so like… does vaccination actually protect against infection or not?
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 23 February 2023 00:53 (one year ago) link
The bivalent vax keeps from you getting seriously infected/hospitalized as a result of the original omicron variants.
A friend, a research nurse, advised me to get jabbed with a second bivalent vaccine. No harm done, and it may even offer some protection for a couple months.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:00 (one year ago) link
that’s not quite my question. if i wanted to protect others around me, would getting vaccinated make any difference?
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:02 (one year ago) link
Yes, although of course that doesn't mean you can't get infected if you're vaccinated.
It also reduces expected severity of illness if you DO get infected, although of course that doesn't mean you can't get severely ill from COVID if you're vaccinated.
― Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:05 (one year ago) link
Supposedly it's like 40-50% efficacy against infection....until it wanes. Definitely better than the OG boosters
https://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/volumes/72/wr/mm7205e1.htm
― waiting for a czar to fall (Neanderthal), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:17 (one year ago) link
Have a friend who had all the most recent shots and went on trip, only to end up in a covid unit in a foreign country's hospital with Covid pneumonia. friend has lupus, too. not great! but it seems they're on the mend.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:40 (one year ago) link
This is not to say don't get yr shots, but to say: precautions are better than nothing, but this thing can still get you.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:41 (one year ago) link
Yep
― waiting for a czar to fall (Neanderthal), Thursday, 23 February 2023 01:44 (one year ago) link
Immune systems aren't perfect at their job, but a well-educated immune system does better work than a naive one.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 23 February 2023 04:20 (one year ago) link
i get all that, my question is specifically about whether there is ANY evidence that vaccination slows transmission.Neanderthal i don’t understand the paper you link to but it sounds like you’re saying it has a huge impact - a 40-50% percent less chance of being infected (and thus transmitting to someone else) - which is great!
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 23 February 2023 08:28 (one year ago) link
If I remember my Emily Oster emails right, the vaccine makes it less likely that you’ll catch covid for the first few months, but after that the effect is negligible. Separately however, the vaccine greatly reduces the risk of having a serious bought of covid for a much longer time that a few months — but that risk is never zero.
― Chuck_Tatum, Thursday, 23 February 2023 10:07 (one year ago) link
right again i totally get that last part. i'm specifically interested in transmission risk. it's dispiriting if the transmission effect only last a few months. i guess the main thing there remains all the other stuff: masks, being outdoors etc? cause i am not going to get boosted every 4 months or whatever! or maybe i should??
― Tracer Hand, Thursday, 23 February 2023 10:20 (one year ago) link
The CDC announced we're shifting to yearly vaxes. As for transmission effects, it was ever thus, even the original vaccines in early 2021.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 February 2023 10:25 (one year ago) link
As for frequency, I mean...we're still in a pandemic. My friend, whose advice I trust, didn't hesitate when I asked her about a second bivalent jab.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 23 February 2023 10:27 (one year ago) link
if i wanted to protect others around me, would getting vaccinated make any difference?
Short answer: yes.
The vaccine should make a difference at each of the stages of transmission to others that directly involve you. It should raise the threshold of exposure to the virus required to produce a symptomatic infection in you and if you become symptomatic it should allow your immune system to suppress the amount of virus you shed and the length of time you're shedding it. Everything else about transmission is a variable the vaccine cannot influence.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 23 February 2023 20:09 (one year ago) link
I got a second bivalent jab this morning at CVS. Using my old card that ran out of space after my pre-bivalent booster in June 2022 helped grease the lie. So did realizing the staff member and I shared a birthday.
― Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Friday, 3 March 2023 15:40 (one year ago) link
guess i'm putting this here because it's political and the other thread is "non-political". it's also US-centric. avert your eyes.
the house has a new GOP-led subcommittee on the coronavirus, and the purpose seems to be to increase the pain of those of us who lost someone to Covid, those of us still suffering from long covid, and those who are going to experience those things in the future. the purpose is not to erase our experiences, but instead to gas light us as much as possible so that we start to think that maybe we were the problem, and that instead of the problem being hundreds of millions of cruel dumbasses who refused to do anything to help and in fact actively opposed it, the problem was the people who got sick and the people who were hurt.
i continue to await the subcommittee on cancer in which the GOP will go to every length to make those who suffered from cancer feel like it was all just a big unnecessary trick that led to lots of people being afraid about getting cancer, and that those who had cancer were lying, weak, and selfish.
i think the high water mark of people giving a fuck about covid was in the first month. every single day since then has been in the direction of "covid was nothing, we never should have done anything about it, lots of people die every day, we don't care about people who die from the flu, we've gotten used to people dying in car wrecks, why should we care about covid". (getting any sort of memorial or day of recognition for a million people dying of covid in the US alone, for example, is absolutely impossible and i am a fool for even thinking it would happen, even though it would mean everything to me to go out and be with the other people who lost people, on that day, and to see them and for all of us to be there)
the needle won't move back toward the direction of empathy until the next pandemic
House Republicans presented with a textbook case of the ailment this week. The newly formed select subcommittee on the coronavirus pandemic met for the first time for what its chairman, Rep. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), said would be some “Monday-morning quarterbacking.” It instead became a Tuesday afternoon of false starts and illegal blocks.Republicans on the panel, some of them medical doctors and others just playing one on TV, offered their predictable assessments. Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) kicked off with the unsupported allegation that “covid was intentionally released” from a Chinese lab because “it would be impossible for the virus to be accidentally leaked.”Rep. Richard McCormick (R-Ga.) advanced the ball by informing the panel that coronavirus booster shots “do more harm than good.”And then Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) scored with this extraordinary medical discovery: “Researchers found that the vaccinated are at least twice as likely to be infected with covid as the unvaccinated and those with natural immunity.”But the panel’s greatest contribution to the science of misdirection was to feature as witnesses three scientists who arguably did more than all others to champion a herd-immunity approach to covid. Two of them were co-authors of the “Great Barrington Declaration,” put out by a Koch-backed group, which argued in 2020 for letting the virus run wild through the population while somehow segregating the old and vulnerable.Had they prevailed in making herd immunity the official policy, hundreds of thousands more Americans might have died. As it was, President Donald Trump and GOP governors used these scientists’ claims disparaging face masks, isolation and vaccines to whip up resistance to public health restrictions.One of the witnesses, Marty Makary, a Johns Hopkins surgeon and Fox News regular, used the committee meeting to present a new variant of covidiocy. He declared with absolute certainty that the virus came from a Wuhan lab.“It’s a no-brainer that it came from a lab,” he declared. What’s more, “at this point it’s impossible to acquire any more information, and if you did it would only be in the affirmative.” He even suggested that two of the nation’s top virologists knew this but “changed their tunes” because they were bribed with grant money by Anthony Fauci.
Republicans on the panel, some of them medical doctors and others just playing one on TV, offered their predictable assessments. Rep. Debbie Lesko (R-Ariz.) kicked off with the unsupported allegation that “covid was intentionally released” from a Chinese lab because “it would be impossible for the virus to be accidentally leaked.”
Rep. Richard McCormick (R-Ga.) advanced the ball by informing the panel that coronavirus booster shots “do more harm than good.”
And then Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) scored with this extraordinary medical discovery: “Researchers found that the vaccinated are at least twice as likely to be infected with covid as the unvaccinated and those with natural immunity.”
But the panel’s greatest contribution to the science of misdirection was to feature as witnesses three scientists who arguably did more than all others to champion a herd-immunity approach to covid. Two of them were co-authors of the “Great Barrington Declaration,” put out by a Koch-backed group, which argued in 2020 for letting the virus run wild through the population while somehow segregating the old and vulnerable.
Had they prevailed in making herd immunity the official policy, hundreds of thousands more Americans might have died. As it was, President Donald Trump and GOP governors used these scientists’ claims disparaging face masks, isolation and vaccines to whip up resistance to public health restrictions.
One of the witnesses, Marty Makary, a Johns Hopkins surgeon and Fox News regular, used the committee meeting to present a new variant of covidiocy. He declared with absolute certainty that the virus came from a Wuhan lab.
“It’s a no-brainer that it came from a lab,” he declared. What’s more, “at this point it’s impossible to acquire any more information, and if you did it would only be in the affirmative.” He even suggested that two of the nation’s top virologists knew this but “changed their tunes” because they were bribed with grant money by Anthony Fauci.
― z_tbd, Friday, 3 March 2023 17:57 (one year ago) link
also fuck this washington post op-ed writer. even with selective editing i can't excise his uncontrollable, annoying snark
― z_tbd, Friday, 3 March 2023 17:59 (one year ago) link
the needle won't move back toward the direction of empathy until even after millions needlessly die in the next pandemicBut it's probably safe to assume it'll continue moving in its present direction regardless. Monsters gonna monster.
― Beautiful Bean Footage Fetishist (Old Lunch), Friday, 3 March 2023 19:33 (one year ago) link
"2200-2900 People Still Die Of COVID Every Week In This Country But I Haven't Been One Of Them (Yet)" is a really weird shirt to want a child you've never met to wear
― least said, sergio mendes (sic), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 08:25 (one year ago) link
When the next pandemic sweeps the United States, health officials in Ohio won’t be able to shutter businesses or schools, even if they become epicenters of outbreaks. Nor will they be empowered to force Ohioans who have been exposed to go into quarantine. State officials in North Dakota are barred from directing people to wear masks to slow the spread. Not even the president can force federal agencies to issue vaccine or testing mandates to thwart its march.Conservative and libertarian forces have defanged much of the nation’s public health system through legislation and litigation as the world staggers into the fourth year of covid.At least 30 states, nearly all led by Republican legislatures, have passed laws since 2020 that limit public health authority, according to a Washington Post analysis of laws collected by Kaiser Health News and the Associated Press as well as the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials and the Center for Public Health Law Research at Temple University.Health officials and governors in more than half the country are now restricted from issuing mask mandates, school closures, and other protective measures or must seek permission from their state legislatures before renewing emergency orders, the analysis showed.
Conservative and libertarian forces have defanged much of the nation’s public health system through legislation and litigation as the world staggers into the fourth year of covid.
At least 30 states, nearly all led by Republican legislatures, have passed laws since 2020 that limit public health authority, according to a Washington Post analysis of laws collected by Kaiser Health News and the Associated Press as well as the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials and the Center for Public Health Law Research at Temple University.
Health officials and governors in more than half the country are now restricted from issuing mask mandates, school closures, and other protective measures or must seek permission from their state legislatures before renewing emergency orders, the analysis showed.
"gift article" link for those who want to read the rest: https://wapo.st/3J0mqN5
― z_tbd, Wednesday, 8 March 2023 15:33 (one year ago) link
“One day we’re going to have a really bad global crisis and a pandemic far worse than covid, and we’ll look to the government to protect us, but it’ll have its hands behind its back and a blindfold on,” said Lawrence Gostin, director of Georgetown University’s O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law. “We’ll die with our rights on — we want liberty but we don’t want protection.”
jeeeeeeez Lawrence, what a downer, lighten up!
― z_tbd, Wednesday, 8 March 2023 15:35 (one year ago) link
a lot of graves are going to require urine when some of these people shuffle off
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 16:25 (one year ago) link
fucking death cult iirc
― realistic pillow (Jon not Jon), Wednesday, 8 March 2023 19:10 (one year ago) link
Today in fucking-around-and-finding-out: https://www.vice.com/en/article/z3mb89/ivermectin-danny-lemoi-death
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Monday, 13 March 2023 18:56 (one year ago) link
Wait, he'd been taking it daily for ... a decade!?
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 13 March 2023 19:34 (one year ago) link
Lemoi began taking the version of ivermectin designed for animals on a daily basis in 2012, after he was diagnosed with Lyme disease, according to a detailed account of his medical history he gave on a podcast last November.
Man, if he'd gotten into shilling essential oils between Lyme exposure and COVID he could have been any number of my high school classmates.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Monday, 13 March 2023 19:42 (one year ago) link
wow, this thread's revived less and less, eh?
With March ending this is the longest span of no COVID cases anywhere in my life since the beginning.
Two hundred people still die a day, though.
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 27 March 2023 16:05 (one year ago) link
A friend got it at the end of Feb, but otherwise, nothing here for a while, either.
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Monday, 27 March 2023 16:10 (one year ago) link
currently doing the rounds in the uk.
dad collapsed and when the medics had ruled out all the usual stuff they tested for covid and he was positive (he'd been to skittles 3 days before). uncle, the one who was meant to be sheltering but has mostly been sheltering in the pub also came down with it from the same event. both better now.
i went into central london for only the 2nd time in 3 years on thursday, 45 minutes on public transport total, started coughing on the saturday, sweating, shivering for a couple of days, still coughing 9 days later.
― koogs, Monday, 27 March 2023 16:21 (one year ago) link
jeez, koogs, best wishes
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 27 March 2023 16:25 (one year ago) link
are UK numbers still bad? a few months ago my friend teaching there on a temporary contract said that people only wore masks when they HAD covid, but that no one else did at all
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table), Monday, 27 March 2023 17:00 (one year ago) link
(i've been jabbed, COVID and flu, but the last one was start of Oct. it's not been bad bad, more of a chore than anything)
― koogs, Monday, 27 March 2023 17:09 (one year ago) link
Yeah, I know a few people that have tested positive in the past few months. Between vaccines and treatment, more a pia than anything else. I think right now the transmission rate is pretty low everywhere in America. Now, common colds? Everyone everywhere seems to have the sniffles.
― Josh in Chicago, Monday, 27 March 2023 17:22 (one year ago) link
― Goose Bigelow, Fowl Gigolo (the table is the table),
Isn't that how things are here? I just ended a 49-student course and I was the only masked person.
― the very juice and sperm of kindness. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 27 March 2023 19:58 (one year ago) link
UK reported numbers are up 30% week-on-week lately, so probably vastly higher irl British Columbia’s restrictions on public testing are so limiting that it is currently estimated to have reported numbers 1% of actual US deaths have dropped below the 9/11sworth/pw standard this month
― least said, sergio mendes (sic), Monday, 27 March 2023 20:46 (one year ago) link
i think i unbookmarked this thread. i finally got covid in January and have been more lax about masking since then, but still do it on public transport/ crowded shops more often than not. i had a mild cold the other week and felt more comfortable masking tbh.
― kinder, Monday, 27 March 2023 22:21 (one year ago) link
i went into central london for only the 2nd time in 3 years on thursday, 45 minutes on public transport total, started coughing on the saturday, sweating, shivering for a couple of days, still coughing 9 days later.― koogs, Monday, 27 March 2023 17:21 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
― koogs, Monday, 27 March 2023 17:21 (yesterday) bookmarkflaglink
this is basically what happened to me three weeks ago (though it was a Friday when I was in London)...I'm mostly over it but still not as sprightly as I was before
― TWELVE Michelob stars?!? (seandalai), Monday, 27 March 2023 23:46 (one year ago) link
I essentially choose to remain on general guard and I see no reason not to. My hospital still has about ten patients right now because of COVID, and that's just one hospital in the city. I see no need to run an unneeded risk, and with the shift to spring/summer about here, and therefore more chances to hang outside with people, great; I'll happily mask up in the meantime when I'm inside somewhere as needed.
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 27 March 2023 23:49 (one year ago) link
thanks to Elon’s broken new Twitter, despite having blocked him ages ago I am now getting Feigl-Ding pushed back into my feed, had to block him all over again, but not before seeing that he’s back on his dangerous fearmongering bullshit, wildly misquoting Fauci and having everyone in his mentions believing that Fauci is saying “vaccines don’t work”.
― Maxmillion D. Boosted (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Monday, 27 March 2023 23:55 (one year ago) link
Does anyone know how soon after infection you can in turn be infectious? Googling has only turned up the information that you can be infectious 48 hours before you have symptoms, but it seems unlikely that 5 minutes after you were infected you would already be able to infect others. (I have a practical interest in this question, due to exposure to someone who was exposed to someone else a few hours earlier...)
― toby, Tuesday, 28 March 2023 17:54 (one year ago) link
I've had a hard time finding anything more specific than that, sadly. There's definitely a incubation period though, it's not exposure-instainfection-transmit.
Hoping it's a false alarm for you!
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 28 March 2023 18:03 (one year ago) link
Anecdotally, I had a friend last year test positive on a Tuesday night, where that previous Monday evening, several of us had close contact with her, and nobody else at the gathering caught it. So it definitely varies.
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 28 March 2023 18:04 (one year ago) link
Thanks! Not worried for myself, the real situation is that person A has covid, person B spent time with them, I'm person C who then spent time with person B, and then I spoke to person D who has a reason to avoid getting covid.
― toby, Tuesday, 28 March 2023 18:11 (one year ago) link
I would guess D is probably ok but probably worth them keeping an eye
― hootenanny-soundtracking clusterfucks about milking cows (Neanderthal), Tuesday, 28 March 2023 18:31 (one year ago) link
i think i looked this up a while ago when my relatives were considering risk of sitting on a train then visiting elderly parents the same day. think we established infection would not happen that quickly.
― kinder, Tuesday, 28 March 2023 19:56 (one year ago) link
Coworker and 6 of his family group caught it 3 weeks ago at his parents' house, none serious fortunately. He's back at work after testing negative but still has a cough and fatigue.
― Jaq, Wednesday, 29 March 2023 04:14 (one year ago) link
I just go by 24 hours, so e.g. if I’m in my unmasked college class, I’ll be ok if I see someone for dinner the next night but I’ll be more careful around other people after that. By and large though, in London where I live, no one I know masks that much except for me, so there’s no longer much point in being “careful for other people” — although I’m careful for myself.
I will sit unmasked in cafes and friends houses and occasional quick meals now - that’s a big quality of life improvement for me, and I’m comfortable with the risk. But I don’t see any point in going unmasked on transport or in a big shop. It’s really no bother to mask in those situations.
― Chuck_Tatum, Wednesday, 29 March 2023 06:52 (one year ago) link
totally, that's pretty much what I do as well
― obsidian crocogolem (sleeve), Wednesday, 29 March 2023 13:59 (one year ago) link
Can't find the 'ilxors with covid' thread, but me and my bf have it again. Pretty sure he picked it up from work again. We're both vaccinated but I'm really struggling with it, very shivery and full of aches.
― emil.y, Wednesday, 5 April 2023 13:26 (one year ago) link