Re: Corona Virus: It's a Marathon, Not a Sprint
Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2022 5:25 pm
The endIn this lawless world, we’ve all become public-health vigilantes. And that’s stupid. I’m really not sure how else to say it.
That is not dead which can eternal lie, and with strange aeons bring us some web forums whereupon we can gather
http://garbi.online/forum/
The endIn this lawless world, we’ve all become public-health vigilantes. And that’s stupid. I’m really not sure how else to say it.
That's not where babies come from.Isgrimnur wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 12:33 pmI guess, as a former OB/GYN, he'd know better than most on how far one can fit one's head up one's own ass.hepcat wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 11:58 am edit: changed twitter link to a better view of the whole exchange...including giant fake check prop rolled out to emphasize Senator Marshall's stupidity...although he probably thought it was smart.![]()
Is that the a study of theories of knowing what's up someone's ass?
Something like that.LordMortis wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 5:51 pmIs that the a study of theories of knowing what's up someone's ass?
Tell it to Peacemaker.LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 5:33 pmThat's not where babies come from.Isgrimnur wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 12:33 pmI guess, as a former OB/GYN, he'd know better than most on how far one can fit one's head up one's own ass.hepcat wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 11:58 am edit: changed twitter link to a better view of the whole exchange...including giant fake check prop rolled out to emphasize Senator Marshall's stupidity...although he probably thought it was smart.![]()
Once again, the pattern holds. Cases rise, followed a few weeks later by more hospitalizations, followed a few weeks later by more death. Over and over.U.S. COVID update: Cases and hospitalizations at record-high, deaths rising
- New cases: 908,916
- Average: 791,803 (+27,457)
- States reporting: 50/50
- In hospital: 150,119 (+4,247)
- ICU: 25,170 (+557)
- New deaths: 2,665
- Average: 1,817 (+95)
Congrats on such low levels!Blackhawk wrote: Wed Jan 12, 2022 11:18 pm My county is at a 23.32% positivity rate. The town where I shop? 24.5%.
That is...not a good look.During the transition last fall, Walensky expressed apprehension about moving from the Boston area to take the helm of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta during the Covid-19 pandemic, a transition official told West Wing Playbook. It caused angst in the ranks. Ultimately, the CDC director did not relocate full-time to Atlanta and continues to work remotely from the Boston area, with frequent trips to CDC headquarters and Washington.
High demand for groceries combined with soaring freight costs and Omicron-related labor shortages are creating a new round of backlogs at processed food and fresh produce companies, leading to empty supermarket shelves at major retailers across the United States.
Growers of perishable produce across the West Coast are paying nearly triple pre-pandemic trucking rates to ship things like lettuce and berries before they spoil. Shay Myers, CEO of Owyhee Produce, which grows onions, watermelons and asparagus along the border of Idaho and Oregon, said he has been holding off shipping onions to retail distributors until freight costs go down.
Myers said transportation disruptions in the last three weeks, caused by a lack of truck drivers and recent highway-blocking storms, have led to a doubling of freight costs for fruit and vegetable producers, on top of already-elevated pandemic prices. "We typically will ship, East Coast to West Coast – we used to do it for about $7,000," he said. "Today it’s somewhere between $18,000 and $22,000."
Birds Eye frozen vegetables maker Conagra Brands' CEO Sean Connolly told investors last week that supplies from its U.S. plants could be constrained for at least the next month due to Omicron-related absences.
Earlier this week, Albertsons CEO Vivek Sankaran said he expects the supermarket chain to confront more supply chain challenges over the next four to six weeks as Omicron has put a dent in its efforts to plug supply chain gaps.
For me it's always listed as 2 1/2 hour wait altho usually it's about 1 1/2 hours. I haven't been the the grocery store in over a month and only once in the last two months. I'm about 9 miles away and it's all mountains.Max Peck wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 11:41 am You've heard of the Waffle House Index, with regard to disaster recovery?
One of the ways I track the pandemic severity is with my Instacart Index. For the last year, I've been placing a groceries order with Instacart about once a week. I tip either 20% or $20, whichever is more, and a shopper normally picks up the order within a couple of minutes of it landing in the system. Today, the order has been sitting there, unclaimed, for more than a half an hour and counting.
Instacart Index: CODE RED
Update: The final time-to-shopper was 45 minutes. That's the first time in the last year that it was over 5 minutes. #Anecdata
I took these pics on Thursday.
This is the defining issue of the pandemic, and we are failing
Here in the US, every day we see OpEds in the WSJ and The Atlantic from highly vaccinated, wealthy, healthy people saying “they’re done” with Covid-19
So weird how other countries didn't get the message that everyone is going to get COVID and they should just get back to doing whatever.The US outlier status for its rise in hospitalizations
—vs European countries now starting descent from Omicron
—in the US, the Omicron wave was superimposed on a 2nd Delta surge
—the US very low 62% vaxx and 23% booster rate is contributing to this
The initial delivery window was "today." Once a shopper picked up the order, everything went at a normal pace and it took about a 1.5 hours until delivery. I'm guessing that either demand was up sharply or, more likely, the number of shoppers logging into the system was down significantly.dbt1949 wrote: Sat Jan 15, 2022 9:31 amFor me it's always listed as 2 1/2 hour wait altho usually it's about 1 1/2 hours. I haven't been the the grocery store in over a month and only once in the last two months. I'm about 9 miles away and it's all mountains.Max Peck wrote: Fri Jan 14, 2022 11:41 am You've heard of the Waffle House Index, with regard to disaster recovery?
One of the ways I track the pandemic severity is with my Instacart Index. For the last year, I've been placing a groceries order with Instacart about once a week. I tip either 20% or $20, whichever is more, and a shopper normally picks up the order within a couple of minutes of it landing in the system. Today, the order has been sitting there, unclaimed, for more than a half an hour and counting.
Instacart Index: CODE RED
Update: The final time-to-shopper was 45 minutes. That's the first time in the last year that it was over 5 minutes. #Anecdata
I don't want to burst your bubble and hope you all remain healthy, but it is still early. A podcaster I listen to had the same thing happen to him - wife positive on Thursday, whole family negative on Monday. Remainder of family had it by Thursday (with the exception of a daughter who never tested positive). Incubation period is different for everyone.El Guapo wrote: Tue Jan 18, 2022 12:15 pm As I think I mentioned in the EBG Covid thread, my wife tested positive via rapid test on Friday (subsequently confirmed via PCR). She's fine (very mild symptoms), and my kids and I are all negative (tested both on Friday, then again this morning). She's vaccinated and boosted, as am I (kids are double-shotted, and 12 YO daughter is getting boosted today).
I have to admit I'm mildly baffled how none of the rest of the family got it, at least to date. *Maybe* my wife happened to become infectious right when we tested her, but seems unlikely. She's been isolating in the living room since the positive test, though she's been out a couple times to the kitchen (not at the same time as us) admittedly double-masked and with the screen door to the outside open, so our protocols haven't been fully Smoove-ian, but I guess that's been enough.
Yeah it is. Odds are decent that at least one of us tests positive before this is over, but we'll see. I read that omicron has a pretty short incubation period, at least.stessier wrote: Tue Jan 18, 2022 12:44 pmI don't want to burst your bubble and hope you all remain healthy, but it is still early. A podcaster I listen to had the same thing happen to him - wife positive on Thursday, whole family negative on Monday. Remainder of family had it by Thursday (with the exception of a daughter who never tested positive). Incubation period is different for everyone.El Guapo wrote: Tue Jan 18, 2022 12:15 pm As I think I mentioned in the EBG Covid thread, my wife tested positive via rapid test on Friday (subsequently confirmed via PCR). She's fine (very mild symptoms), and my kids and I are all negative (tested both on Friday, then again this morning). She's vaccinated and boosted, as am I (kids are double-shotted, and 12 YO daughter is getting boosted today).
I have to admit I'm mildly baffled how none of the rest of the family got it, at least to date. *Maybe* my wife happened to become infectious right when we tested her, but seems unlikely. She's been isolating in the living room since the positive test, though she's been out a couple times to the kitchen (not at the same time as us) admittedly double-masked and with the screen door to the outside open, so our protocols haven't been fully Smoove-ian, but I guess that's been enough.
I'm curious about the biology of how that happens. There's little doubt in this type of situation that there's extended exposure, right? So if no one else in the house pops a positive, seems like the most likely explanation is that the respective immune systems reacted promptly and thoroughly enough that the virus levels never got up to detectable levels - is that about right?LawBeefaroni wrote: Tue Jan 18, 2022 2:53 pm We had a household positive (picked up via rapid antigen and confirmed via PCR). Despite spending a few days before detection without isolation in place, no one else got it. Rest of household tested every 36 hours via rapid and every 72 hours via PCR.
But school is open. That's all that matters.LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:18 am Son is vaccinated but the daily uncertainty is tiring.
I'm having my coffee, but I'm happy to ruin everything in a little bit.Zaxxon wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:22 am Looking forward to Smoove telling me to ignore this glimmer of hope:
Omicron Is in Retreat https://nyti.ms/359twih
We got a message from the twins' school late Monday (MLK Day) afternoon that someone in boy twin's class tested positive on Friday. Per CPS rules, that meant no school for him on Tuesday while teachers prepared for hybrid remote/in-person learning. Vaxxed students (with vaccination on record) who are showing no symptoms could return on Wednesday, while unvaxxed students and vaxxed students showing symptoms would be remote. Girl twin's class proceeded as normal in-person on Tuesday. Since boy twin is vaxxed, I dropped him off at school (with his sister) this morning. It should be interesting to see how many kids are in-person in his class today.LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:18 am Messages from son's school:
6:14 am: A student in [son's classroom] has tested positive for COVID, was last in class Monday.
7:00am: [Son's Classroom] is closed today.
7:06am: Vaccinated students may attend.
7:14am: Unvaccinated students must quarantine and show negative PCR after day 7.
Son is vaccinated but the daily uncertainty is tiring.
Yeah aren't they talking a wave through mid-to-end of March with between 60K and 300K deaths? It's in retreat in some places but like every other wave it isn't propagating across the nation uniformly.Smoove_B wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:28 amBut school is open. That's all that matters.LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:18 am Son is vaccinated but the daily uncertainty is tiring.
I'm having my coffee, but I'm happy to ruin everything in a little bit.Zaxxon wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:22 am Looking forward to Smoove telling me to ignore this glimmer of hope:
Omicron Is in Retreat https://nyti.ms/359twih![]()
The problem with headlines like that one, especially in a newspaper read all across the country, is that the statement doesn't apply everywhere. Parts of New York and New England may be reaching a turning point in the current wave, but much of the country still has a long way to go...and it will most likely get worse for all of us again.Zaxxon wrote:That's a whole lotta fail right there, LB.
Looking forward to Smoove telling me to ignore this glimmer of hope:
Omicron Is in Retreat https://nyti.ms/359twih
If it makes you feel any better, we get daily emails since the return from break:LawBeefaroni wrote: Wed Jan 19, 2022 10:18 am Messages from son's school:
6:14 am: A student in [son's classroom] has tested positive for COVID, was last in class Monday.
7:00am: [Son's Classroom] is closed today.
7:06am: Vaccinated students may attend.
7:14am: Unvaccinated students must quarantine and show negative PCR after day 7.
Son is vaccinated but the daily uncertainty is tiring.