Mostly Apolitical Thread for Discussing/Venting our Rational/Irrational COVID-19 Fears and Experiences in 2020

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (14656 of them)

good news

This is fantastic. A recent study out of the University of Maryland presents the first evidence that full vaccination against COVID-19 actually SUPPRESSES emergent mutations of SARS-CoV-2 Delta variants therefore successfully debunking the myth that vaccines promote mutations.

— Chise 🧬🧫🦠💉 (@sailorrooscout) August 11, 2021

there's too much fucking shit on me (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 11 August 2021 21:38 (two years ago) link

i've decided to trust the scientist with the furry avatar who worked on the vaccine that i got

STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Wednesday, 11 August 2021 21:41 (two years ago) link

I'm terrible at interpreting data and stats, but ... how is it that all of these very smart experts can disagree on how to read and interpret numbers?

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 11 August 2021 21:46 (two years ago) link

they seem to disagree with one person

there's too much fucking shit on me (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 11 August 2021 21:53 (two years ago) link

I don't think it's radical to think that efficacy is lower for delta though

there's too much fucking shit on me (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 11 August 2021 21:54 (two years ago) link

In FL as well and my 9 yr old just started school today, in person, masked of course. I am terrified that we made the wrong decision, but we didn’t have many other options. If something happens I will wish we had just said, “let’s just keep her out of school this year and try again for 4th grade next year.”

epistantophus, Wednesday, 11 August 2021 22:03 (two years ago) link

how is it that all of these very smart experts can disagree on how to read and interpret numbers?

Because the topic of how to interpret numbers like this is the entire academic discipline of statistics, whose problems are very hard and the answers to which not everyone agrees on.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 12 August 2021 00:03 (two years ago) link

Just sat through my local school board deciding (on a 5-4 vote) not to follow any health protocols at all this year. It wasn't a surprise. It also makes us the only large system in our state NOT requiring masks, which makes us a control group of sorts in a real-time COVID experiment. I have to hope at this point that the anti-maskers are right and it will be fine, because what choice do I have.

Public forum was the usual mix of sane sober people saying obvious things ("listen to literally every public health expert on the planet") and crazy people crazy-ing. My favorite was the lady who thought she'd discovered a conspiracy because "they already know what they're going to name the next variant!" No one took the trouble to explain the Greek alphabet to her.

Oh, and the WORST thing was a cute lil 6th grad girl who got up to speak, all blonde ponytails and standing on her tiptoes, and confidently read a very articulate statement that you could charitably say she had help with about all the reasons masks are bad and dumb. And then at the end, she went into a thing about how her family had just gone on vacation in Mexico and had to take COVID tests to come back in, but there are a lot of illegal immigrants crossing every day and who knows how much COVID they're spreading ...

I half expected her to start in on "Tomorrow Belongs to Me." It was some creepy stuff.

:(

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 12 August 2021 05:46 (two years ago) link

MASSIVE news here:

https://www.aegworldwide.com/press-center/press-releases/aeg-presents-require-proof-full-vaccination-us-concertgoers-and-event

This is bound to have cascading effects on showgoing. Note the key point -- negative tests are not going to be accepted as an alternate after the implementation date, it's proof or nothing. Key part:

The vaccination policy, limited only as required by law, will be in full effect nationwide no later than October 1, 2021. Several venues have already been following local government vaccination mandates, with others anticipated to come in the weeks leading up to October 1. The date was chosen specifically to allow time for any eligible unvaccinated ticketholders and staff to reach fully vaccinated status should they choose to do so.

SF in general is also about to require it hands-down:

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/San-Francisco-to-become-second-U-S-city-to-16382500.php

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:00 (two years ago) link

This honestly is putting my mind at a relative ease (relative), in that I had always been intentionally holding off on going to shows of any sort until the very end of September. This timing is ultimately accidental but I am glad for it.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:01 (two years ago) link

good

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:10 (two years ago) link

Surprising for the company that was founded by the same guy who underwrites the right-wing Examiner papers.

Bo Burzum (Boring, Maryland), Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:12 (two years ago) link

Ed Yong:

Even at the low end of the CDC’s estimated range for Delta’s R0, achieving herd immunity would require vaccinating more than 90 percent of people, which is highly implausible. At the high end, herd immunity is mathematically impossible with the vaccines we have now.

This means that the “zero COVID” dream of fully stamping out the virus is a fantasy. Instead, the pandemic ends when almost everyone has immunity, preferably because they were vaccinated or alternatively because they were infected and survived. When that happens, the cycle of surges will stop and the pandemic will peter out. The new coronavirus will become endemic—a recurring part of our lives like its four cousins that cause common colds. It will be less of a problem, not because it has changed but because it is no longer novel and people are no longer immunologically vulnerable. Endemicity was always the likely outcome—I wrote as much in March 2020. But likely is now unavoidable. “Before, it still felt possible that a really concerted effort could get us to a place where COVID-19 almost didn’t exist anymore,” Murray told me. “But Delta has changed the game.”

If SARS-CoV-2 is here to stay, then most people will encounter it at some point in their life, as my colleague James Hamblin predicted last February. That can be hard to accept, because many people spent the past year trying very hard to avoid the virus entirely. But “it’s not really the virus on its own that is terrifying,” Jennie Lavine, an infectious-disease researcher at Emory University, told me. “It’s the combination of the virus and a naive immune system. Once you don’t have the latter, the virus doesn’t have to be so scary.”

jaymc, Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:13 (two years ago) link

Yeah, I linked that Atlantic article in the outbreak thread, it's a good one.

a superficial sheeb of intelligence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:16 (two years ago) link

I wish music venues in Austin would require proof of vaccination

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:18 (two years ago) link

of course, that's nearly impossible when shit like this is happening

UPDATE: Fresa’s says they will no longer be requiring proof of vaccination for indoor dining after TABC informed them it was a violation of SB 968, prohibiting vaccine passports, which was signed into law in June. https://t.co/MA0X8rD9XM

— MelanieTorre (@melanietorre) August 12, 2021

Mr. Cacciatore (Moodles), Thursday, 12 August 2021 17:23 (two years ago) link

welcome to The Republic of Fresa’s, may i take your order?

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 12 August 2021 18:28 (two years ago) link

BREAKING: WFOR is reporting that 4 teachers from Broward county have died of covid in a single day.

Three were unvaccinated. We don’t know the status of the 4th. pic.twitter.com/uT4XW7irc5

— Brianna Keilar (@brikeilarcnn) August 13, 2021

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Friday, 13 August 2021 21:50 (two years ago) link

ugh that's so sad

criminally negligible (harbl), Friday, 13 August 2021 22:07 (two years ago) link

Yeah, and all unvaccinated.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 13 August 2021 22:13 (two years ago) link

Apparently before the schools even opened, though, tbf.

There was an NPR story on Case Western, which had been offering vaccines incentives. With incentives, vaccination hovered around 70%. When the school decided to require vaccination, immediately leapt up to 95% or so.

Josh in Chicago, Friday, 13 August 2021 22:21 (two years ago) link

It’s exposing the kids to infected and contagious adults once the schools open that’s the concern. That many teachers dropping in one day probably doesn’t mean that they were the only four dumb enough to still be unvaxxed.

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Saturday, 14 August 2021 00:20 (two years ago) link

With incentives, vaccination hovered around 70%. When the school decided to require vaccination, immediately leapt up to 95% or so.

This is why all businesses/municipalities that aren't insane need to mandate vaccination. Posting bullshit on social media is one thing. Only the truest of true believers are willing to forego their job in order to own the libs.

Captain Beefart (PBKR), Saturday, 14 August 2021 01:54 (two years ago) link

Only the truest of true believers are willing to forego their job in order to own the libs.

The vulnerability of elected officials to this kind of public mania makes cowards of most of them. After all, they are 'public servants' and accountable even to idiots and the insane.

otoh, the strict hierarchy of business, where the big boss capo di tutti capi lays down the law and all subordinates must either comply or be shown the door allows far greater latitude to the owning class to make this happen. If the Fortune 500 CEOs all made a pact to jump over this cliff together, the anti-vaxxers would secretly fume and complain, but their power to resist would dissolve in an instant like dew in the summer sun.

it is to laugh, like so, ha! (Aimless), Saturday, 14 August 2021 03:21 (two years ago) link

A few weeks ago our local health department released its vaccination numbers, and for a very educated, relatively affluent place I was shocked that the local numbers were so low, implying only around 60% or so vaxxed, and perhaps as low as 30% of eligible 12-18 year olds vaxxed. A lot of people smelled a rat and questioned the data, with one dude going so far as to dig up and analyze different numbers from the state. He did the math, and came up with something a lot more promising and more expected, indicating closer to 80% of eligible 12+ have been vaccinated, and at the high school specifically close to 90% of eligible staff and teachers. Just another example of different groups and health departments getting totally different results with what one presumes are the same numbers. Or are they the same numbers? Who the fuck knows. It definitely doesn't pass the smell test when the same Illinois department of health that keeps calling fully vaxxed people I know to remind them of their second shot they got months ago would have better numbers than our local health department, but here we are.

Josh in Chicago, Saturday, 14 August 2021 19:36 (two years ago) link

Based on FB I do kind of feel like my(vaccinated, middle-aged) peers have stopped trying to avoid spreading COVID altogether, while I persist in my (admittedly pretty mild) regime of wearing a mask when I go in a store, getting takeout or eating outside rather than eating in the restaurant, not going to sporting events for now, etc. Rational/irrational fear is they think I'm being weird and uptight about it.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Sunday, 15 August 2021 19:16 (two years ago) link

huh dunno why you’d be worried about spreading a deadly disease, seems weird

Tracer Hand, Sunday, 15 August 2021 19:28 (two years ago) link

We have to wear masks indoors again in Philadelphia, which is a relief.

I am supposed to be giving an outdoor reading this week, and am becoming slightly nervous about the situation, especially as the forecast calls for rain and the venue is *technically* the patio of a usable indoor space. Going to have to ask my friend, who also hosts, what he thinks we should do if it's dumping rain...but since he has a young child and so does one of my fellow readers, I doubt he'd move it inside.

heyy nineteen, that's john belushi (the table is the table), Sunday, 15 August 2021 20:29 (two years ago) link

OK, everyone start your clocks: both kids back in the high school today, full capacity, 3400+ students and staff in relatively tight quarters, everyone masked and overwhelmingly (80-90%+) vaxxed. Let's see how it goes.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 August 2021 12:39 (two years ago) link

Good luck, everyone.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 August 2021 12:46 (two years ago) link

fwiw, the handful of very modest, very small outbreaks last year at the school (when it was at reduced capacity, still masked but on partial reopening in the spring of course much less vaxxed) all were spread and traced to outside the school - parties, mostly - so we'll see how things fare under new conditions. More virulent strains, but mostly vaxxed population, both in and out of school. More densely packed, but everyone still wearing a mask, perhaps less cautious, but perhaps (hopefully) slightly less of a need for caution.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 August 2021 13:06 (two years ago) link

In a press conference just now, Tennessee Health Commissioner Lisa Piercey says the state has already seen more COVID hospitalizations in just the first half of August than in any other full month in the pandemic.

— Stephen Elliott (@ElliottStephenB) August 16, 2021

bobo honkin' slobo babe (sic), Monday, 16 August 2021 16:40 (two years ago) link

local outbreak in my town linked to 2 crowded gigs at a couple 100ish-capacity venues last weekend. 'honor system' mask policy meant hardly any masks. luckily i skipped both gigs, but over the last week my various feeds have been a daily rollcall of vaxxed friends posting about testing positive. no 'official' count but just connecting the dots on social media looks to be as many as 30 breakthroughs or more. definitely going to keep me away from any indoor gigs for a long while.

nobody like my rap (One Eye Open), Monday, 16 August 2021 17:05 (two years ago) link

*shakes head* Sorry to hear that. All SF shows are masked period and more venues as I muttered the other day are switching to a vax-only policy for admittance so while I'm still going to play it by ear when the time comes in late September, at least there's that to start with.

Ned Raggett, Monday, 16 August 2021 17:24 (two years ago) link

I was going into the office 3x per week starting the week after July 4. After a short vacation in early-August, with cases starting to pop off and CDC guidance moving back to masking indoors for the vaccinated (no one was masking), I haven't gone in the last two weeks and don't plan on it any time soon. No one has said anything.

I just received an email from our office manager that someone who was vaccinated just tested positive so I feel pretty vindicated in my decisions.

Captain Beefart (PBKR), Monday, 16 August 2021 17:35 (two years ago) link

both kids back in the high school today, full capacity, 3400+ students and staff in relatively tight quarters, everyone masked and overwhelmingly (80-90%+) vaxxed.

This'll be us in a couple of weeks -- good luck to us all! I think this really might work. But I think it's inevitable that clusters of kids will test positive and miss substantial chunks of school and that's gonna be disruptive.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Monday, 16 August 2021 17:40 (two years ago) link

define "work"?

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 16 August 2021 18:27 (two years ago) link

Not a lot of people get sick, and those that do have mild to no symptoms?

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 August 2021 18:31 (two years ago) link

schools being open is going to do what it's done in every other country it's happened, i.e. drive community transmission up significantly (nationally the US's delta wave is small relative to the winter wave because its schools were closed in june/july, unlike in europe). the USA is not magical in this respect.

and the US has lower vaccination rates and looser NPI than most of western europe, and regionally it has vaccination rates in the teens/twenties, so i'm not sure why we're expecting a good outcome in terms of hospitalizations when that happens.

i think schools should reopen, but the idea this "might work" seems strange to me.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Monday, 16 August 2021 18:50 (two years ago) link

Might work = no one I know dies.

Captain Beefart (PBKR), Monday, 16 August 2021 19:04 (two years ago) link

It's the American way.

Captain Beefart (PBKR), Monday, 16 August 2021 19:05 (two years ago) link

I'm not talking about the entire stupid country, I'm talking about where I live. It might work, here. If I lived my life like I were living in Mississippi, I would be living it a lot differently. The patronizing stuff is pretty exhausting.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 August 2021 19:37 (two years ago) link

And I mean, I get it, I get the concern and the caution, it's all real and warranted. But people were positive Lollapalooza would be a super spreader event, and it wasn't. Good news sometimes comes to pass. If anywhere at its best bases its policies on anywhere at its worst, then it will be masks, social distancing and shelter at home for the foreseeable future. And maybe it will be, because the places at their worst right now - Mississippi, Florida, et al. - are really far behind the places at their best right now. You said yourself (xpost) that you think schools should open. Well, there's your "might work" right there, whatever your standard happens to be.

Josh in Chicago, Monday, 16 August 2021 19:50 (two years ago) link

What I have a hard time getting my mind around is: assuming delta means (1) COVID can’t be eradicated (2) COVID is now endemic (3) super spreader events are no longer the primary means of transmission and (4) breakthroughs are not uncommon, then what is the goal with masking, distancing, avoiding indoor events etc unless you are in an area where the medical system is severely overburdened? What is the endgame other than herd immunity via a combination of infection and vaccination? And what do other NPIs do but prolong reaching that endgame? Not a rhetorical question. I mean individually people can choose to mask and avoid indoor activities for years to come if they want to lessen their risk, but it just kind of feels like most of us are going to get it sooner or later.

longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Monday, 16 August 2021 20:04 (two years ago) link

The goal is to make it as harmless as a cold or mild flu.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 August 2021 20:07 (two years ago) link

Or, alternately, we or the planet die.

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 16 August 2021 20:08 (two years ago) link

then what is the goal with masking, distancing, avoiding indoor events etc unless you are in an area where the medical system is severely overburdened?

harm reduction, pure and simple. waiting until the local medical system is already severely overburdened before instituting NPIs is bad policy, in the same way that waiting for catastrophic outcomes of global warming before instituting effective reductions in CO2 emissions is bad policy.

it is to laugh, like so, ha! (Aimless), Monday, 16 August 2021 20:12 (two years ago) link

Or, alternately, we or the planet die and the planet lives.

Captain Beefart (PBKR), Monday, 16 August 2021 20:13 (two years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.