The uninsured do not "remain the demographic with the lowest vax rates."
Correct, I forgot rural residents. The uninsured are the second-lowest vaccinated population (59% to 58%).
18% of uninsured people say they will definitely not get vaccinated in contrast to 31% of Republicans
"The difference is that the uninsured are less likely to be steadfastly refusing - they just aren't 'taking advantage' of our healthcare system, which is the thing eephus said isn't happening."
― papal hotwife (milo z), Tuesday, 21 December 2021 23:49 (two years ago) link
All of which proves the point of the tweet about access - people who don't regularly have access to are (correctly) suspicious of our healthcare system. They're also more likely to be low-income workers, which makes finances/time off part of the equation. I'm doing okay financially and I delayed my second dose multiple times because I couldn't budget 24 hours to deal with potential (and as it turned out actual) side effects - the same with my booster.
It might be comforting to believe that the unvaccinated are all just a bunch of 1/6 reenactors waiting to get in on the game for round 2, but reality is more complicated.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Tuesday, 21 December 2021 23:54 (two years ago) link
Your statement that insurance status was the biggest predictor of vax status was wrong and you're trying to rationalize your words into you somehow being not wrong. The most annoying part is that I know you know how to read a chart and interpret data reasonably and you pretend not to know.
It's true that education, insurance status, and hours worked affect vaccination status. It's trivial and uncontroversial to say so. It also doesn't change the fact that partisanship and partisan misinformation have clearly, demonstrably, numerically verifiably played a larger part in vaccination status for a 10 month old free vaccine than insurance status or income level.
I won't read your reply because you're a clown and it's useless to talk to you.
― bamcquern, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 00:13 (two years ago) link
Your statement that insurance status was the biggest predictor of vax status was wrong and you're trying to rationalize your words into you somehow being not wrong.
The article you posted is about who makes up the most unvaccinated people, which is a different question. On an individual level, rural residents and the uninsured are both more likely to be unvaccinated than "Republicans."
― papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 00:20 (two years ago) link
Oh my god move ON
― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:06 (two years ago) link
sounds like we should vilify individuals then
― towards fungal computer (harbl), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:16 (two years ago) link
only if they don't wear a fucking mask
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:26 (two years ago) link
I "get" vaccine reluctance even though I may not agree with it, but a lot of people defending its adherents itt are ignoring that a lot of these fucks won't wear a mask either
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:27 (two years ago) link
signed, guy who just yelled at some massless asshole I n the 7-11
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:28 (two years ago) link
lol "maskless"
Yeah, my trio of antivaxxer chucklefucks neighbors have been aggressively maskless in our building over the past two years. It'll be intersting to see if anything changes now that cases have jumped like 400% in a week (in a city with a nearly 90% fully-vaxxed rate).
― Rep. Cobra Commander (R-TX) (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:31 (two years ago) link
But tbf, most of our neighbors are aggressively maskless at this point. I was in our generally unpopulated storage area this afternoon when someone whose storage cage thing is right next to mine popped in maskless and was all like 'oh, tee hee, didn't realize anyone was in here!' and pulled her turleneck over her mouth like that's a fucking thing we're doing in late 2021. I just split rather than being all 'are you not at all concerned about my vaccination status and being right up in my face, even if only for the sake of your unvaccinated two-year-old?!?'.There are a whole lot of people in my world who I'm never going to be able to see as non-idiots when this is all over.
― Rep. Cobra Commander (R-TX) (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:37 (two years ago) link
My sister works in a post office with two men who apparently proudly and loudly refused to get vaccinated, and both have now been in hospital w covid, are back home on oxygen, and changed their tunes but now they can't get their shots for 90 days or whatever.
― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 01:42 (two years ago) link
I do think there are a lot of vaccinated folk that, somehow, someway, managed to have missed the boat on the fact that it doesn't stop transmission like thought during Alpha wave, and that the protection definitely waned.
my best friend often was going out to restaurants the last few months, no mask, though he'd bring one when I went out with him. he never could give me a real reason why not - other than he didn't seem to think it was that big of a risk.
It seems ludicrous because it wasn't like this news was confined to fringe resources, but on talking to people each day, it really seems like a bunch of people think they're more protected than they are against these variants due to being vaccinated. or are convinced they'll know when they catch it and not transmit to anybody.
my other best friend was starting to slack on masks but after listening to me talk to her about the risks, started doing it again. <3
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:08 (two years ago) link
and neither of them were "COVID is overblown" folks either is the weird part. the latter friend got it and would send me her symptoms every day for a month, and wound up losing her job due to quarantining responsibly.
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:09 (two years ago) link
(this was in April of 2020)
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:12 (two years ago) link
two men who apparently proudly and loudly refused to get vaccinated, and both have now been in hospital w covid, are back home on oxygen, and changed their tunes
those fucks are lucky to be home and alive. the worst stories are the 'proudly unvaxxed' who literally beg the nurses for anything that could save them, before being put into deep sedation, on a ventilator, and die two weeks later.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:17 (two years ago) link
https://www.reddit.com/r/QAnonCasualties/comments/rakxun/my_career_of_treating_patients_has_ended/
― towards fungal computer (harbl), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:18 (two years ago) link
I think you are totally correct about that, based on my experiences over the past few days - the guy in the 7-11 said the same thing - "hey I'm vaccinated" - SO WHAT YOU CAN STILL SPREAD IT
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:19 (two years ago) link
People who just stop listening WAY too soon: C/D?
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:22 (two years ago) link
gonna have to say "Dud" there
― chaos goblin line cook (sleeve), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:26 (two years ago) link
yeah people tend to go with what they heard first, or their shitty layman's interpretation, which is a problem. Like when the first anecdotes came out of South Africa that most cases were milder (before we had even any empirical data), people have been saying "IT'S A MILDER WAVE, WHO CARES", and not backing down from that stance. even though the epis very much are still saying that's not been proven to be the case AND it'd have to be a much, much, much milder wave to keep hospitalizations down.
Director Walensky during Alpha said it didn't seem that vaccinated could catch or transmit the disease, and that's all anybody remembers. Honestly during the beginning of Delta, I had stopped masking because they told us vaccination effectiveness was holding, and I believed that we were unlikely to spread. as soon as that new report came out regarding Provincetown, I went back to it immediately. but a LOT of people didn't because they were still operating under the assumption that we couldn't spread.
like whose fault is it if people don't listen? Scientists kinda get blamed when they 'speak too soon', but if they say nothing at all people ask why the silence. I do not envy them. CDC has sucked though.
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:28 (two years ago) link
(that being said, there *was* a preprint today that was optimistic on reduction of hospitalization, but pre-prints scare me and are often of varying quality, so I won't be sharing it).
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:29 (two years ago) link
of course it's political. what do the right-wingers in this country believe? what consistent principles do they have? just one - Lets Go Brandon/Make America Great Again Again/whatever makes the liberals mad. who are the ones making the most noise about how everyone should get vaccinated? there's your answer. these people do not see anything as a threat unless it's right in front of their noses. of course they're going to die easily preventable deaths as soon as a pandemic came along.
maybe one for the shitty NYT opinionbot but I truly believe our death toll would be lower had Trump gotten re-elected. for the dumbest possible reason, of course. Trump would've tried to convince the country that he alone invented the vaccine. all the libs would've gotten it anyway because we don't think like that. if you wanna die to trigger your political enemies hey, more power to ya
― frogbs, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 02:44 (two years ago) link
He got booed for mentioning the vaccine in late spring. I'm not entirely convinced they listen to him on anything, he's just the avatar of their collective id. Trump would have had to make the CDC go on TV and tell you not to take the vaccine to get the oppositional defiance as ideology crowd to sign on wholeheartedly.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 03:10 (two years ago) link
well sure, but his crowd seemed pretty into the vaccine when he was in office. they only oppose it now cuz Biden wouldn't shut up about it
― frogbs, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 03:12 (two years ago) link
fresh wave of bad reviews for yankee candles pic.twitter.com/1mlandB78I— drewtoothpaste (@drewtoothpaste) December 21, 2021
― STOCK FIST-PUMPER BRAD (BradNelson), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 03:56 (two years ago) link
Milo makes a good point, what I said should be taken to apply only to the set of people it applies to (which is a lot of people)
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 05:09 (two years ago) link
Here is the head of NYC corrections sounding the alarm: 1% of prisoners were COVID positive until recently, 9.5% yesterday, over 17% today. He “implores” us to stop sending people to rikers. pic.twitter.com/RkfIYz5NtB— Sarah Lustbader (@SarahLustbader) December 22, 2021
― dark end of the st. maud (sic), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 05:58 (two years ago) link
[Thread] 1. NEW study on how sick (or not) #Omicron makes people in SA Full study here: https://t.co/u07Q4W3vDq (preprint) pic.twitter.com/zrgeKxFSkQ— Mia Malan (@miamalan) December 22, 2021
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 14:36 (two years ago) link
so this should surprise nobody, but FL's Department of Health is actively online on Twitter and attacking experts who are focused on the worsening numbers here. Like actually sitting chemists engaged in flame wars and siccing their followers on people like Howard Forman (an MD and Yale professor). they're using FL Dept of Health's own twitter account and their own personal ones to do this.
it's gross and definitely a sign DeSanthole is aspiring to Republican heights beyond being our governor
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 14:52 (two years ago) link
As funny as it is, I thought the Yankee Candle thing turned out that they changed the formula and it smells less now?
― A Pile of Ants (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 14:56 (two years ago) link
i know it's off-topic but yankee candles, christ, definitely one of the worst aspects of growing up around conservatives
― Nedlene Grendel as Basenji Holmo (map), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 15:11 (two years ago) link
as i remember them you absolutely have to be 100% anosmiac to not smell anything from them. i doubt they changed their formula that much.
― Nedlene Grendel as Basenji Holmo (map), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 15:13 (two years ago) link
what do they smell like
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 15:18 (two years ago) link
Complacency.
― Ima Gardener (in orbit), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 15:23 (two years ago) link
anyone care to look into the new walter reed vaccine and tell me all the ways in which it is good but also bad, the hope that it provides, but also the potential drawbacks which are already foreseeable and unfortunately mean that no, it's not yet time to be optimistic
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 17:13 (two years ago) link
Good news:
New data from Scotland and South Africa suggest people infected with the Omicron variant of coronavirus are at markedly lower risk of hospitalization than those who contracted earlier versions of the virus, promising signs that vaccines remain effective at warding off severe illness with the fast-spreading strain.
Scientists caution, though, that Omicron’s heightened transmissibility—and its ability to sidestep immunity from vaccination or prior infection—means it still has the potential to cause further waves of sickness and death simply by infecting many more people.
“The combination of increased risk of transmission and immune evasion of Omicron mean that any advantage in reduced hospitalization could potentially be exceeded by increased rates of infection in the community,” said researchers at the University of Edinburgh in a paper detailing their findings that is still to be peer-reviewed.
The Edinburgh study, drawing on the health records of 5.4 million people in Scotland, found the risk of hospitalization with Covid-19 was two-thirds lower with Omicron than with Delta.
― So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 17:24 (two years ago) link
If I'm reading it right, there's no news there at all? It's just saying more Scottish people are vaccinated now than in 2020.
― dark end of the st. maud (sic), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:00 (two years ago) link
for real, did any of you read anything about the Walter Reed/US Army vaccine? the one that broke last night?
https://www.defenseone.com/technology/2021/12/us-army-creates-single-vaccine-effective-against-all-covid-sars-variants/360089/
i realize reading a military-focused publication is going to make some of your lower intestines spontaneously explode. but this seems extremely promising to me, like incredibly EXTREMELY promising to me? am i fucking crazy?
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:22 (two years ago) link
It is confirming what was anecdotal prior to now, that in each of the places where Omicron hit hardest first carry a much lower risk of hospitalization. These are the first studies to actually definitively claim that.
Attribution is still not nailed down - how much of it is due to prior infection/vaccination versus less virulence. But the same pattern has been seen in countries with varying degrees of vaccine-derived immunity and immunity from infection.
However important not to overlook that this same summary indicated that this benefit could be offset by the ease of transmission, which means less people proportionately infected, but enough total hospitalizations to overwhelm hospitals.
It's probably going to come down to the reaction in the non-immunized - if there is an inherent less virulence rather than just it being a product of an immunity wall, things might turn out better.
Problem is we probably won't know that until the wave is over or close to it, so curbing spread is important.
― hopefully this review helped someone (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:23 (two years ago) link
Xpost
here. this way we don't have to give lucrative clicks to the mouthpiece of global genocide
Within weeks, scientists at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research expect to announce that they have developed a vaccine that is effective against COVID-19 and all its variants, even Omicron, as well as previous SARS-origin viruses that have killed millions of people worldwide. The achievement is the result of almost two years of work on the virus. The Army lab received its first DNA sequencing of the COVID-19 virus in early 2020. Very early on, Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch decided to focus on making a vaccine that would work against not just the existing strain but all of its potential variants as well.Walter Reed’s Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle COVID-19 vaccine, or SpFN, completed animal trials earlier this year with positive results. Phase 1 of human trials, which tested the vaccine against Omicron and the other variants, wrapped up this month, again with positive results that are undergoing final review, Dr. Kayvon Modjarrad, director of Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch, said in an exclusive interview with Defense One. The new vaccine will still need to undergo phase 2 and phase 3 trials.Unlike existing vaccines, Walter Reed’s SpFN uses a soccer ball-shaped protein with 24 faces for its vaccine, which allows scientists to attach the spikes of multiple coronavirus strains on different faces of the protein.“It's very exciting to get to this point for our entire team and I think for the entire Army as well,” Modjarrad said. The vaccine’s human trials took longer than expected, he said, because the lab needed to test the vaccine on subjects who had neither been vaccinated nor previously infected with COVID.
The achievement is the result of almost two years of work on the virus. The Army lab received its first DNA sequencing of the COVID-19 virus in early 2020. Very early on, Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch decided to focus on making a vaccine that would work against not just the existing strain but all of its potential variants as well.
Walter Reed’s Spike Ferritin Nanoparticle COVID-19 vaccine, or SpFN, completed animal trials earlier this year with positive results. Phase 1 of human trials, which tested the vaccine against Omicron and the other variants, wrapped up this month, again with positive results that are undergoing final review, Dr. Kayvon Modjarrad, director of Walter Reed’s infectious diseases branch, said in an exclusive interview with Defense One. The new vaccine will still need to undergo phase 2 and phase 3 trials.
Unlike existing vaccines, Walter Reed’s SpFN uses a soccer ball-shaped protein with 24 faces for its vaccine, which allows scientists to attach the spikes of multiple coronavirus strains on different faces of the protein.
“It's very exciting to get to this point for our entire team and I think for the entire Army as well,” Modjarrad said.
The vaccine’s human trials took longer than expected, he said, because the lab needed to test the vaccine on subjects who had neither been vaccinated nor previously infected with COVID.
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:25 (two years ago) link
i am basically a town crier that is fucking annoying and no one looks at him, but
they have developed a vaccine that is effective against COVID-19 and all its variants, even Omicron, as well as previous SARS-origin viruses that have killed millions of people worldwide.
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:26 (two years ago) link
seems noteworthy
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:27 (two years ago) link
it is hard to exist in this state of hope without it being immediately narrowed and dampened by caution and the need for patience and probably 6-12 more months of developments. can someone please bring me out of this state of hope, back to where i belong, the purgatory of pragmatic caution?
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:28 (two years ago) link
"expect to announce that" is probably the reason none of us itt have any opinion yet KM
― dark end of the st. maud (sic), Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:30 (two years ago) link
whatever dude
i am going to outside and be happy
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:31 (two years ago) link
it's huge fucking news
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:32 (two years ago) link
or you know what, it is to me. let me just put myself in the same idiotic bubble that the rest of the world is in. i am going to selectively choose my own favorite piece of news, and just believe the fuck out of it
― Karl Malone, Wednesday, 22 December 2021 18:33 (two years ago) link