I should have known better.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 2:27 pm Might be the only 24 states actively tracking and reporting breakthrough infections. Testing is so 2020.
Also,
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Moderators: $iljanus, LawBeefaroni
I should have known better.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 2:27 pm Might be the only 24 states actively tracking and reporting breakthrough infections. Testing is so 2020.
Are you sure this isn't our giant meteor? I mean, 'Giant meteor' could just be a generalization...
Largely over politics. We have met the enemy and he is us.BREAKING: All August reports for #COVID19 in Tennessee are now posted, and it was not a good month for the state's school-age (5-18) children. A whopping **42,599** tested positive for the virus - a 72% increase over December and 44x higher than June. MORE TO FOLLOW. Overall, 162,724 Tennesseans tested positive for #COVID19 in August - school-age children (5-18) made up 26% of that number. August was the highest month for reported #COVID19 deaths in Tennessee since February. ***777*** of our family, friends and neighbors became victims to the virus. Death is a lagging indicator. So with skyrocketing hospitalizations, this number could be higher in Sept. As we reported early this morning, #COVID19 hospitalizations are now at an all-time high in Tennessee. 3,338 hospitalized, with 943 in ICU, 661 on ventilators. (Pediatric numbers: 73 hospitalized, 18 in ICU, 7 on ventilators.)
Joke's on you - we didn't really care about testing in 2020, either.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 2:27 pm Might be the only 24 states actively tracking and reporting breakthrough infections. Testing is so 2020.
The inevitable fallout...Zaxxon wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:01 am Smoove may enjoy* this recap of Monday's health board meeting...
* - In a 'make your blood boil' sorrt of way...
Indeed. Hell will be raised, but this group isn't going to be receptive to logical argument.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:35 pm No, no. That's not good. It would be like if the county commissioners said, "We don't like how the regional fire department is handling fires, so we're going to start our own local fire response team - from scratch."
It's f-ing madness and the people that live in the affected area should be calling for all kinds of hell to be raised. Well, unless they really also hate masks, then I guess congratulations you're getting what you voted for.
Your mistake is assuming that 'finding qualified staff' is one of the priorities here.I am having a hard time believing they're going to be able to find qualified staff willing and able to function the way they want.
She was overruled by a board with rational actors on it. Now imagine that the County is run by 3 people with more politically-fueled rage against public health, much less health knowledge, and no rational actors.Isgrimnur wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:39 pm Who would have thought a radiologist wouldn't be the best board member during a pandemic?
Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:35 pm No, no. That's not good. It would be like if the county commissioners said, "We don't like how the regional fire department is handling fires, so we're going to start our own local fire response team - from scratch."
It's f-ing madness and the people that live in the affected area should be calling for all kinds of hell to be raised. Well, unless they really also hate masks, then I guess congratulations you're getting what you voted for.
I am having a hard time believing they're going to be able to find qualified staff willing and able to function the way they want.
They left out the implied, "After which, good luck, you're fucked.""We are sorry that our 50+ year history of serving Douglas County residents may be coming to an end and that the separation has been catalyzed at such a divisive moment," according to the statement. "If the county does choose to make a change, we will continue to serve the residents to the best of our ability as long as we remain their Public Health Department and will provide whatever support we practically can in the transition."
LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:47 pm They left out the implied, "After which, good luck, you're fucked."
Pretty much. This is the article associated with the infographic:Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 2:27 pm Might be the only 24 states actively tracking and reporting breakthrough infections. Testing is so 2020.
Although not every state, nor the CDC, is attempting to track all reported breakthrough cases, the data we do have from about 25 states suggests the vast majority of serious cases, hospitalizations, and deaths still involve the unvaccinated.
Well, I'm not entirely familiar with the laws in CO, but I would hope there are licensing requirements to practice public health - like most states (including my own). Here, the state would be stepping in to remind the county that they need to using qualified/licensed staff as part of their experiment.Zaxxon wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 4:38 pm Your mistake is assuming that 'finding qualified staff' is one of the priorities here.
Doctor's say call "Call in the family". I'm ashamed to say I'm quite happy M&D aren't going down. Terrible. Now his sister is on O2 and can't talk. When you can't tell your family "just get the damned shot already!" and have them pay one bit of mind. Heartbreaking.LordMortis wrote: Mon Aug 30, 2021 8:49 amI guess 50/50 isn't a death sentence I assume that includes earlier cases where people were dying more.Isgrimnur wrote: Sun Aug 29, 2021 8:34 pmSixty-nine studies were included, describing 57,420 adult patients with COVID-19 who received IMV [invasive mechanical ventilation]. Overall reported CFR [case fatality rates] was estimated as 45% (95% confidence interval [CI], 39-52%). Fifty-four of 69 studies stated whether hospital outcomes were available but provided a definitive hospital outcome on only 13,120 (22.8%) of the total IMV patient population. Among studies in which age-stratified CFR was available, pooled CFR estimates ranged from 47.9% (95% CI, 46.4-49.4%) in younger patients (age ≤40 yr) to 84.4% (95% CI, 83.3-85.4%) in older patients (age >80 yr).
Antivaxxers are claiming COVID is just like the flu and survival rate is 99.9%.YellowKing wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 5:23 pm For all those who say "Masks don't work."
I have a co-worker who's school started the year with no mask mandate. Cases first week? 60+. Board of Health forced them to implement mask mandate. This week's cases? 7.
I know it's anecdotal, but it just showcases how frustratingly simple this all would be if people would just stop being so damn hardheaded and do the right thing.
I'm going to tell you a secret. When you're running epidemiological comparisons, the first rule is to make sure the populations you're comparing are standardized. So comparing COVID outcomes in kids vs COVID outcomes in adults tells me the person making the claims has no idea what they're talking about.Kasey Chang wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:17 pm Children so far are showing less severe symptoms than adults when it comes to COVID. That is true. But with 4.8 million children testing positive as of August 26, even with a near-zero mortality rate, parents are taking chances with their children's lives to "prove" their ideology. Is that what freedom really means to them?
He was given human prescription version, not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this. Joe Rogan likely will be fine and he'll tell all his fans it was NBD because he was given treatments that the average person will never have access to. And so the cycle will continue.malchior wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:40 pm I can't wait unt this moron tells his huge audience that horse paste worked.
Setting aside invermectin, why can't more people get regeneron and monoclonal antibodies? They can't make enough?Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:21 pmHe was given human prescription version, not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this. Joe Rogan likely will be fine and he'll tell all his fans it was NBD because he was given treatments that the average person will never have access to. And so the cycle will continue.malchior wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:40 pm I can't wait unt this moron tells his huge audience that horse paste worked.
I must have missed the "deplorable" disaster when I was playing.Blackhawk wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 3:59 pmAre you sure this isn't our giant meteor? I mean, 'Giant meteor' could just be a generalization...
I do wonder sometimes if I was wrong about there being a higher power. That we're all in a giant game of Sim City, and the player is finally getting bored and keeps hitting the random disaster button to see what happens.
Aren't they stupid expensive? I remember seeing a cost of $1,200/dose at some point, but maybe that wasn't accurate.El Guapo wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 10:02 pmSetting aside invermectin, why can't more people get regeneron and monoclonal antibodies? They can't make enough?Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:21 pmHe was given human prescription version, not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this. Joe Rogan likely will be fine and he'll tell all his fans it was NBD because he was given treatments that the average person will never have access to. And so the cycle will continue.malchior wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:40 pm I can't wait unt this moron tells his huge audience that horse paste worked.
It's cost prohibitive. Rogan gets the full treatment because rich/famous. Not everyone who is "feeling shitty" gets Regeneron.El Guapo wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 10:02 pmSetting aside invermectin, why can't more people get regeneron and monoclonal antibodies? They can't make enough?Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:21 pmHe was given human prescription version, not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this. Joe Rogan likely will be fine and he'll tell all his fans it was NBD because he was given treatments that the average person will never have access to. And so the cycle will continue.malchior wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:40 pm I can't wait unt this moron tells his huge audience that horse paste worked.
This is semi-anecdotal, but it sure seems like regeneron and monoclonal antibodies significantly increase the COVID survival rate. So even if it's more expensive and less ideal than vaccination, given that a lot of people are going to choose not to vaccinate seems like a major public policy goal should be to make those treatments more widely available.Skinypupy wrote: Thu Sep 02, 2021 9:46 amAren't they stupid expensive? I remember seeing a cost of $1,200/dose at some point, but maybe that wasn't accurate.El Guapo wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 10:02 pmSetting aside invermectin, why can't more people get regeneron and monoclonal antibodies? They can't make enough?Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:21 pmHe was given human prescription version, not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this. Joe Rogan likely will be fine and he'll tell all his fans it was NBD because he was given treatments that the average person will never have access to. And so the cycle will continue.malchior wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 7:40 pm I can't wait unt this moron tells his huge audience that horse paste worked.
Old news but bears repeating.Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis — who has been criticized for opposing mask mandates and vaccine passports — is now touting a COVID-19 antibody treatment in which a top donor’s company has invested millions of dollars.
Powerful pro-vaccination PSA today from Orthodox rabbis in New York: "The ribono shel olam [creator of the world] has given us a precious gift. It's called the covid-19 vaccine." "Unvaccinated people die! They die." "What's the shaylah [question] over here? Are we playing games?"
KFOR reports that an ER doctor has ranted that they are getting so many ivermectin overdose cases in "rural Oklahoma" that ambulances are STUCK at hospitals waiting for beds to open up, which means no ambulance for the rest of the patients of trauma.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Sep 01, 2021 8:21 pm He was given human prescription version (ivermectin), not the apple flavored horse paste his audience is buying. And that's what continues to be so fuct up about all this.
Hey, they need that water! Do you know how hard it is to get horse paste down? That stuff is sticky!Smoove_B wrote: Sat Sep 04, 2021 12:31 pm Yes. And just like FL, people in parts of Oklahoma are being asked to use less water to free up LOX supplies.
This really is the dumbest timeline.