gonna hear about that gets sick and who's like an older famous person who you're going to read about tomorrow? who passed away from complications from this? And oh, my god, did you hear so and so's brothers in the hospital with it? And so it's like, closing in, because there's so many more cases? Yeah, I think that is what's causing this incredible level of anxiety. But it's, it's like nothing, nothing our generation has ever seen. And, I mean, I guess this is what it must have felt like during the Second World War, except that went on for years. Right. And you had people that you cared about overseas fighting and you never heard from them. You didn't know what was going on.

Adam Naddelman, MD 49:35
And I don't know what you can do about it too. Like if you ever heard the the theory that Irish people are more susceptible to depression because of the potato famine. If you're looked at that, like that, I like that concept that they were so sad for so long that it got burned into their DNA. And I don't know if I believe that but I mean, in the short term, you know, this is this is your reality, all of a sudden, it's hard to think Something Oh,

Unknown Speaker 50:00
yeah, I mean, just there's so many things about the way we live as a people I think are gonna, they're just going to change unless there's a vaccine and a vaccine really soon or a treatment that's going to be shown to be that basically can just eradicate this, like the way that we did with smallpox you know, things like that, where there's where there's a vacuum that bad effective that you can say Coronavirus is gone. There's gonna be other pandemics. I mean, this is not gonna be the only time in our lives you have to deal with something like this, unfortunately, right?

Adam Naddelman, MD 50:29
I you know, it's funny, I think there's a real opportunity for like a worldwide celebration of something like that could happen, it could be a real unifying thing. I've also noticed my wife wanted to buy a used car. Like, right, she's been looking at these little weird cars that nobody has, they're not expensive, and she's like, this is what I want. That's all she could talk about. And this came up, I have not heard about that car one time. The other thing that I'm seeing happen, which is super interesting, is um, you know what virtue signaling is right? Like, you know, you say something on Facebook to prove to everybody you know, the right thing, you know, to me, like, there's that, that's all gone. Like, nobody's got any time for any first world nonsense. They're all just worried about this, like all this. I, I was saying to my son, you didn't realize how good your life was, and how much free time you had to fill with, like, other stuff because you weren't worried about anything. You know, like everything was just going the way you wanted it to?

Unknown Speaker 51:25
I mean, it does seem like there's still a small group of people that think they have all the answers with this. Yeah. Like I saw a comment on social media every day where someone was trying to argue that they don't have COVID they have Coronavirus, like what that person like that doesn't make any sense. The same thing. This Coronavirus It's called COVID-19 because it was from 2019. They first discovered it, it's the same exact thing, literally the same exact thing like how could you I saw like power and I didn't engage in it. I was just reading it but people going back and forth with this theory that just because you're ever Coronavirus interaction with this particular Coronavirus. It doesn't mean you have COVID. Like that is just completely not true. So there's still this weird like, No, I mean, some of the two is I guess, political, but it's stuff with like going after some of Trump's advisors that are trying to play it straight. And if you saw that stuff about Fauci, but apparently there's been people that are like after him and attacking him because he touched his forehead. During one of the press conferences, it looked like he was unhappy with something, someone else's thing. So they're attacking him, like with this fury that he needs, actually, he's actually now getting protection from the government. And if you saw that,

Adam Naddelman, MD 52:41
for trying to keep

Unknown Speaker 52:42
trying to help us all stay alive. There is an element of some of this stuff. But you're right. I mean, I think there's much less of this holier than thou sanctimonious nonsense that goes on online where you're like enough with you're showing us how smart you are about everything. There's less of that.

Adam Naddelman, MD 52:56
Yeah. And because, yeah, if you step back and watch one of those conversations, like you were talking about, you see, 10 1215 people come in, they're all saying something different. And then all of a sudden, like, oh, that person's right. And then you think that's how everybody feels about this. Like, maybe I'm, maybe I actually know that person's right. Or maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I just agree with them, like you were saying. So there's it, there's literally no benefit. It either serves to make you upset or serves to make you feel like hmm, I'm right about this. It's just, it's a very, but anyway, there's a lot less of it. I think people are focused now on, on core survival ideas. And it's different, you know, it's different now thinking about, do I want to risk getting sick? Do I need to do I need a chicken breast bad enough to risk getting sick? You know, maybe that'll help moving forward? I don't know. Maybe it won't. Maybe it'll be three weeks, there'll be a flag that goes up. This thing's all over and everybody will just go back to the way it was. I have no idea. Yeah,

Unknown Speaker 53:52
I mean, yeah, it is interesting, right? I mean, like, if, if all of a sudden tomorrow morning, we woke up and they said good news, it looks like this virus is weakening every time it jumps. And each virus can only infect X number of people. So it's gonna die out. Like that's what they that's what the studies show. And then, you know, and they said, and you know, all our models show that within two weeks, that's going to happen. I think two weeks later, you would have like, like Bourbon Street would be packed the beaches and follow the pack, people would be pouring beers on each other's heads. It would be like, the biggest celebration ever. And then 24 hours later, there's the argument online about nonsense and, you know, fighting over different things with the grocery store, and whatever. So it's hard to know. I mean, I hope I really hope it's a shortlist thing. I guess the impact it has on everyone and will be something we'll have to watch over time.

Adam Naddelman, MD 54:39
Well, what I've learned is, is that what you just said, where you were clearly saying, Let me make up a scenario and tell you how it would it may be and somebody just heard that and heard Oh, this is going to be over in two weeks because I because the disease indicated the same like power and it just dies out. It's you know,

Unknown Speaker 54:57
as I was saying it I thought I was thinking to myself, you should just edit That whole part out that someone's gonna hear just that piece and go, Oh my god, that doctor that was talking and said that it's not gonna be bad at all. That's not what I'm saying.

Adam Naddelman, MD 55:07
No, no. And I know but you could, you know, you listen away for a second you're listening while you're you're cleaning or something. I see it happen a lot. It's really, I'll get no, it's like you said this and I think to myself, No, I didn't. And then they're like, no right here, and I go look him he had a listen that again. That's not what I said. And then though Oh, yeah, I got it. Thanks.

Unknown Speaker 55:25
Well, and they saw the, you know, the really amazing thing about that is, so that's someone accidentally just not listening to the whole segment, right, you just pick up. But you can see how so easy to just take something that someone says out of context, and then use it for your own benefit. Yeah. Right. Like, you know, there's so many times where you hear a clip, a one sentence clip of something and you completely, like that clip I just said, If you would just pull that out and say, well, there's this guy saying there's going to be nothing like that can be manipulated so easily. It's ridiculous, right? Especially now with social media.

Adam Naddelman, MD 55:56
Yeah. Oh, no, please. There'll be a there'll be an animatronic you saying it, it's, somebody will look more real than you, your kids will look at and think that's definitely him. Right? So your children are pretty active people is this. My my son is he's getting to cage tiger. Like he's trying to like doll, his mind with video games. And he's keeping up with his college work. Which by the way, I explained to him how much the semester cost, and I didn't care what room he was in, I expected the same grades. Yeah, but he needs to get he needs to get warm. Like he just wants to go throw a ball or, you know, he's like, Can we just go to a field in the head or something like, I gotta get out of

Unknown Speaker 56:36
here? Yeah, I mean, my kids are the same way. My my older two are their high school age. So they're, they're actually decently busy with their work, like their school is doing a pretty good job with their online schooling, it's actually pretty, it's, it mirrors pretty well what they'd be doing in the classroom, because their classes are small. So they have like, real zoom lectures, and they have homework and assignments and assessments and stuff. My daughter's school is not quite as much just because she's only in seventh grade. So she gets done quickly. In terms of the physical piece of it, yeah, I've been trying to encourage them, like, get yourself outside as much as you can. My older one runs. So he's been still running, I think he still has a hope that the season is not completely lost, but nothing else is getting ready for college. But the other two are like, you know, they're used to going from a basketball practice to a baseball practice, or a softball practice or whatever. And they're like, not doing much. My daughter's softball program just started these virtual session, where they're doing like 45 minutes of conditioning to, you know, two or three times a week on zoom. And they're gonna do like virtual hitting sessions, where they're gonna, you know, yeah, try to do it. But it's not the same, right?

Adam Naddelman, MD 57:40
Yeah. You could learn to hit a baseball like that. I'd be standing usual. So

Unknown Speaker 57:44
it's hard to play softball by yourself, then maybe basketball. But so yeah, I mean, I think it's hard. It's a combination of their bodies aren't moving, and they're not engaging in the same way. I mean, could you imagine what this would be like? They 15 years ago with no zoom meetings and no FaceTime and no cell phones, like the way we have them now where you can, you know, see a picture of the person you're talking to imagine the isolation in that scenario, it'd be, it'd be unreal, like, if you had to turn on the nightly news, to find out what the weight is, is yet

Adam Naddelman, MD 58:14
to sit around 24 hours to get the new update, you know, Yeah, I was gonna try to find it. I heard last night that. In France, it was France, they were so worried about domestic violence, that they they basically put a safe word into play, and you could walk into any pharmacy and say that word and someone would collect you like to get you because you think about that if you're if you're a victim of domestic violence, this thing has now locked you in the room, you least want to be in in the entire world with no way to get out. I thought that's, that's pretty smart.

Unknown Speaker 58:48
One of my partners actually had to put a post up on Facebook about keeping your kids safe at home for the same reason. You know, these kids that are in kind of dangerous households, potentially abusive parents, whether it's emotional or physical. Yeah. And spouses too. I mean, this is a nightmare. Yeah, they can't go anywhere to escape any of it. It's a nightmare. I think, too, about the kids who said My brother is

Adam Naddelman, MD 59:13
my brother's in Wisconsin, and he, he was changing jobs. And he had a couple of weeks, you know, between jobs, and he thought, I'm gonna keep doing something. So he took this job delivering lunches for like a local school. And within two days of doing it, he goes, Scott, some of these kids take the lunch on Monday morning, the food I bring him on Monday morning, and they told me they haven't eaten since the thing I gave them on Friday. And he's like, and now they're all like, you know, so they kept doing it. They're still taking the meals to these places, and people are showing up like, Well, what about places that aren't or these kids just at home? Nobody's feeding them?

Unknown Speaker 59:45
That was one of the big reasons why New York didn't.

Unknown Speaker 59:49
Oh, really is because they were Yeah, they were I that's what I read that they were really concerned about the kids on the on the lunch program. Yeah. So they were bused. There were stories about bus drivers kind of drive their route with the kids. One drop them off. But as you can imagine that super inefficient

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:00:03
Yeah, yeah. a school bus to delivering lunches is a it's not gonna work. But yeah, there's just my point is that there's a lot that impacts people's lives that most of us wouldn't think about, you know? And yeah, you're right it is, you know, as all

Unknown Speaker 1:00:18
I mean, I've been saying it for a while, but like, one of the things I'm worried about is just what is going to happen to the economy, and not the economy in terms of like the numbers up, but just, you know, there's a certain dignity and getting up every day and going to work and like doing what you do getting paid for it, being able to support your family, having, you know, food for your kids to eat. Like, there's going to be times pretty soon when people are deciding, do I eat this? Or I give it to my kid, right? And I just don't know, how is this as a society, you can maintain this level of the closed off, Miss everything, before people are going to get desperate. You know, and I know that there's been three pieces of legislation now. And there's even rumblings about a fourth. But, you know, at some point, like, I'm nervous that people are going to really get desperate. And I don't know what that looks like, in certain parts of the country. Actually, every part of the country, you're not even confined to one area.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:01:14
No, I know. I mean, you see, listen, obviously, people are thinking about it, you want to see a long line still look at a gun shop, like people are in lines to buy guns, there are people who you never would have thought of owning a gun in their lives who are out trying to find one, because they're extrapolating out three months and thinking, this is gonna get upside down, and I can't protect myself. Even when you said what you just said, I thought, Oh, you know, you were gonna see soup lines again. And I thought, Oh, no, no, we're not because we can't get in line next to each other. So that won't happen. You know?

Unknown Speaker 1:01:43
Well, right. I mean, like, I think the way one of the things I keep thinking about is you see all the craziness with the toilet paper and, you know, that's like the perfect like, panic buying moment, right? So some people got nervous that they're going to get stuck in the house. So they started buying a lot of toilet paper. So then other people saw those people buying toilet paper and said, Oh, no, they're gonna buy up all the toilet paper, I need to go buy a lot of toilet paper. And then by the time we got to like the third round of that there was no more toilet paper, right? That's fine right now, because you're buying toilet paper, and you can afford to buy it. But what happens when you can't afford to buy the toilet paper anymore? Then what?

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:02:20
Yeah, no, yeah. No, I mean, it's a it's a slippery slope. I like I've said before I, I those zombie TV shows they write themselves, it's not hard to sit into a room and extrapolate out what happens when people get desperate. And it's, you know, as I'm sitting here, I've never thought about this once. But I'm like federalize the grocery stores. Just make food free for a while. Everybody gets, you know, enough to get them by and it keeps you that that kind of hope. But like you said to like, you'll want to be able to pay for it yourself. And at some point, that'll become that'll feel desperate to you like, I don't want this to be I don't want to be handed this food every time. You just run into it. Yeah, you turn into a robot at some point. Like, I think that life is in the, you know, it's in the moments, right? It's not the things you do. It's the things you do in between those things. It's, you know,

Unknown Speaker 1:03:10
yeah, I mean, look, I mean, I think like, we're talking scenarios where this goes on and never stops for six months, or 12 months or 18 months. I don't think that's gonna happen. I mean, I think especially when you look at what's going on in China and parts of Italy, that got absolutely walloped with this. They're starting to come back. I mean, if you look at like Wu Han, now they are more worried about cases coming in from the outside, right, in cases from within Milan. Yeah. Even though like the social distancing stuff started way too late. The testing is not anywhere near where it should be. We don't have the ability to prove someone had it, at some point, you're going to get to into a situation where the number of new cases is significantly dropping, right. And as it dropped, the comfort level with people returning to normal is going to come back. It's just a question of, When is that going to happen? I

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:03:55
didn't mean to say I thought it was gonna happen. I meant to say that in nuff people's heads, they're thinking about it.

Unknown Speaker 1:04:02
Like they're there. They look, I just gave that ridiculous toilet paper story. Right. So I'm thinking about it too, right. I think the reality though, is, we're not gonna get to that point, right? Like, I just can't believe in the United States of America in 2020. We're gonna be at a point where we're like, you know, no one could afford a roll of toilet paper anymore. Like, that's, I just can't imagine that's gonna happen. I'm gonna be sharing a loaf of bread for three days.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:04:26
Yeah, I don't think so. either. I just think that it's, um, I've talked to enough people who have anxiety issues now. And I know that something like this just, it just shoots them off like a rocket like they were doing like back when I was talking about everything just goes your way. They were struggling then.

Unknown Speaker 1:04:42
You know, oh, there's no doubt about it. I mean, think of it's the worst case scenario for people with anxiety. You know, even if you want to save one hour at a time, take it one day at a time, all that kind of stuff. That's fine, except that you don't even know what's gonna happen. So, you know, you can make yourself bananas and then if you try to take a week or two out. Are you trying to take all you know, my kids want to go back to college in the fall? Are they gonna be able to go or not? I'm hearing rumors like, you literally can make yourself insane. And there's no distraction. That's the problem.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:05:10
Yeah, the only thing to distract you is more thoughts like this. Like, I actually thought I had the conscious thought this morning, that since my son has been three and a half years old, he's been playing baseball. And since he's been about nine, he's been telling me he's gonna play in college, and now he's there, and they canceled the college baseball season. Are they gonna cancel? The next one was my next thought. Did he do? Right, you know, like, yeah. What else have we all done for nothing?

Unknown Speaker 1:05:35
It's so true. Like, I mean, I think when they closed the schools for a couple weeks, everyone was saying, oh, they'll probably close until like Easter, and they'll or they'll close them through spring break, and then they'll get back after break. And, and then it was sort of like, well, it's only getting worse. So why in the world are they going to get back? So now everyone's like, well, I'm probably just gonna be close for the year. And I still hope maybe there's some outside chance they get back for a few weeks, but odds are they're going to be closed for the year. Right? Well, so then you say, Well, why would their camp be open over the summer, right? And why would their sleepaway camp is supposed to go to an August field? And why would we be able to take that family vacation we're supposed to take in the summer and and then you're like, Well, why would the school reopened? And you can make yourself absolutely bananas, like life is gonna end? That's probably not really what's gonna happen. You just have to wait and see them.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:06:21
No, I agree. All right. Well, I feel better after talking to hopefully people. Yeah, but I seriously do I, you know, like you said, there's, there's, you get caught in a vacuum. And, you know, it's tough. Like Kelly's Kelly loves the news. And Kelly's like, if it rains, Kelly's watching the weather, she loves it. So even my son's, like, Mom, stop watching this. And she's like, I like knowing what's going on. She's not freaked out. But like, I walked through the room, sometimes they'll say, I don't want to hear about this right now. You know,

Unknown Speaker 1:06:49
I mean, it's so true. Like, I mean, you know, you and I have known each other a long time. And we've always been kind of, you know, into the politics of what's going on, and the process and all of that, like, we're kind of losing all that, like, you don't even get to be like a you know, political junkie anymore, because there's nothing, you can't even find coverage of the campaigns and all which I understand, right? But, and the sports is the same way. And there's so many things that people really enjoyed as part of their life. They faded into the background, but I'll tell you what, when they come back, they're going to come roaring back, right? I mean, could you imagine what baseball is going to be like that first weekend when they start playing again, or, or, you know, like, you know, first weekend of the NFL, or if they get to the NBA playoffs, or whatever it is going to be crazy. Oh,

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:07:33
I don't like I mean, I never again, I want I'll bring it back to diabetes for a second, I do anything for my daughter not to have diabetes. But there have been so many good things that have come from it, it's hard to believe that would not have happened if she didn't have it. I don't just mean like, I don't mean this podcast, I mean, just like, the way we think or see or things and there's gonna be a lot of good stuff that comes out of this. So you're right, like, you know, you turn on a baseball game as a baseball fan, and go, I cannot believe these guys are playing in front of 10,000 people, I wish there were more people there, people are going to be dying to get out. You know, and, and the ball teams are gonna have to make season tickets, pretty cheap, and you know, and it's gonna, everything's gonna feel exciting. Again, I think that we have so many options for how to spend our time that it kind of created like a paralysis. For some people, people are just like, why there's too many options. So I'm not doing anything. And now all of a sudden, people are gonna pick again, this is what I think's important. I'm gonna go, I'm gonna support it, I'm gonna do it. Yeah,

Unknown Speaker 1:08:29
I think, honestly, I think there's two things that are really gonna happen once we once you get back to normal one is people are gonna remember how nice it was to be with other people. And they're going to make more of a point to do that, like, it was very easy to just text or call or not actually see people face to face. I think that this is reminding people how you need that. And the other thing is this idea of like experiences versus things like, actually, you know, living through something right versus just owning something. I think that there is a trend towards that already. I think people are going to go way, way more towards that. Once this is all kind of moves back to normal.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:09:07
Well, I'm glad we did this today. Because like I said, I was this afternoon, I was a little like, what's the point? And then I, you know, I needed to be reminded the point is in a month or so this is going to be over and then you know, that'll be the point. I really appreciate you doing this. Thank you so much.

Unknown Speaker 1:09:21
Now of course.

Adam Naddelman, MD 1:09:24
Thank you so much, Adam for coming on the show and sharing your feelings about the Coronavirus. And for talking it through with me I felt good about that. I really did like chatting with a friend and you know going over real things that are happening and getting to like sort of sort through how I felt about them. Huge thanks. Of course the Contour Next One blood glucose meter go to Contour Next one.com to see if you're eligible for an absolutely free meter. And to check out all the reasons why this blood glucose meter and in my opinion is the best one Arden has ever used. And don't forget touch By type one.org check out their programs, their awareness campaign, their dance program. Everything, just, you know, pick through their website. Have a great time. Next week on the show, we're going to be doing some stuff with Jenny. And I actually have another person with type one diabetes who has had the Coronavirus and is done with it now. I'll be interviewing them tomorrow. And if everything goes well, I should be bringing you that show. In the next few days. Everybody stay safe. Cover your coughs cover your face. Don't forget your hand sanitizer and we'll get through this


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