Coronavirus’s Potential Impact on Amateur Radio

Coronavirus (COVID-19) is a big deal. Even if you think, “oh, the flu is worse,” or, “oh, it’s not in my backyard,” it’s still a massive global health emergency. It’s killed over 4,000 and infected over 100,000 worldwide as of 11 March 2020.

Coronavirus is not your regular run-of-the-mill flu. It disproportionately affects those who are older and have pre-existing immune system deficiencies. According to WorldOMeters (which provides up-to-date statistical tallies based on Chinese records), the following is a chart of current mortality by age:

AGEDEATH RATE*
80+ years old 14.8%
70-79 years old 8.0%
60-69 years old 3.6%
50-59 years old 1.3%
40-49 years old 0.4%
30-39 years old 0.2%
20-29 years old 0.2%
10-19 years old 0.2%
0-9 years old no fatalities

*Death Rate = (number of deaths / number of cases) = probability of dying if infected by the virus (%). The percentages do not have to add up to 100%, as they do NOT represent share of deaths by age group.

And here’s data from N8RMA’s State of the Hobby Survey, showing the makeup of age among amateur radio licensees (given it’s inherent biases, it’s the best data we hams have publicly that I am aware of):

AgePercentage of Hams (2019)
65 and older 35.18%
55-64 years old 30.45%
45-54 years old 16.19%
35-44 years old 10.33%
25-34 years old 4.78%
15-24 years old 2.75%
Under 15 0.32%

I see an issue here. About 70% of (surveyed) hams are over age 50, and the death rate probability for people over 50 infected with Coronavirus averages to be 7.9%, and that’s just considering age. Risks are also high for males, people with cardiovascular disease, high blood pressure, diabeties, and cancer. That means if COVID-19 were to infect everyone, ham radio might – quite literally – face an existential crisis. So we’ve got to keep the spread to a minimum.

Cancellations

As such, some amateur radio meetings have been canceled. As of posting (11 March), the HamSCI Workshop and the Visalia DX conference has been canceled. Numerous smaller local and regional hamfests have also been canceled for the months of March and April.

Hamvention has not yet canceled. Being later in May, it’s still too early to tell if COVID-19 will have an impact vs. other events like NAB, SXSW, Cochella, among other large events that have also been canceled but are in April.

I still plan to attend but seeing that the WHO has classified COVID-19 as a pandemic, and Ohio has a few cases, I wholly suspect we’ll hear something from Hamvention organizers very soon.

Update: The ARRL has an exhaustive list of all ham radio event cancellations here: http://www.arrl.org/news/visalia-international-dx-convention-other-events-cancelled-due-to-coronavirus-worries and here: http://www.arrl.org/canceledHamfests.php

Supply Chain Impacts

All of Asia took a massive hit, and so for the coming months one can imagine that it will take it’s toll on the global electronics supply chain. I haven’t heard of any big ham radio gear rumors, but surely this will squash any if there were for at least the next few months.


I don’t mean to be alarmist, but also I kind of do. The WHO is sounding the alarm loud and clear, so now is the time to put precautionary measures into effect.

Things you can do to avoid Coronavirus (and getting sick in general):

  1. Wash your hands, like this, and DO NOT skimp out on soap or wash for less than 20 seconds.
  2. Don’t touch your face or frequently touched surfaces unnecessarily.
  3. Use hand sanitizer (>60% Alcohol) when soap and water is not available.
  4. Cough and sneeze into your arm in a downward facing direction away from people or common areas/surfaces.
  5. Avoid air travel and public transit.
  6. Avoid large gatherings of people.
  7. If you do have to go out around many people, wear a mask in public. Contrary to CDC guidance, masks prevent respiratory infection. If you do happen to have an N95 mask lying around in your wood shop, it might help block aerosolized spit particles from entering your lungs directly, which is how a majority of infectious respiratory disease is transmitted.
  8. Have at least 2 months of water and non-perishable food stored in a safe place at home.
  9. Stay informed with CDC information.
  10. Consider postponing your big Disney vacation or cruise in the next few months.
  11. If you’re older, consider self-quarantine, like telling your kids and grandkids to not visit for a while and avoid stores and other establishments during peak-hours.
  12. Share this information with friends.

Finally, if you’re sick, for goodness sake, stay home. People not staying home when they have flu-like symptoms is the reason why this disease is spreading so easily. Call your local health department for guidance and testing if needed.

Things you should not do:

  1. Use essential oils, colloidal silver, or anything marketed as a “cure” without any scientific basis as a means of preventing disease.
  2. Hoard masks, GermX, toilet paper, and disinfectant wipes (or sell them at ungodly prices)
  3. Vote in an administration that inadequately prepares for pandemics and fires the entire U.S. Pandemic Response Team created during the Ebola outbreak.
  4. Panic sell all of your stock. This is a good time to buy!
  5. Panic in general.

Standing Desks for Ham Shacks? (and where I’ve been)

Update

I’ve been quiet lately. I went on an European 3-week vacation (Prague, Krakow, Berlin, Amsterdam, and Paris), which meant I got behind on work stuff, so I’ve been busy catching up.

I was on HamRadioNow in a Phasing Line/HRN mashup. Check that out here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w31LUEjNgnU

The Phasing Line podcast is still moving along, now with a Patreon! Apparently, we did something that people enjoy, and I think we’ll keep doing that. We pre-recorded a lot of episodes over the break, but never got around to editing them, so beware some episodes may seem out of date. I hope you don’t find that to be a problem!

I’ll be speaking at the St Louis Suburban Radio Club (SLSRC) Winterfest hamfest on January 28 about YOTA and Youth Ham Radio. This is the first time I’m actually hosting a forum, so that’s pretty cool. I’ll be up against Bob Heil to put it in perspective! I’ll try to record my presentation and post it on my YouTube.

I’ll also be at the Orlando Hamcation February 10 through 12, with Aaron Boots AA0RN, who’s a rising W0EEE star. They’ll be having a collegiate forum at 3pm in Classroom 1. I don’t have anything to present, but I want to be there to represent the ARRL Collegiate Amateur Radio Initiative (CARI) and check out the 2nd biggest hamfest in the US. I’ll also try to record it. See http://www.hamcation.com/forums/ for more forum info.

That’s about as far as I’ve planned this year. I definitely cannot attend Hamvention (here’s why) but I’m looking at attending some other bigger hamfests (like Friedrichshafen, Pacificon, HamCom, NEAR-fest, anything else listed on https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamfest) since Jesten earned me 110,000 Southwest Air and 125,000 American Air points (leftover after our Europe trip). With that said, if you want me to come talk about youth at your hamfest, let me know sooner than later, before I have to spend 110% of my time helping my fiancee plan our wedding (Oct 2018 baby!).

Finally, what I came here to write:

W6LG inspired me for this post. On November 2, 2016, he had a pulmonary embolism and heart attack, nearly killing him. He survived, and is back to making great videos on YouTube.

I’m 25, so you might not understand why I’m posting about this, but it’s surprisingly relevant. I’ve been an “official adult” for 2 years now, and I’ve noticed a few changes.

  1. I have little to no activity daily. I walk between 1000 and 5000 steps a day, measured by my iPhone/Pebble smartwatch
  2. My posture sucks
  3. I’m about thirty pounds overweight, and eating 1,500 cal/day for the last 6 months has made for some slow progress:
  4. My neck and back hurts

It’s obvious why these 4 things are happening. It’s because I’m sitting for 8 to 10 hours a day at a desk. So I stood up. Literally. I found some boxes to prop my monitors and keyboard up at properly ergonomic heights, and (aside from my feet hurting) things started just feeling better.

Then I got a newer, better chair and ditched the standing desk boxes. I’m quickly realizing standing is clearly helpful, because the same problems came up, even though my new chair was more ergonomic.

When I watched W6LG’s video, I immediately realized that I have never seen a ham radio station on a standing desk. Jim’s right – we hams spend a shitload of time sitting behind our radios, DXing and contesting, not giving a single thought to the clots slowly building up in our butts, the plaque building up around our hearts, and the atrophy of muscles that once made it so easy to climb a flight of stairs.

The easiest way to fight disease exacerbated by lack of activity is to stand up, stretch, and walk. Of course, if you’re able to stand, this works, but if you require a wheelchair or mobility scooter, follow your individual doctor’s advice on staying healthy.

Standing desks aren’t cheap, but milk crates and boxes did fine for me. Ikea also has several DIY-methods of making standing desks a thing for your station or workbench. And even if you don’t have a standing desk, set a timer to remind yourself to stretch. You can also use apps like Stand Up! for iOS or Randomly RemindMe for Android.

Additionally, the team at Consumers Advocate has poured hundreds of hours into researching different models of standing desks and converters, doing the hard work so you don’t have to. They reviewed and researched models for all budgets, and conveniently  put the maximum lifting capacity of each desk so you don’t overburden it with your SO2R FT-3000DX  station and 1.5kW linear amplifier should you want to lift that up while you stand!

Consumers Advocate Logo
Click me to review standing desks!

Do you have a standing desk at your hamshack? Send me your standing desk shack pics at sterling@n0ssc.com!