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Curfew

                                                                                       Saturday
                                                                                       March 21, 2020
                                                                                       T: 582-7800                 implemented
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                 A
                 Aruba’s ONLY English newspaper ruba’s ONLY English newspaper
             In pandemic, word definitions shift and new lexicon emerges



            By MATT SEDENSKY
            PHILADELPHIA     (AP)   —
            Newscasts    bring   word
            of  "hot  zones"  and  "lock-
            downs." Conversations are
            littered  with  talk  of  "quar-
            antines"  and  "isolation."
            Leaders  urge  "social  dis-
            tancing" and "sheltering in
            place"  and  "flattening  the
            curve."
            In  an  instant,  our  vocabu-
            lary  has  changed  —  just
            like everything else.
            It seems like just days since
            people  were  looking  up
            "caucus"  for  clarity  on  the
            American political process
            or  "acquit"  to  decode  the
            Senate's  verdict  in  Presi-
            dent  Donald  Trump's  im-
            peachment.  Now,  those
            turning to online dictionar-
            ies  are  parsing  the  differ-
            ence  between  epidemics
            and  pandemics,  ventila-
            tors  and  respirators,  seek-
            ing  some  black-and-white
            answers in the face of total
            uncertainty.
            “Words matter,” says John
            Kelly, a senior research edi-  In this Wednesday, March 18, 2020 file photo, a sign reminding people about "social distancing" in the midst of the COVID-19 coro-
                                         navirus outbreak stands next to a roadway in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
            tor at Dictionary.com.                                                                                                          Associated Press
                    Continued on page 3

            Imports of medical supplies plummet


            as demand in U.S. soars



            By MARTHA MENDOZA and  tioning personal protective  arrived  from  China  about
            JULIET LINDERMAN             equipment like gloves and  a  month  ago,  on  Feb.  19.
            The  critical  shortage  of  masks.                       And as few as 13 shipments
            medical  supplies  across  The United States counts on  of  non-medical  N95  masks
            the  U.S.,  including  testing  receiving  the  vast  majority  have  arrived  in  the  past
            swabs,  protective  masks,  of its medical supplies from  month  —  half  as  many  as
            surgical  gowns  and  hand  China, where the coronavi-    arrived the same month last
            sanitizer,  can  be  tied  to  a  rus has infected more than  year. N95 masks are used in
            sudden  drop  in  imports,  80,000  people  and  killed  industrial settings, as well as
            mostly from China, The As-   more  than  3,200.  When  hospitals, and filter out 95%
            sociated Press has found.    Chinese  medical  supply  of all airborne particles, in-
            Trade  data  shows  the  de-  factories  began  coming  cluding ones too tiny to be    In  this  March  17,  2020,  photo,  Theresa  Malijan,  a  registered
            cline in shipments started in  back  on  line  last  month,  blocked by regular masks.   nurse, has hand sanitizer applied on her hands after removing
                                                                                                   her gloves after she took a nasopharyngeal swab from a pa-
            mid-February  after  the  spi-  their  first  priority  was  their  Governors across the coun-  tient at a drive-through COVID-19 testing station for University of
            raling coronavirus outbreak  own hospitals.               try are becoming panicked    Washington Medicine patients in Seattle.
            in China led the country to  The  government  required  as states run out of equip-                                             Associated Press
            shutter  factories  and  dis-  makers of N95 masks to sell  ment.  President  Donald
            rupted  ports.  Some  emer-  all  or  part  of  their  produc-  Trump  has  urged  them  to  tection, more of our hospi-  Foster, the American Hospi-
            gency rooms, hospitals and  tion  internally  instead  of  buy  masks  on  the  open  tal  staff  could  become  ill,  tal Association’s vice presi-
            clinics in the U.S. have now  shipping masks to the U.S.   market, but few if any are  which  would  mean  there  dent of quality and patient
            run out of key medical sup-  The most recent delivery of  available.                   wouldn’t be people to care  safety policy.
            plies,  while  others  are  ra-  medical-grade  N95  masks  “Without  adequate  pro-   for  patients,”  said  Nancy        Continued on page 8
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