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Subject: "The Omicron coronavirus variant (B.1.1.529) thread - PT II" Previous topic | Next topic
handle
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Fri Jan-27-23 10:48 AM

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"The Omicron coronavirus variant (B.1.1.529) thread - PT II"


          

Starting a new thread because the older one has over 500 replies and takes forever to load.

Old thread location: https://board.okayplayer.com/okp.php?az=show_topic&forum=4&topic_id=13448755&mesg_id=13448755&page=

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Topic Outline
Subject Author Message Date ID
01/27/2023
Jan 27th 2023
1
Electric Boogaflu
Jan 28th 2023
2
Turbo & Ozone approved.
Feb 22nd 2023
9
01/28/2023
Jan 28th 2023
3
Find you resources now - before you get infected
Jan 29th 2023
4
Biden intends to end Covid-19 and public health emergencies on May 11,2...
Jan 30th 2023
5
I really hate people misusing the results of this study
Feb 22nd 2023
6
The fallacy is: People who get COVID die at a much higher rate ....
Feb 22nd 2023
7
      Exactly
Feb 22nd 2023
8
02/28/2022
Feb 28th 2023
10
Wtf do you mean?
Feb 28th 2023
11
I mean it's "BAD" , like "low"
Feb 28th 2023
12
its not settled
Mar 01st 2023
17
Lol, no, lab leak is NOT the most likely origin.
Feb 28th 2023
13
      i responded in the other post
Mar 01st 2023
14
      You have an exaggerated sense of what "gain of function" research
Mar 01st 2023
15
           RE: You have an exaggerated sense of what "gain of function" r...
Mar 01st 2023
16
                No one said it was impossbile, jsut need some proof
Mar 02nd 2023
18
                RE: No one said it was impossbile, jsut need some proof
Mar 02nd 2023
20
                     the wet market thing always felt more racist than the lab leak theory
Mar 04th 2023
25
                          in the end
Mar 04th 2023
27
                Incapable without it being statistically obvious in the genome.
Mar 03rd 2023
22
                     Even then they GOT YOU
Mar 03rd 2023
23
                     RE: Even then they GOT YOU
Mar 04th 2023
26
                     it's not that simple
Mar 04th 2023
24
      yeah, i've heard many scientists already come out against this story...
Mar 02nd 2023
19
           yea but advances science
Mar 02nd 2023
21
Defintion of Low Confidence as used by the DOE
Mar 13th 2023
28
      don't know what your point is
Mar 23rd 2023
32
03/13/2023
Mar 13th 2023
29
3/20/2023
Mar 20th 2023
30
what i find puzzling
Mar 24th 2023
33
the raccoon dog "report"
Mar 24th 2023
34
3/23/2023
Mar 23rd 2023
31
03/26/2023
Mar 26th 2023
35
RE: 03/26/2023
Mar 27th 2023
36
      Good to hear you're doing okay
Mar 27th 2023
37
03/28/2022
Mar 28th 2023
38
04/10/2023
Apr 11th 2023
39
i have serious question and i hope people don't come at me for asking:
Apr 11th 2023
40
I don’t think it’s much of a risk anymore
Apr 11th 2023
41
appreciate your thoughts.
Apr 11th 2023
45
i stopped masking like a year ago
Apr 11th 2023
42
I got it a month ago, and I'm fully vaxed (with the most recent booster)
Apr 11th 2023
43
It depends
Apr 11th 2023
44
the costs of masking have
Apr 11th 2023
46
04.14.2023
Apr 14th 2023
47
I don't think I posted these last week
Apr 14th 2023
48
let it go
Apr 14th 2023
49
04/17/2023
Apr 17th 2023
50
04/19/2023
Apr 19th 2023
51
04/25/2023
Apr 25th 2023
52
04/29/2023
Apr 29th 2023
53
NYT article interview with Fauci
Apr 29th 2023
54
05/05/2023
May 05th 2023
55
05/11/2023 -
May 11th 2023
56
05/24/2023
May 24th 2023
57

handle
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Fri Jan-27-23 11:03 AM

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1. "01/27/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

tldr;
Story 1:Bivalent data is good enough that FDA advisors say it should replace the OG vaccine.

Story 2:Evusheld doesn't work against XBB1.5, so people with weak immune system who took it prophylactical-ly lose another tool.

Story 3:A proposal to make the vaccine a once-a-year thing. (I think it's a bad idea because this virus is changing faster than once a year.)

Story 4:It's old but I don't think I posted it. If you are pregnant and get COVID you have much higher risks of being hospitalized.

--

Story 1:
FDA advisors recommend replacing original Covid vaccine with bivalent omicron shots for all doses
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/01/26/fda-advisors-recommend-using-covid-omicron-shots-for-all-doses.html

*The 21 members of the FDA committee unanimously backed the proposal, agreeing that it would simplify the U.S. Covid vaccination program.

*Currently, Pfizer’s and Moderna’s omicron shots are only authorized as a booster, while the first two doses are still their old shots based on the original Covid strain.

The committee’s 21 members unanimously backed the proposal, agreeing that it would simplify the U.S. Covid vaccination program.

“This is absolutely the right thing to do for the program. It will make things simpler,” said Dr. Melinda Wharton, a senior official at the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, a division of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The proposed change would only affect people who have not yet received their two-dose primary vaccination series. No timeline was provided on when this switch might occur if the FDA accepts the panel’s nonbinding recommendation.

---
Story 2:
U.S. FDA pulls authorization for AstraZeneca's COVID-19 treatment Evusheld
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/us-fda-withdraws-authorization-astrazenecas-evusheld-2023-01-26/

Jan 26 (Reuters) - The U.S. health regulator has withdrawn emergency-use authorization for AstraZeneca's (AZN.L) COVID-19 antibody cocktail Evusheld as the treatment is not expected to neutralize the currently dominant XBB.1.5 subvariant of Omicron.

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) had limited Evusheld's use earlier this month for the same reason and the agency's Thursday announcement sent U.S. shares of London-based AstraZeneca down 1.31% to $65.75.

Omicron subvariant XBB.1.5 has been spreading rapidly in the country since December and it made up nearly half of all U.S. COVID-19 cases last week, according to government data.

--
Story 3:
Should COVID vaccines be yearly? Proposal divides US scientists
Some say the US Food and Drug Administration’s proposal to update COVID-19 vaccines each year, similar to influenza jabs, could boost uptake.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-00234-7


Scientists are split about a US Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) proposal to update COVID-19 vaccines once a year, similar to the agency’s approach for annually updating influenza vaccines. At a meeting of the FDA’s vaccine advisory panel on 26 January, some researchers argued that the proposal to offer an updated vaccine every US autumn would help simplify the country’s complex COVID immunization schedule and might boost uptake as a result.

But other scientists were less convinced about the timeline — or whether healthy adults should be urged to receive an annual COVID-19 jab at all. Angela Shen, a vaccine specialist at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, says the proposal, released on Monday, is “conceptually not a bad idea”. But she questions whether the data support updating the vaccine composition once a year because SARS-CoV-2 spawns new variants at a much faster rate than influenza. “Just scratching out ‘flu’ and replacing it with ‘COVID’ on all the documents might not work, because COVID is not the flu,” says Shen, who is a member of a US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory panel on immunization practices.


--
Story 4:
Large new review underscores the risks of Covid-19 during pregnancy
https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/16/health/covid-19-pregnancy-risks-review/index.html

Pregnant women and their developing babies are at higher risk for severe outcomes if they get Covid-19, and now a large, international review is helping to underscore how devastating those risks can be.

The study draws on data from 12 studies from as many countries—including the United States. Altogether, the studies included more than 13,000 pregnant women—about 2,000 who had a confirmed or probable case of Covid-19. The health outcomes for these women and their babies were compared to about 11,000 pregnancies where the mother tested negative for Covid-19 or antibodies to it at the time of their deliveries.

Across the studies about 3% of pregnant women with Covid-19 needed intensive care, and about 4% needed any kind of critical care, but this was far higher than the numbers of pregnant women who needed that kind of care outside of a Covid-19 infection.

Compared to pregnant individuals who weren’t infected, those who got Covid-19 were nearly 4 times more likely to be admitted to an intensive care unit. They were 15 times more likely to be ventilated and were 7 times more likely to die. They also had higher risks for pre-eclampisa, blood clots, and problems caused by high blood pressure. Babies born to moms who had Covid-19 were at higher risk for preterm birth and low birth weights.

Previous studies have suggested that Covid-19 may increase the risk of stillbirth, but this study didn’t find that same link.

------------


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squeeg
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Sat Jan-28-23 04:04 AM

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2. "Electric Boogaflu"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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CyrenYoung
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33750 posts
Wed Feb-22-23 01:13 PM

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9. "Turbo & Ozone approved."
In response to Reply # 2


  

          


*skatin' the rings of saturn*


..and miles to go before i sleep...

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Sat Jan-28-23 08:28 AM

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3. "01/28/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Omicron sub-variant XBB.1.5 accounts for 61.3% of U.S. COVID cases - CDC
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/omicron-sub-variant-xbb15-accounts-613-us-covid-cases-cdc-2023-01-27/

Jan 27 (Reuters) - The Omicron subvariant XBB.1.5 has likely become the dominant variant in the United States, accounting for 61.3% of COVID cases in the week ended Jan. 28, data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed on Friday.

The subvariant accounted for 49.5% of cases in the week ended Jan. 21, estimates from CDC showed.

XBB.1.5, which is currently the most transmissible variant, is an offshoot of XBB, first detected in October.

The now-dominant XBB-related subvariants are derived from the BA.2 version of Omicron.

--
What’s CH.1.1? Meet ‘Orthrus,’ a new wildcard Omicron strain with a concerning Delta mutation
https://fortune.com/well/2023/01/27/meet-orthus-ch11-new-omcrion-covid-variant-delta-mutation-deltacron-convergent-evolution/

^^Info about the dominant strain in the UK.

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handle
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18512 posts
Sun Jan-29-23 12:59 PM

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4. "Find you resources now - before you get infected"
In response to Reply # 0


          

1: Know where your PCR testing locations are:

In San Diego they've closed the majority of testing sites and many of the remains have gone to rapid lateral flow tests. I'd google " PCT testing" and figure out where you'd need to go if you need a PCRF test.

San Diego is here: https://www.sandiegocounty.gov/content/sdc/hhsa/programs/phs/community_epidemiology/dc/2019-nCoV/testing.html

2:Know how to message your doctor or someone about anti-viral pills:
I have a portal I use to message my doctor, or I could go into the urgent care to get Paxlovid. San Diego suggest calling 2-1-1 if you don't have a doctor.

Also ask your pharmacy if they can prescribe it directly for you - many can if they have a doctor, a physician assistant or a nurse practitioner available. Some states allow pharmacists to prescribe too.

3:If you think you may have it, isolate or wear mask around people
Better safe than sorry.


Find out now, when you're sick it'll be much less fun.

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Mon Jan-30-23 08:16 PM

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5. " Biden intends to end Covid-19 and public health emergencies on May 11,2..."
In response to Reply # 0


          

tldr:
Medicaid will kick a whole bunch of people off.
Vaccines no longer free.
Congress ( REPUBLICANS!) blocking any new aid, so new research, paying for existing treatments, etc. will all be gone.


https://www.cnn.com/2023/01/30/politics/may-11-end-of-covid-and-public-health-emergencies


President Joe Biden intends to end the Covid-19 national and public health emergencies on May 11, the White House said Monday.

The White House, in a statement of administration policy announcing opposition to two Republican measures to end the emergencies, said the national emergency and public health emergency authorities declared in response to the pandemic would each be extended one final time to May 11.

“This wind down would align with the Administration’s previous commitments to give at least 60 days’ notice prior to termination of the (public health emergency),” the statement said.

The statement added, “To be clear, continuation of these emergency declarations until May 11 does not impose any restriction at all on individual conduct with regard to COVID-19. They do not impose mask mandates or vaccine mandates. They do not restrict school or business operations. They do not require the use of any medicines or tests in response to cases of COVID-19.”

The statement came in response to a pair of measures before the House that would end the public health emergency and the Covid-19 national emergency.

The administration argues that the bills are unnecessary because it intends to end the emergencies anyway. The White House also noted the passage of the measures ahead of May 11 would have unintended consequences, such as disrupting the administration’s plans for ending certain policies that are authorized by the emergencies.

The White House said it would extend the Covid-19 emergencies one final time in order to ensure an orderly wind-down of key authorities that states, health care providers and patients have relied on throughout the pandemic.

A White House official pointed to a successful vaccination campaign and reductions in Covid cases, hospitalizations and deaths as a rationale for lifting the emergency declarations. The official said a final extension will allow for a smooth transition for health care providers and patients and noted that health care facilities have already begun preparing for that transition.

The administration is actively reviewing flexible policies that were authorized under the public health emergency to determine which can remain in place after it is lifted on May 11.

Benefits of the public health emergency
The public health emergency has enabled the government to provide many Americans with Covid-19 tests, treatments and vaccines at no charge, as well as offer enhanced social safety net benefits, to help the nation cope with the pandemic and minimize its impact.

For instance, it has allowed most Americans covered by Medicare, Medicaid and private insurance plans to obtain Covid-19 tests and vaccines at no cost during the pandemic. Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries have also had certain therapeutic treatments, such as monoclonal antibodies, fully covered.

Once the public health emergency ends, many Americans will have to start paying for these items.

However, the federal government has been preparing to shift Covid-19 care to the commercial market since last year, in part because Congress has not authorized additional funding to purchase additional vaccines, treatments and tests.

The public health emergency has also meant additional funds for hospitals, which have been receiving a 20% increase in Medicare’s payment rate for treating Covid-19 patients.

But several of the most meaningful enhancements to public assistance programs are no longer tied to the public health emergency. Congress severed the connection in December as part of its fiscal year 2023 government funding package.

Most notably, states will now be able to start processing Medicaid redeterminations and disenrolling residents who no longer qualify, starting April 1.

As part of a Covid-19 relief package passed in March 2020, states were barred from kicking people off Medicaid during the public health emergency in exchange for additional federal matching funds. Medicaid enrollment has skyrocketed since then, and millions are expected to lose coverage once states began culling the rolls.

Also, food stamp recipients were receiving a boost in benefits during the public health emergency. That extra assistance will end as of March, though several states have already stopped providing it.

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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
20709 posts
Wed Feb-22-23 10:24 AM

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6. "I really hate people misusing the results of this study"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

https://twitter.com/michaelpsenger/status/1627493002796240896?s=46&t=ckEXOInpPU5c3m_WCBH8xQ

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/amp/rcna71027



  

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handle
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Wed Feb-22-23 11:09 AM

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7. "The fallacy is: People who get COVID die at a much higher rate ...."
In response to Reply # 6


          

The fallacy is: People who get COVID die of COVID at a much higher rate than people who don't get COVID.

Also people who have never gotten COVID have a much lower incidence of suffering from long COVID.

Over a million dead American's didn't benefit from "natural immunity."






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Heinz
Member since Dec 26th 2003
20709 posts
Wed Feb-22-23 01:01 PM

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8. "Exactly"
In response to Reply # 7


  

          

Not to mention natural immunity does nothing to stop transmission to the vulnerable which is sort of broader point of the vaccine

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Tue Feb-28-23 08:48 AM

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10. "02/28/2022"
In response to Reply # 0


          

The bad news thread - meaning it made the news, but is probably bad.

COVID was cause by a lab leak, says DOE!!!! - with low confidence.
https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2023/02/covid-pandemic-origin-china-lab-leak-theory-energy-department/673230/

--
Masks actually don't work (and if you believe the study we weighted multiple times higher than the others - they actually GIVE YOU THE FLU!!):

https://healthfeedback.org/claimreview/multiple-studies-show-face-masks-reduce-spread-of-covid-19-cochrane-review-doesnt-demonstrate-otherwise/

--

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
1779 posts
Tue Feb-28-23 10:58 AM

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11. "Wtf do you mean?"
In response to Reply # 10


          

Lab leak is the most likely origin and most ppl (capable of thinking not puking talking points) who follow this closely have thought this for a long time. Are you saying you disagree?

>The bad news thread - meaning it made the news, but is
>probably bad.
>

"probably bad". Do you mean false? What do you mean?

  

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handle
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Tue Feb-28-23 01:51 PM

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12. "I mean it's "BAD" , like "low" "
In response to Reply # 11
Tue Feb-28-23 01:52 PM by handle

          

>Lab leak is the most likely origin and most ppl (capable of
>thinking not puking talking points) who follow this closely
>have thought this for a long time. Are you saying you
>disagree?

I don't know if it came from nature or from a lab -- but I do know it's not "settled" in any way, especially when this report was issued with "low confidence." I don't know the exact levels of confidence that are available, but "low" seems, un, low. (FBI said it had "moderate confidence" in the lab leak theory.)

So two U.S. intelligence agencies said "Likely from lab" but no prof. 4 say "Likely from nature" but no definitive proof. And several other agencies say "We don't know - there's not enough proof."

So I guess not many people are as "capable of thinking not puking talking points" that you fancy yourself to be.

I mean *the day after* the pandemic started a lot of people said "It was a lab leak, in Wuhan, with a bar" like it was a game of Clue with no proof.

>"probably bad". Do you mean false? What do you mean?
Like "bad" work. Like "bad" job.

Could it come out of a lab? Maybe.

But doesn't seem settled to me - unless you automatically "know" that anyone who disagrees isn't "(capable of
>thinking not puking talking points)."

It's weird that thinking people (who aren't talking point pukers) are proclaiming a low confidence report making hsi matter settled.

>Could it come out of a lab?
Maybe.

(Also the report is classified, so we don't even know what it actually says.)

Edit: Link to an article:https://slate.com/technology/2023/02/lab-leak-theory-doe-wsj-fauci-covid-origins.html

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
1779 posts
Wed Mar-01-23 07:10 PM

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17. "its not settled"
In response to Reply # 12
Wed Mar-01-23 07:10 PM by fif

          


it's not settled. what 'most likely' means is that if i were forced to bet on it, i'd go with lab leak over natural origin. and my contention is that if most "experts in the field" were forced to do the same...let's say they're forced to bet on it with the consequence of being wrong being a painful death. they have 6 months to weigh the evidence. i think a majority would claim a lab leak was the most likely origin.

but there are all sorts of incentives among experts close to this to not look at things as objectively as they might

  

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stravinskian
Member since Feb 24th 2003
12592 posts
Tue Feb-28-23 02:05 PM

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13. "Lol, no, lab leak is NOT the most likely origin."
In response to Reply # 11


          


The people who actually look at the data and know the science (as opposed to internet cranks and 'journalists' who know no science and think they can find 'data' on the internet) generally all agree that the question is subtle, unsettled (and will probably never be settled to anyone's satisfaction), but that the preponderance of evidence is still clearly in favor of the same kind of natural origin as every other coronavirus that's developed in the last million years, including all of the SARS and MERS variants that covid is a part of.


It's also a completely moot point, because the mere fact that all the other SARS variants emerged naturally means that we need to accelerate laboratory research on them, even if that presents a risk of lab leaks.

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
1779 posts
Wed Mar-01-23 06:17 PM

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14. "i responded in the other post"
In response to Reply # 13


          


>generally all agree that the question is subtle, unsettled
>(and will probably never be settled to anyone's satisfaction),

i agree, it is unsettled and the origin of covid may never be known

>but that the preponderance of evidence is still clearly in
>favor of the same kind of natural origin as every other
>coronavirus that's developed in the last million years,
>including all of the SARS and MERS variants that covid is a
>part of.

new gene editing techniques...are new. lab leaks happen. scientists now have ability to do things that they couldn't 20 years ago, let alone a million. they can create new viruses with unforeseeable consequences in labs. the wuhan lab was the leading lab in all of china (and up there globally) for sars viruses. the chinese govt used Wuhan as a negative control in a study assessing threat of diseases of zoonotic origin (was considered an unlikely ground zero for this vs places in south china with far more 'wet market' type activity'). a bat virus is considered the most likely starting point of sars cov 2. wuhan virology lab was going very far away and bringing these bat viruses in to study them.

>
>
>It's also a completely moot point, because the mere fact that
>all the other SARS variants emerged naturally means that we
>need to accelerate laboratory research on them, even if that
>presents a risk of lab leaks.

without you getting more specific, this is irresponsible. the HOW and WHAT of the science is important. there is a possibility that sars cov 2 started like this: researchers at wuhan virology lab go on far away field trip, find bats with little understood virus, take virus back to Wuhan, start experimenting with the virus, modifications they make (whether intentionally or not, who knows) make the virus capable of spreading and presenting a danger to humans...this virus infects a lab worker....there is a global pandemic.

so in this sceneario, if the researchers left the bats in far flung caves alone...we don't have a pandemic. so saying we need to accelerate lab research without prescribing how we can ensure this research is safe and will not lead to the accidental creation and release of viruses that pose a threat to humans is critical.

taking the lab leak origin hypothesis seriously means taking a hard look at the scientific practices that MAY have caused the pandemic. it's not a point-scoring practice in playing the blame game. the threat of lab-created pandemics is real and more needs to be done to make sure we aren't cooking up global disasters under the blind banner of "all science is good! accelerate! accelerate!"

  

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stravinskian
Member since Feb 24th 2003
12592 posts
Wed Mar-01-23 06:35 PM

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15. "You have an exaggerated sense of what "gain of function" research"
In response to Reply # 14


          


is even capable of.

The fact that we can't resolve this question is precisely because the differences between sars-cov-2 and other unquestionably natural coronaviruses are minor and completely consistent with normal evolutionary development. Yes, this virus would have escaped the caves within a couple years regardless of anything the mad scientists might have done.

The deeper you dip into the "scientists are tinkering with viruses" meme the deeper you get into assertions that we know as incontrovertible facts to be untrue.

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
1779 posts
Wed Mar-01-23 06:58 PM

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16. "RE: You have an exaggerated sense of what "gain of function" r..."
In response to Reply # 15
Wed Mar-01-23 07:00 PM by fif

          

>The fact that we can't resolve this question is precisely
>because the differences between sars-cov-2 and other
>unquestionably natural coronaviruses are minor and completely
>consistent with normal evolutionary development.

this is part of what is unsettled about the question of zoonotic vs lab leak. there is disagreement on this point. sars cov 2 COULD be the result of a change to a virus made in the lab. if a virus not deadly or easily transmissible among humans is tweaked in a lab and becomes very transmissible...this virus might look very much like all other coronaviruses that have leapt from animals to people.


> Yes, this
>virus would have escaped the caves within a couple years
>regardless of anything the mad scientists might have done.

the original animal reservoir has not been found. so not sure where your confidence here is coming from.


>The deeper you dip into the "scientists are tinkering with
>viruses" meme the deeper you get into assertions that we know
>as incontrovertible facts to be untrue.

are you claiming that current scientific techniques are incapable of editing the genes (or selectively breeding, fostering certain mutations) of a virus in a way that makes it more deadly to humans? (even as an unintended consequence). i do not think this is true.

  

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handle
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18. "No one said it was impossbile, jsut need some proof"
In response to Reply # 16


          

What folks reacted to were OBSVIOUS racists and loons IMMEDATELY saying it was the CH***KS done infected us, and probably on purpose!!!

Like this guy:
https://www.cbsnews.com/video/trump-blames-china-for-coronavirus-outbreak/#x

The folks like Jon Stewart on the train because "it makes sense" to them so it has to be true!!!!

1: So could it have evolved or mutated in nature and then travel to humans because of the meat trade at a livestock house or wet market? YEs.

2: Could number 1 have happened, but not travelled into humans but instead was being studied in a lab and a whoopsie occurred and it got out?

3: Could the Chinese have engineered it? Sure.

We've seen #1 happen with other viruses.
We've seen #2 happen, much less often.
We've never seen #3 happen with definitive proof.

I lean to #1 since it has happened before.
And #2 and #3 being bandied about way before we could know anything seems either racists (Trump, GOP, et. al) or jumping the gun (libs!!!)


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fif
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Thu Mar-02-23 09:33 PM

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20. "RE: No one said it was impossbile, jsut need some proof"
In response to Reply # 18


          

>What folks reacted to were OBSVIOUS racists and loons
>IMMEDATELY saying it was the CH***KS done infected us, and
>probably on purpose!!!

yea, i mentioned this in the other thread:

"the anti-trump contingent in media and govt very quickly moved to dismiss the possibility of a lab leak. with some reason--they didn't want to allow trump's claims to inflame racism, xenophobia etc."

so i get the motive. but it’s time to move past that. preventing future lab leaks should be a top global priority. i do think a lab leak is probably what sparked the pandemic. but regardless of whether that happened or not, the risk of a lab leak causing another pandemic is very real. the world needs to come together ASAP to find ways of reducing the chance of a lab leak causing a future pandemic.

if humans did this to humanity--or can--be good to focus on how not to let the bugs out of the bag.

>I lean to #1 since it has happened before.

will just point out that a lot of what these labs can now do is very new under the sun. far easier to make deadly shit in labs than ever before. this cutting edge science is alluring to researchers–lot of breakthroughs waiting to happen there. but it’s hand of god type stuff and cuts both ways…it can advance medicine but can also create little killers.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25505122/

  

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Mynoriti
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25. "the wet market thing always felt more racist than the lab leak theory"
In response to Reply # 20


  

          

i suppose the lab leak is more 'anti-china' on a larger scale, esp since it could also feed people's conspiracies about a bio-weapon, but if we ever really got a definitive answer that this was a result of research and negligence, it would seem like its more racist to say this virus spread because of dirty chinese people cramming animals together ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.


>>What folks reacted to were OBSVIOUS racists and loons
>>IMMEDATELY saying it was the CH***KS done infected us, and
>>probably on purpose!!!
>
>yea, i mentioned this in the other thread:
>
>"the anti-trump contingent in media and govt very quickly
>moved to dismiss the possibility of a lab leak. with some
>reason--they didn't want to allow trump's claims to inflame
>racism, xenophobia etc."

  

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fif
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27. "in the end"
In response to Reply # 25


          

gain of function research is extremely dangerous and needs to operate in the light of day (well lol, not like outside, but you know what i mean).

so it will be tough to talk about all this and not draw racial attacks from...racists. but with trump out of the picture, the scientific community needs to realize that ongoing and future research that increases the pathogenicity of viruses can be extremely dangerous and unpredictable and requires far more oversight and safety precautions than it appears were in place at the wuhan virology institute.

  

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stravinskian
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22. "Incapable without it being statistically obvious in the genome."
In response to Reply # 16


          


>>The deeper you dip into the "scientists are tinkering with
>>viruses" meme the deeper you get into assertions that we
>know
>>as incontrovertible facts to be untrue.
>
>are you claiming that current scientific techniques are
>incapable of editing the genes (or selectively breeding,
>fostering certain mutations) of a virus in a way that makes it
>more deadly to humans? (even as an unintended consequence). i
>do not think this is true.


The genome is just a series of numbers and there are simple statistical tests of how likely a mutation might have come through random processes. Manual genomic editing implants large continuous segments into a preexisting external genome. Random mutation arises from transcription errors and other processes that raise, rather than lower, the entropy of the string.

The fact that these tests have not been able to favor a genomic editing hypothesis also means that these mutations were entirely consistent with natural variation, which in turn means that either it happened naturally or it would have happened naturally very soon anyway.

  

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handle
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23. "Even then they GOT YOU"
In response to Reply # 22


          

I mean, maybe there's a unknown/secret technology that they can obfuscate it with?

AND How do you know the genomic professionals and statisticians and virologists aren't been paid off by big pharma or big China, etc.?

Even then they could have just found it in the wild and let it leak on purpose, or accident......

It's a theory they say you need to DISPROVE .. and until you can prove a different theory they insist their theory is true... with proof.. because it is plausible.



------------


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fif
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Sat Mar-04-23 05:06 PM

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26. "RE: Even then they GOT YOU"
In response to Reply # 23


          

>I mean, maybe there's a unknown/secret technology that they
>can obfuscate it with?
>
>AND How do you know the genomic professionals and
>statisticians and virologists aren't been paid off by big
>pharma or big China, etc.?

they have new tools with great power and they want to use them. The Cambridge Working Group proposed a moratorium on gain of function research in 2014 that lasted until 2017. Shi (head researcher of Wuhan VI) proposed adding cleavage site to bat viruses in novel ways to figure out how they might leap to humans. Proposal rejected. What she then did with these ambitions at WVI under woefully inadequate lab safety conditions (for what was in the 2018 proposal) is not entirely clear. But it seems highly possible it was directly against the spirit of the 2014 moratorium--to do novel gain of function research in a lab with lax safety


>It's a theory they say you need to DISPROVE .. and until you
>can prove a different theory they insist their theory is
>true... with proof.. because it is plausible.

again, we're talking about probability, no one has a slam dunk "THIS IS WHAT HAPPENED"

the WVI researchers were literally interested in how to make bat viruses leap to humans. the world is a very large place. it is a tremendous coincidence that covid brokeout in Wuhan, a place with a lab that was doing cutting edge research that likely qualified as gain of function with many many bat viruses.

  

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fif
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24. "it's not that simple"
In response to Reply # 22


          

to determine whether editing took place. the pro-zoonosis scientists admit as much in their papers. if the claimed intermediate host had been ID'd...that'd be another thing.

but what we do know is that sars-cov-2 is a bat coronavirus (sarbecovirus) with the only known furin cleavage spike in that lineage.

and the lead researcher at Wuhan Virology Institue, Dr Shi Zhengli, was very interested in figuring out how to add furin cleavage spikes to bat viruses in order to study how they might leap to humans.

Shi, working under EcoHealth Alliance (headed by Peter Daszak), submitted a grant proposal to DARPA in 2018 proposing to introduce "human-specific cleavage sites" into bat viruses. She'd done similar work in the past with Ralph Baric at UNC. The grant proposal was rejected, Shi began working in Wuhan, collecting large numbers of unknown bat viruses and experimenting on them. The safety conditions of this lab were not nearly adequate for gain of function research...

it is not clear what sort of experiments were going on at the WVI. Shi and the Chinese govt have every incentive to cover up. As do many other in this field such as Peter Daszak.


  

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PROMO
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19. "yeah, i've heard many scientists already come out against this story..."
In response to Reply # 13


  

          

saying it's from a lab leak.

and the reason, and honestly this seems like the most reasonable thought IMO, is that corona virus isn't new, and every other iteration of it that was a health emergency came from natural sources (animal transmission to humans in one way or another).

i'm not invested in who is right or wrong about it, just saying THAT theory does make the MOST sense.

  

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fif
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21. "yea but advances science"
In response to Reply # 19
Thu Mar-02-23 09:51 PM by fif

          

have us in a new world. labs in recent years have been manipulating viruses in new ways with unforeseeable consequences.

  

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handle
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28. "Defintion of Low Confidence as used by the DOE"
In response to Reply # 10


          

Defining terms:
https://s3.documentcloud.org/documents/23691737/ica_2017_01.pdf

“Low confidence generally means that the information’s credibility and/or plausibility is uncertain, that the information is too fragmented or poorly corroborated to make solid analytical inferences, or that reliability of the sources is questionable.”

------------


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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
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Thu Mar-23-23 10:45 PM

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32. "don't know what your point is"
In response to Reply # 28


          

i think you may be misinterpreting what that means...

a coin flip here is 50 50. saying lab origin is "most likely" means DOE estimates there is a greater than 50% chance covid came from a lab.

that's the bottomline conclusion. the "low confidence" they have in the evidence involved is factored into this bottomline assessment of likelihood.

this doesn't mean they're saying 'hey we think there's a 65% chance it came out of a lab cuz this guy we just talked to holding a cardboard sign was really convincing'.

they're weighing all sorts of shit. like all the ins and out of...

well...pandemics throughout history pretty much all came through zoonosis...but...there have been quite a few lab leaks since wwii...and these last 20 years...wow...pretty wild access to the source code of life these lab coats got now...this gain of function stuff's pretty sci fi...oh and what's that...Shi wanted to add FCS's to bat coronaviruses in 2018...and sars-cov-2 is the ONLY bat coronavirus with a furin cleavage spike? hmmm...

...wait, you're telling me she was going to remote caves and collecting as many bat coronaviruses as she could find and freezing them? and then resurrecting them whenever she liked? to do what?! to try to infect mutant mice with humanoid lungs? why? to try to make the viruses capable of infecting humans? whoa, crazy shit, man. wait...what was that proposal of Shi's rejected in 2018 again? oh...so basically she was interested in trying to make sars-cov-2...before it even existed?

Shi must be pissed them raccoon dogs beat her to the punch.

that study is flimsy btw. and the atlantic article you linked was published BEFORE the pre-print of the paper was even released. so it was a PR rollout...and the scientists involved...well..let's say a good number of them have been engaging in motivated reasoning in this space since early 2020. and btw, the NYT changed their original headline on the raccoon dog paper to reduce the 'WOW finally proof of zoonosis!' vibe.

if you want to get into the arguments, go for it. important to remember that what happened happened in china. and china's control of information re:Wuhan have made an objective, thorough investigation impossible. china's incentives here are important to consider.

the raccoon dog paper, hm is there something there? i don't think so, the virus was not IN the animals, was mixed in samples. and mysteriously these wet market sample genomes surface online. there's no way of knowing, but yes, the conclusions of the paper further china's interests in diverting attention away from the gain of function that was going on in the Wuhan labs. Worobey's other papers on the Wuhan wet market have been poked full of holes, problems with methodology. Same with the two origins claim.

So...the jury's still out...what do you think?

  

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handle
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29. "03/13/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

FYI: Still averaging around 400 deaths a day in the United States. Around 140,000 a year.


--
Johns Hopkins dashboard closed on 3/10/2023:
https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html

--
California to alter COVID rules in healthcare settings: Masks and vaccinations not required
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-03-03/california-to-end-mask-requirement-in-healthcare-settings

Among the changes announced by the California Department of Public Health is the end of statewide mask requirements in healthcare and other indoor high-risk settings — including correctional facilities and emergency and homeless shelters — beginning April 3.

Effective the same day, California will no longer require COVID-19 vaccinations for healthcare workers, including those in adult and direct care settings, correctional facilities and detention centers.

In other changes, starting March 13, an individual who tests positive for COVID-19 can exit isolation after five days, provided they feel well, symptoms are improving, and they have been fever-free for 24 hours. The state’s earlier recommendation was to exit isolation upon receiving a negative rapid test on or after the fifth day following the onset of symptoms or the first positive test. For those who couldn’t test, or continued to test positive after Day 5, the state recommended isolating for at least 10 days.


Note:LA is keeping theirs, and health care facilities can still require it since they are private property.

---
COVID in California: State COVID metrics remain in holding pattern
Pandemic numbers barely budged in the past week but continue to show modest improvement.

California’s pandemic numbers barely budged in the past week but continue to show modest improvement. The health department reported on Thursday an average of 2,612 new daily cases — or about 6.5 per 100,000 residents — as of Mar. 9, compared to 2,760 cases per day, or 6.9 per 100,000 residents the week before. The state’s seven-day rolling coronavirus test positivity rate, which tracks the percentage of lab test results that are positive for the virus, edged down to 5.9% from 6.5%. The daily average of COVID patients in California hospitals fell to 2,375 compared to 2,506 last week, and the number of inpatient beds now in use for COVID-19 patients edged up slightly from 4% the prior week. The state tallied another 216 confirmed COVID-19 deaths this week, bringing the statewide pandemic toll up to 100,640 as of Thursday, with an average of 17 people still dying each day due to the virus. Although California’s COVID-19 state of emergency ended Feb. 28, this marks the fourth consecutive week that the numbers have plateaued at a level public health experts say is still too high to declare the virus vanquished.

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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Mon Mar-20-23 10:55 AM

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30. "3/20/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Coronavirus: China reports first case of coinfection by two Omicron subvariants

https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3214021/coronavirus-china-reports-first-case-coinfection-two-omicron-subvariants

tldr; So we've had delta/Omicron cases reported, here's 2 Omicron infections at the same time.

--
COVID XBB 1.16 variant: Tracker finds high cases in India, know the symptoms

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/life-style/health-fitness/health-news/covid-xbb-1-16-variant-tracker-finds-high-cases-in-india-know-the-symptoms/photostory/98684471.cms?picid=98684496

"In India, XBB.1.16 is showing a high prevalence in the states of Maharashtra and Gujarat as per covSPECTRUM. XBB 1.16 has not descended from XBB.1.5 but both have descended from XBB and more recently XBB.1," TOI has reported quoting a top expert from India's genome sequencing network."XBB is currently dominating in India, and the latest uptick in cases in the country could be a result of XBB 1.16 and perhaps XBB 1.5 but a few more sample runs would clear the picture," the expert has told the media.

tldr; Omicron XBB. 1.16 goin buck wild in India
--

The Strongest Evidence Yet That an Animal Started the Pandemic

https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2023/03/covid-origins-research-raccoon-dogs-wuhan-market-lab-leak/673390/

I mean, let's not talk about it yet FIF, it's exhausting: I know it could still be: - a racoon dog was using unknown and advanced tools (that are undetectable to less advanced researchers) to study corona viruses, slipped up and give it to itself, then travelled to the market for lunch where it spread from.

tldr; Raccooncoocie!

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
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Fri Mar-24-23 12:23 AM

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33. "what i find puzzling"
In response to Reply # 30


          

about you is that you are clearly somewhere up there in the 95th plus percentile of people in terms of your current concern about covid. (which is whatever to me--from the outside looking in, it seems unhealthy for you tbh, but you gotta do you.)

but despite your doom and gloom hyper-vigilance on all things covid, you are very dismissive of the lab origin hypothesis. We have sci fi capabilities, humans can create the next pandemic in a lab. Maybe we already sparked one off. You've got heavy covid-policeman energy. Since you already got that going, I'd suggest a good use of that energy is learning about the dangers of gain of function research and elevating awareness about it. One of the best preventative measures against another pandemic...is global action to do all we can to ensure the next one isn't started by scientists. If it wasn't a random transmission from the animal world, if WE made it happen, we can organize people in better ways so it don't happen again.

i'm curious at what point this becomes something you are interested in. DOE and FBI are above 50%..dismiss..dismiss...is your response. those are wild high numbers. do you think the other fed agencies are all firmly at 0% likelihood of lab origin and scoffing at DOE and FBI? that's the stance you seem to take, but definitely doesn't reflect the actual probabilities or opinions of qualified people who look into this. even if it were an only 10% chance it came out of a lab...i feel this should be enough to make you think...hey wtf are these virologists doing? something's gotta change there!

>tldr; Raccooncoocie!

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
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Fri Mar-24-23 05:16 PM

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34. "the raccoon dog "report""
In response to Reply # 30
Fri Mar-24-23 05:18 PM by fif

          

(scare quotes important here...the authors themselves say: "This report is not intended for publication in a journal". So before this pre-print was even released (ie NO other scientists were able to read it or look at the data), the Atlantic performs the puff-job you linked...on a paper NEVER intended for peer-review. This is not the way scientific publishing is supposed to work--and definitely not on a matter as contentious and globally important as the question of how covid began.)

I think there is value in looking at the circumstances of this "report" hitting the Atlantic/mainstream news cycle:

--An opportunity for skeptics like Handle to see that something is amiss in how the covid origins debate is being covered in the media.
--That what the authors of the "report" are doing is largely spin, not objective, peer-reviewed science.
--That the Atlantic (and others) were guilty of journalistic malpractice (on an extremely important topic) in how they covered this.

the Handle, with no grip:

>I mean, let's not talk about it yet FIF, it's exhausting: I
>know it could still be: - a racoon dog was using unknown and
>advanced tools (that are undetectable to less advanced
>researchers) to study corona viruses, slipped up and give it
>to itself, then travelled to the market for lunch where it
>spread from.

"slipped up and give it to itself" --the words of a drunk prostitute talking about an std? hm...but...regarding the "report", covid & raccoon dogs: false. the "report" does NOT show that the raccoon dogs had covid. it looks like, maybe, there was covid on surfaces near raccoon dog dna (shedded fur, slobber, etc). when? on jan 1 2020. long after the first human cases of covid are known to have occurred (late nov-early dec 2019, or before).

if you wanna tighten up your understanding of what's going on in the investigations into covid's origins, i'm all ears. but i think you need to do some reading. you're talking full of certainty from a place of ignorance. you're insulated from the facts, you use the low-resolution, sound-bite views of others to form very strong opinions. not a good method for understanding a topic like this. pass over it in silence, or educate yourself. in general, try to learn how to live with uncertainty, it may help you deal with your emotional problems. this is unsolicited advice, but you often type like an unhinged asshole, so there ya go...

here is a good place to start: Jesse Bloom at Seattle's Fred Hutch analyzes the raccoon report:
https://twitter.com/jbloom_lab/status/1638373988392140801

  

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handle
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31. "3/23/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

White House To Dissolve COVID Team As It Prepares For End Of Emergency Measures

https://www.huffpost.com/entry/white-house-covid-team-to-dissolve_n_641c680be4b01ea5cd92ef6c

The White House is reportedly preparing to dissolve its COVID-19 team as Joe Biden’s administration prepares to end the coronavirus national and public health emergencies on May 11.

Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House COVID-19 response coordinator, will probably vacate his position once the emergency officially ends, while many members of his team have already departed.

The news was first reported by The Washington Post.

“As a result of this administration’s historic response to COVID-19, we as a nation are in a safer, better place than we were three years ago,” a senior administration official told The Post. “COVID no longer disrupts our lives because of investments and our efforts to mitigate its worst impacts.

The official added that while Americans will still have to deal with COVID-19, moving out of the emergency phase of the response is the next step in the nation’s fight against the virus.

The emergency declaration was first put in place by then-Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Jan. 31, 2020, while President Donald Trump was in office.

Biden has since extended the emergency but announced earlier this year that it would expire in May.

Jha told WBUR last week this signals the country is in a “different and in a better place with COVID.”

“It means that the emergency tools we needed to manage this virus are no longer needed in the same way,” he said.

It also means some Americans will have to start paying for testing and antiviral drugs, though COVID-19 shots will remain free for the majority of the country.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recorded a weekly total of 149,955 COVID-19 cases and just over 1,700 weekly COVID-related deaths, as of Wednesday.

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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35. "03/26/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Phonte caught Covid
No article, but on the Taboo episode of ?uestlove's podcast Phonte , wh0 famously sheltered during COVID, caught COVID after doing a small tour on San Diego and Orange County.

--
A hidden pandemic: the orphans Covid has left behind
https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/26/us/covid-orphans-pandemic/index.html

Swipe: Joshua, his younger brother, Zachary, 14, and sister, Maddie, 10, are among the estimated 238,500 Covid orphans in the United States whose lives have been upended in the past three years by the loss of a parent or primary caregiver, according to the Imperial College London COVID-19 Orphanhood Calculator. Globally, there have been more than eight million Covid orphans since the World Health Organization declared Covid-19 a pandemic in March 2020.


---

It's getting hard to find data on COVID infections since most trackers have shot down and most countries are reporting less frequently.

I heard that last week the entire continent of Africa reported only 6 deaths in total. The US reported 1700 deaths last week.


--
https://abcnews.go.com/Health/covid-19-death-rates-varied-dramatically-us-major/story?id=98055024

Swipe:
"Nearly every state, from the 26 worst performing states in the pandemic, fall into one of the three... disproportionately high population of people identifying as Hispanic...higher than the national average identifying as black...or high levels of support for the 2020 republican presidential candidate," said lead author Tom Bollyky, a senior fellow for global health, economics, and development at the Council on Foreign Relations and professor of law at Georgetown University, in a video commentary.

The authors further discussed parts of the study highlighting racial, economic and social inequities in the U.S. that led to differences in rates of infection and death rates between states.

States with higher poverty rates of poverty had higher death rates. For every 2.6% increase in poverty rates above the national average within a state, there was a 23.3% increase in the cumulative death rate, reflecting a significant economic healthcare disparity.

"The COVID-19 pandemic clearly exacerbated fundamental social and economic inequities, but science-based interventions and policy changes provided clear impact on mortality rates at the state level," said Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist and chief innovation officer at Boston Children's Hospital and an ABC News contributor.

Policies adopted by states during the pandemic, including mask mandates, social distancing and vaccine mandates, were associated with lower COVID-19 infection rates and higher vaccination rates were associated with lower death rates.



------------


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JtothaI
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Mon Mar-27-23 04:52 PM

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36. "RE: 03/26/2023"
In response to Reply # 35


  

          

I was at the Orange County show and I just KNEW I was going to get it there, it was PACKED.

I didn't.

But a week later my office of 11 got hit with 6 of us including myself catching it.

A guy had it and didn't know and then went out 4 days and then we went down one by one.

Took that paxlovid 5 day script and I'm good after about 6 days.

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Mon Mar-27-23 05:42 PM

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37. "Good to hear you're doing okay"
In response to Reply # 36


          

>I was at the Orange County show and I just KNEW I was going
>to get it there, it was PACKED. >I didn't.
>
>But a week later my office of 11 got hit with 6 of us
>including myself catching it.
>
>A guy had it and didn't know and then went out 4 days and then
>we went down one by one.
>
>Took that paxlovid 5 day script and I'm good after about 6
>days.

It's still circulating *a lot* compared to flu and colds.

My work's guidance: Masking is highly recommended in indoor settings such as large meetings or group events exceeding 50% of room capacity.

But hey, people doing "non-risky" things are catching it too - it's just incredibly contagious and still out there in force.

I'm glad you did okay.

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Tue Mar-28-23 05:17 PM

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38. "03/28/2022"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Omicron Was Present in Pune's Sewage Days Before Its First Ever Detection in South Africa, Reveals IISER Study

https://weather.com/en-IN/india/coronavirus/news/2023-03-28-omicron-found-in-punes-sewage-days-before-detection-in-africa

tldr; Omicron discovered in wastewater samples in India before being diagnosed in South Africa.

--
WHO revises COVID-19 vaccine recommendations for Omicron-era
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/who-changes-covid-vaccine-recommendations-2023-03-28/

tldr; Says boosters should/could be given between 6-12 months for those at risk, and recommends weighting cost effectiveness before giving to healthy children.

--

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handle
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18512 posts
Tue Apr-11-23 10:17 AM

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39. "04/10/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Biden signs bill ending Covid-19 national emergency
https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/10/politics/covid-19-national-emergency-end-biden/index.html

tldr: Fuck congress, but they only fucked it up by a month. (And the lack of funding is also another fuck congress.)

President Joe Biden signed legislation Monday to end the national emergency for Covid-19, the White House said, in a move that will not affect the end of the separate public health emergency scheduled for May 11.

A White House official downplayed the impact of the bill, saying the termination of the emergency “does not impact our ability to wind down authorities in an orderly way.”

The bill to end the national emergency cleared the Senate last month in a bipartisan 68-23 vote and passed the House earlier this year with 11 Democrats crossing party lines to vote for the joint resolution.

“Since Congress voted to terminate the National Emergency earlier than anticipated, the Administration has worked to expedite its wind down and provide as much notice as possible to potentially impacted individuals,” the official said, adding that the country is in a “different place” than it was in January.

The administration has been winding down authorities over the past few months, the official noted.

The official said that “to be clear, ending the National Emergency will not impact the planned wind-down of the Public Health Emergency on May 11” – which enabled the government to provide many Americans with Covid-19 tests, treatments and vaccines at no charge, as well as offer enhanced social safety net benefits, to help the nation cope with the pandemic and minimize its impact, as CNN previously reported.

“But since Congress moved to undo the National Emergency earlier than intended, we’ve been working with agencies to address the impacts of ending the declaration early,” the official said.

The White House had signaled strong opposition to the bill but said that ultimately, the president would sign it if it came across his desk. The White House had planned end to both emergencies by May 11.

-


White House launching $5 billion program to speed coronavirus vaccines
https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2023/04/10/operation-warp-speed-successor-project-nextgen/

Note: It's behind a paywall. I'll post another link below for Eric Topol's take.

“Project Next Gen” — the long-anticipated follow-up to “Operation Warp Speed,” the Trump-era program that sped coronavirus vaccines to patients in 2020 — would take a similar approach to partnering with private-sector companies to expedite development of vaccines and therapies. Scientists, public heath experts and politicians have called for the initiative, warning that existing therapies have steadily lost their effectiveness and that new ones are needed.

“It’s been very clear to us that the market on this is moving very slowly,” Ashish Jha, the White House coronavirus coordinator, said Monday. “There’s a lot that government can do, the administration can do, to speed up those tools … for the American people.”

Jha and others said the new effort will focus on three goals: creating long-lasting monoclonal antibodies, after an evolving virus rendered many current treatments ineffective; accelerating development of vaccines that produce mucosal immunity, which is thought to reduce transmission and infection risks; and speeding efforts to develop pan-coronavirus vaccines to guard against new SARS-CoV-2 variants, as well as other coronaviruses.

--
https://erictopol.substack.com/p/project-next-gen-the-united-states?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=587835&post_id=113920598&isFreemail=true&utm_medium=email

------------


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PROMO
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Tue Apr-11-23 11:49 AM

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40. "i have serious question and i hope people don't come at me for asking:"
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

is covid still a serious health risk for most people?

the reason i ask is because i'm still masking in public EVERYWHERE i go. but when i go out, i pay attention to the people i see and i'd say 10 percent or less of the people i see are also masked up.

i go to a place on the weekends, BOTH days, where almost no one is masked up, people are right next to each other for extended periods (though it is a big, warehouse like building with a 50 foot tall ceiling so maybe the air just circulates well in there - it doesn't feel like it does though sometimes), and i see the same folks every weekend and none of them are sick or are talking about how they got sick, etc and many of those people go to this place EVERYDAY of the week, not just weekends like i do. on averages there's at least 100 people in there on either Sat. or Sun., sometimes more.

not gonna lie, it's hard when you see everyone else not masked and seemingly healthy, and not want to join. and just from what i'm seeing it seems like it's not really a risk for most people anymore especially if you're vaxxed up.

am i buggin?

  

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DaKidFromHaiti
Member since Feb 19th 2006
1179 posts
Tue Apr-11-23 12:45 PM

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41. " I don’t think it’s much of a risk anymore "
In response to Reply # 40


  

          

I haven’t worn a mask (unless I’m somewhere that asks to wear them) since restrictions got lifted here. I’m double vaxxed up and caught it last summer but been good since. I work with kids everyday who go to school and are around other kids, I’ve gone to the movies more times than I can count maskless, been on the metro, traveled etc with no mask and haven’t gotten sick. Maybe I’ve gotten lucky but going all this long and not getting sick I’m kinda whatever about this stuff now. To each their own and I understand why someone would feel more comfortable wearing a mask but I’m off them.

  

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PROMO
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Tue Apr-11-23 01:42 PM

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45. "appreciate your thoughts."
In response to Reply # 41


  

          

i'm double vaxxed (not boosted) and got it last summer w/ very mild symptoms (worst was a migraine for a day - i never get migraines, and i don't know if that was from covid per se).

my wife and i have been heavily debating if we want to stop masking or not. still no decision.

  

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Mynoriti
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Tue Apr-11-23 12:50 PM

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42. "i stopped masking like a year ago"
In response to Reply # 40


  

          

with the exception of maybe a doctor's office or places where they're required.
soon as i stopped i didn't wanna go back, and felt like i've been doing it to long, and to a degree i understand why people see mask wearing as being overly paranoid.

but i also don't want t fall into that kind of judgy mindset. I think everyone should do what is comfortable to them. if someone feels safer or even more considerate wearing a mask, they should continue.
but if someone's wearing/not wearing a mask is some kind of statement, that's just goofy.

far as the other stuff, idk. people are still dying, but there are more treatments. i still haven't gotten it (far as i know) but probably 95% of the people i know have had it, some immuno-compromised, some have had it multiple times. mostly i just hear it really sucks for a day or two and it's draining.

  

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mrhood75
Member since Dec 06th 2004
44356 posts
Tue Apr-11-23 01:24 PM

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43. "I got it a month ago, and I'm fully vaxed (with the most recent booster)"
In response to Reply # 40


  

          

So I figure there's still a risk.

I'm one of those people who masks everywhere indoors (I'm sitting at my work desk now masked up). Then a month ago my wife and I pushed our luck going to three events in five days, largely unmasked at each of them. And, of course, she was sick by that Monday and I was sick by Tuesday (though we didn't test positive until Thursday).

I live in the Bay Area, where more people mask up than in many other places, and still a lot of people go unmasked. However, I see my parents on a weekly basis, both of home are very close to 80, neither of whom have had COVID. So, especially out of consideration to them, I mask up whenever I'm inside work or any other public place. I figure staying disciplined is worth their health.

I will add that I just got back from Hawaii for vacation with my wife, parents, and my brother and his wife and kids. We all masked up in the airports and on the plane, but while on the island, no one used masks.

-----------------

www.albumism.com

Checkin' Our Style, Return To Zero:

https://www.mixcloud.com/returntozero/

  

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handle
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Tue Apr-11-23 01:30 PM

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44. "It depends "
In response to Reply # 40


          

tldr; If you're young and healthy and not around a lot of older/less healthy folks then you'll probably be fine.

>is covid still a serious health risk for most people?
Depends on who you are. It's so contagious that it's very easy to get.

https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#datatracker-home

It says we've had 104,242,889 reported cases in the U.S. and 1,127,104 deaths. That means that 1.08% of people who caught COVID died of it. But let's be serious, while I suspect that more people probably died of COVID than reported there were likely 2 or 3 times more infections than reported too.

The CDC also reports 452,024 hospitalizations from COVID. That has had serious impacts of those folks - and on others who couldn't get healthcare because of it. And CDC reported last year that 7% of folks who got infected reported "long covid" symptoms.

So your personal risk, depending on your age, health, immunity (via vaccine or infection or both), and some luck COVID is not a personal death sentence - it never was for most.

Getting sick and feeling bad and missing work and giving your friends/family it are other factors.

>the reason i ask is because i'm still masking in public
>EVERYWHERE i go. but when i go out, i pay attention to the
>people i see and i'd say 10 percent or less of the people i
>see are also masked up.

They may have underlying health conditions - or they may just chose to wear the mask because 'why get COVID while grocery shopping?' if wearing a mask would lower the risk dramatically?

>not gonna lie, it's hard when you see everyone else not masked
>and seemingly healthy, and not want to join. and just from
>what i'm seeing it seems like it's not really a risk for most
>people anymore especially if you're vaxxed up.
>
>am i buggin?

If you get the current variant, are healthy, are younger, have some immunity from vaccination or prior infection, get Paxlovid or another treatment you may just get a mild flu like illness and you're 99% or more likely to survive and over 92% chance - or more- to not get long Covid.

If your risk profile is worse, like you're an 80 year old with HIV - it's a different calculation.

So within those factors you have to decide when/if to wear a mask. Or if you're around folks who have a different risk profile a lot you may have to factor that in too.

I got it, it fucking SUCKED for me. Healthy 50 year old when I got it, but it knocked me out and sent me to the E.R. because my blood/oxygen level went to 89% on my home monitor - and %93 on the one in the E.R. (Paxlovid was not approved at the time.) My mom, a 74 year old who has weakened immunity from chemo therapy did a lot better than I did.

(All of this changes if a new variant comes around too - it's a moving target.)

But people are getting still sick, and we're still on track to have 100,000 COVID-19 deaths in the U.S this year - that's 2x3 times our "normal" flu deaths in the 21st century.

I still mask everywhere where I'd regret getting COVD - Walmart, Target, Vons, Home Depot, etc. I didn't mask when I had workers in my house recently. I don't mask when in a car with friends either.

I think this way "If it was 2013 and the flu got more contagious and was killing the same amount as COVID is now would I have worn a mask?"

For me, the answer is yes. I suspect for most of the people I know the answer would have been no.

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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fif
Member since Feb 23rd 2004
1779 posts
Tue Apr-11-23 11:56 PM

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46. "the costs of masking have"
In response to Reply # 40


          

long outweighed the benefits for the vast majority of people. especially for kids. kids learn a lot from faces, watching faces make words and emotions.

a mask in public in april 2023 also is sending a signal: stay away, i am still very concerned about covid. which is fine, that's your right to be concerned. i don't think most people should be.

but the still-very-concerned might want to consider the effects masking has on reducing their chances of having positive interactions with other humans.

my opinion:

take take take it off
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=czF8wntVIUI

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Fri Apr-14-23 09:28 AM

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47. "04.14.2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

You're less likely to get long COVID after a second infection than a first
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2023/04/14/1169216517/youre-less-likely-to-get-long-covid-after-a-second-infection-than-a-first

If you've gotten COVID more than once, as many people have, you may be wondering if your risk for suffering the lingering symptoms of long COVID is the same with every new infection.

The answer appears to be no. The chances of long COVID — a suite of symptoms including exhaustion and shortness of breath — falls sharply between the first and second infections, according to recent research.

"It does seem that the risk is significantly lower the second time around than the first time around for developing long COVID," says Daniel Ayoubkhani, a statistician at the Office for National Statistics in the United Kingdom, who's been studying long COVID in that country.
(more at link)

--
About 100k nurses left workforce amid COVID-19 burnout, stress: survey
https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3950337-about-100k-nurses-left-workforce-amid-covid-19-burnout-stress-survey/

About 100,000 nurses quit due to stress and burnout during the COVID-19 pandemic and and another 800,000 said they intend to leave by 2027, according to a new survey from the National Council of State Boards of Nursing.

--
California judge orders church that defied COVID rules to pay $1.2M
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/california-judge-orders-church-defied-covid-rules-pay-1-2m

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Fri Apr-14-23 11:19 AM

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48. "I don't think I posted these last week"
In response to Reply # 47


          

Even with improved treatments, COVID’s death rate is still 60% higher than for the flu
https://fortune.com/well/2023/04/06/covid-deadlier-flu/


Covid-19 isn’t “just a flu,” with a study of hospital patients finding that the virus was still 60% deadlier than influenza last winter.

Greater immunity against the coronavirus, better treatments, and different virus variants lowered COVID’s mortality risk to about 6% among adults hospitalized in the U.S. last winter from 17% to 21% in 2020, researchers at the Clinical Epidemiology Center of the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri found. That was still much higher than the flu’s death rate of 3.7%.

“This finding should be interpreted in the context of a two-to-three times greater number of people being hospitalized for Covid-19 versus influenza in the US in this period,” epidemiologist Ziyad Al-Aly and colleagues wrote in a letter Thursday in the journal JAMA. The research is based on an analysis of electronic health records in databases kept by the Department of Veterans Affairs, which operates the largest nationally integrated health care system in the US.


tldr: VA study shows COVID is 60% deadlier than the flu. VA people are older, whiter, and more at risk than you may be.

------------


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Tiger Woods
Member since Feb 15th 2004
18159 posts
Fri Apr-14-23 01:57 PM

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49. "let it go "
In response to Reply # 0


  

          

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Mon Apr-17-23 09:47 PM

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50. "04/17/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Rare COVID symptom reported as latest omicron subvariant hits the U.S.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/health/article/covid-subvariant-xbb-1-16-conjunctivitis-17898060.php

Note: It's pink eye

A new COVID-19 subvariant “threatens to shatter” hopes to stave off a new coronavirus surge in the U.S. before next winter, and some experts worry it could be linked to the rise of a previously rare pandemic symptom.

XBB.1.16, which reached reportable levels in the U.S. last week, could be behind an uptick of conjunctivitis, especially in children, reports from India suggest, alongside the more common symptoms of fever, cough and fatigue.

The latest omicron subvariant, thought to be the most transmissible yet, is fueling a surge of cases in India. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data shows XBB.1.16 nearly doubled its proportion in the U.S. last week, although it still is considerably less prevalent than other subvariants circulating in the country.

At the same time, pediatrician Vipin M. Vashishtha, a member of the World Health Organization’s Vaccine Safety Net program, also noted a rise in cases of “itchy conjunctivitis with sticky eyes” in India that appear to be to be associated with XBB.1.16, although no studies have yet been published to confirm the linkage.

---
New COVID variant causes allergy-like symptoms
https://www.fox5ny.com/news/new-covid-variant-causes-itchy-watery-eyes


Doctors here in New York City and around the world are looking into the new omicron subvariant, arcturus, that's spreading fast.

" concerning is that the fact that it may be resistant in terms of antibodies we may have from the other omicron subvariant, so this specific strain may be able to evade those antibodies that our body may have formed to the other omicron subvariants," offered Dr. Rabia Delatour at New York University's Langone Health.

Arcturus is highly contagious among children in India and it's causing a new symptom.

"Something unique about this strain is that we're seeing a lot more cases in children in India, and those children are experiencing some severe conjunctivitis, which is redness or irritation of the eyes and this wasn't previously seen with other immigrants of variants, so it’s something unique to this strain," Dr. Delatour continued.

--

Anecdotal: Co-worker took his wife and 3 kids on vacation in Mexico. All came back with COVID. (Unclear if he had COVID before travelling or if he caught it while travelling.) Everyone's fine - his wife is pretty sick but doesn't appear serious.

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Wed Apr-19-23 09:24 AM

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51. "04/19/2023"
In response to Reply # 0
Wed Apr-19-23 09:34 AM by handle

          

FDA authorizes additional omicron Covid booster for seniors and people with weak immune systems
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/18/covid-seniors-immunocompromised-can-receive-additional-omicron-shots.html

The Food and Drug Administration on Tuesday authorized an additional dose of Pfizer
and Moderna
’s Covid-19 vaccines targeting the omicron variant for seniors and people with weak immune systems.

Seniors who are 65 years of age or older and who have already received a vaccine targeting the omicron BA.5 subvariant are now eligible to receive another dose at least four months after their last shot, according to the FDA. People with weak immune systems can receive another omicron shot at least two months after their last dose and receive additional shots at the discretion of their doctor.

--
Covid May Increase the Risk of Type 2 Diabetes, Researchers Find
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/18/health/covid-diabetes.html

Men and people with severe illnesses were more likely to develop the condition within a year. But the data does not prove that the coronavirus causes diabetes.

People infected with the coronavirus were significantly more likely to be diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes within a year of their infection, compared with those who had not been exposed to the virus, researchers in Canada reported on Tuesday.

Men were more likely to develop diabetes than women, the scientists found. People who were so sick that they were hospitalized were more than twice as likely to go on to a diabetes diagnosis, compared with those who were not infected.

People who were admitted to intensive care were more than three times as likely to develop diabetes, the researchers also found. The findings add to a growing body of evidence about Covid’s long-term effects.

“This is definitely a concern in terms of long-term outcomes,” said Dr. Naveed Z. Janjua, the paper’s senior author and a professor at the School of Population and Public Health at University of British Columbia.

“With a respiratory infection, you usually think, ‘Seven or eight days and I’m done with it, that’s it,’” he added. “Here we’re seeing lingering effects that are lifelong.” (More at link)


--
GOP senator releases ‘bombshell’ COVID-19 origins report
https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/gop-sentor-releases-bombshell-covid-origins-report

Sen. Roger Marshall released a 300-page report that claims the virus came from two lab leaks

After more than two years of research, Sen. Marshall revealed on "Mornings with Maria" Tuesday that a "preponderance of evidence" points to two lab leaks in China as the cause of the global pandemic.

"This is big. It is a bombshell that the preponderance of evidence shows that there were two lab leaks," Sen. Marshall said. "If we had a scale in front of us and we put all the evidence on one side that supports a natural spillover, the other for the lab origin of this, I think that 95% of that evidence is on the lab origin."

Sen. Marshall released his findings on Monday, detailing how the two separate, unintentional leaks spiraled into perhaps one of the most devastating events in recent history.


NOTE: BOMBSHELL is in the title of the press release from Marshall.

*Note: Sen. Roger Marshall still isn't convinced that Biden won the 2020 election.



------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Tue Apr-25-23 11:23 AM

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52. "04/25/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Florida surgeon general altered key findings in study on Covid-19 vaccine safety
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/04/24/florida-surgeon-general-covid-vaccine-00093510

Joseph Ladapo defended the move, saying revisions are a normal part of assessing such analysis.

Read the original article for all the BULLSHIT he did, I've swiped just a small part.

Swipe: The newly released draft of the eight-page study, provided by the Florida Department of Health, indicates that it initially stated that there was no significant risk associated with the Covid-19 vaccines for young men. But “Dr. L’s Edits,” as the document is titled, reveal that Ladapo replaced that language to say that men between 18 and 39 years old are at high risk of heart illness from two Covid vaccines that use mRNA technology.


The newly released draft of the eight-page study, provided by the Florida Department of Health, indicates that it initially stated that there was no significant risk associated with the Covid-19 vaccines for young men. But “Dr. L’s Edits,” as the document is titled, reveal that Ladapo replaced that language to say that men between 18 and 39 years old are at high risk of heart illness from two Covid vaccines that use mRNA technology.

“Results from the stratified analysis for cardiac related death following vaccination suggests mRNA vaccination may be driving the increased risk in males, especially among males aged 18-39,” Ladapo wrote in the draft. “The risk associated with mRNA vaccination should be weighed against the risk associated with COVID-19 infection.”
---

Up to one in 20 new diabetes cases could be linked to Covid, study suggests
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/apr/18/up-to-one-20-new-diabetes-cases-could-linked-covid-study

Up to one in 20 new diabetes cases could be related to Covid infection, data suggests.

The research adds to mounting evidence the pandemic may be contributing to a rapidly escalating diabetes crisis, with individuals who have experienced more severe Covid at greatest risk.

However, lifestyle factors such as being overweight or obese continue to be the main driver for the increase, with 4.3 million officially diagnosed cases in the UK alone.

--
Are your ears ringing? Experts are studying whether its linked to COVID or the vaccine.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/health/2023/04/24/tinnitus-covid-vaccine-what-we-know/11727081002/

Note: I have a friend who IMMEDIATELY reported tinnitus after getting the first dose, and it happens each time he gets a booster.

He's also had Covid TWICE and MERS, he travels *a lot* for work and can't not travel.

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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Sat Apr-29-23 10:24 AM

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53. "04/29/2023"
In response to Reply # 0


          

Reminder: Free tests still available if you haven't reached your limit: https://www.covid.gov/tests

Also: Your health insurance will reimburse you for 8 tests a month - you could buy 8 today, then 8 between May 1st and May 11th and get reimbursed. (Ask your insurance when/if they are discontinuing the reimbursement, they have the option to keep paying if they want to.)

--
CDC to stop tracking Covid levels in communities
The CDC will end its Covid community-level tracking program, which provided information on how the virus was spreading where you live.

https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/cdc-stop-tracking-covid-levels-communities-rcna82059

"With the end of the public health emergency, CDC will no longer get the same data. We are working to update the measure used to convey the risk of Covid-19 in communities based on data that will be available," a CDC spokesperson wrote in an email. "Our priority remains providing the information necessary to protect the nation's public health."

Note:You can get some idea of how much is in your community by tracking wastewater. Google your city's name + covid wastewater.

--

ABC News edits RFK Jr. interview to exclude ‘false claims about the COVID-19 vaccines’
https://thehill.com/homenews/media/3977874-abc-news-edits-rfk-jr-interview-to-exclude-false-claims-about-the-covid-19-vaccines/

tldr; He's spreading not only COVID vaccine falsehoods, but the tired "Vaccines causes autism" shit. Expect him to be on Real Time with Bill Maher at least 3 times before the election.


--


------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Sat Apr-29-23 10:42 AM

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54. "NYT article interview with Fauci"
In response to Reply # 0


          

IT's behind a paywall, but I pasted into a document.

Original link:https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/04/24/magazine/dr-fauci-pandemic.html (Try it, you might have enough free articles to view it, I didn't.)

Copy/paste link I posted: https://justpaste.it/90unx


Some swipes:
---
Wallace-Wells: Even now, when we talk about pandemic response, we focus on things like school closures and masks, but it seems to me that Covid mortality has been shaped much more by the country’s vaccination levels. There have been three times as many American deaths since Election Day 2020 as before. And we’ve done much worse, compared with our peers, since vaccination began than we had before.

Fauci: I mean, only 68 percent of the country is vaccinated. If you rank us among both developed and developing countries, we do really poorly. We’re not even in the top 10. We’re way down there.3 And then: Why do you have red states that are unvaccinated and blue states that are vaccinated? Why do you have death rates among Republicans that are higher than death rates among Democrats and independents?4 It should never ever be that way when you’re dealing with a public-health crisis the likes of which we haven’t seen in over a hundred years.

That’s part of it. The other part of it has nothing to do with that divisiveness. It has to do with the fracturing of our health care delivery system in this country. We have let the local public-health and health care delivery system really suffer attrition. And the health disparities — racial and ethnic health disparities. Every country has a little bit of that, but we really have a lot of it.

Footnote: According to a study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research in September 2022, rates of excess deaths were 76 percent higher among Republicans than Democrats throughout the pandemic. The gap was much smaller in 2020; it then grew almost sevenfold with the arrival of vaccines.
--

Wallace-Wells: One thing I’ve seen you emphasizing lately is the lesson that you need to act early to stop exponential growth, and that earlier interventions are much more effective than later interventions. But in January and February and even into March of 2020, you and a lot of other folks in the public-health infrastructure were spreading a message that most Americans didn’t really need to worry about the virus, that it wasn’t a real risk to most of us. It wasn’t until later in March that the alarm was really raised. Was that too late? Could we have raised the alarm earlier? And if so, what would the effect have been, do you think?

Fauci: Well, first of all, this is one of the things that keeps getting distorted. When I said we don’t need to do anything different right at this moment, please don’t forget that was followed by a semicolon, and then a “however,” and then by, “This could change rapidly, and we better be prepared for that.” I said that every single time. And the people who want to do gotchas on me only show the first part.

Wallace-Wells: But if you go back in time, if you put yourself in February 2020, you’re telling Helen Branswell,7 for instance, that this virus was low-risk and that you didn’t want to stake your credibility on what could be a false alarm. Do you wish you had said then more emphatically that this is a real, urgent threat and that we need to stand up our defenses immediately?

Footnote: “At present,” Fauci told the veteran journalist at an Aspen Institute panel on Feb. 11, 2020, “the risk is really relatively low.” But he was careful to say: “Is there a risk that this is going to turn into a global pandemic? Absolutely. Yes, there is.” He also added that “if we got up and said … ‘We’ve really, really got a big risk of getting completely wiped out’ and then nothing happens, then your credibility is gone.”

Fauci: Yeah, I think, retrospectively, we certainly should have done that. If you look at what we knew at the time, though — we didn’t know that in January. We were not fully appreciative of the fact that we were dealing with a highly, highly transmissible virus that was clearly spread by ways that were unprecedented and unexperienced by us. And so it fooled us in the beginning and confused us about the need for masks and the need for ventilation and the need for inhibition of social interaction.

Wallace-Wells: The asymptomatic spread.

Fauci: To me, that was the game-changer. And if we knew that very early on, our strategy for dealing with the outbreak in those early weeks would have been different. So when people say to me, “Could we have done better?” Of course, of course. If you knew many of the things then that now you know, definitely you would want to do things differently.

---

Wallace-Wells: It was around the same time that the mask guidance wavered — first, masks were not recommended, and then they were.9 But I want to ask you to reflect on the even bigger picture: Were the culture-war fights over masking worth it? Or did those fights have a bigger negative impact on future vaccine uptake among conservatives than the positive impact they had on spread? To be clear: I’m not someone who doesn’t think masks work. I think the science and the data show that they do work, but that they aren’t perfect and that at the population level the effect can be somewhat small. In what was probably our best study, from Bangladesh, in places where mask use tripled, positive tests were reduced by less than 10 percent.

Fauci: It’s a good point in general, but I disagree with your premise a bit. From a broad public-health standpoint, at the population level, masks work at the margins — maybe 10 percent. But for an individual who religiously wears a mask, a well-fitted KN95 or N95, it’s not at the margin. It really does work.

--

Wallace-Wells: But when I watched your recent lecture at Georgetown, you didn’t talk about herd immunity at all. Nobody does. Which makes sense, given that perhaps 95 percent of the country has had the disease, on top of the almost 70 percent who have been vaccinated, and the virus is obviously still circulating. And in fact a number of epidemiologists I’ve spoken to have told me that given the nature of this virus, we should have never entertained herd immunity as a possibility, given the way SARS-CoV-2 replicates in the body. What went wrong there?

Fauci: Well, I don’t think anybody did anything wrong. What went wrong was that the virus did not act the way one would have thought the virus would act. We made an assumption that turned out to be an incorrect assumption — that this was going to act like other viruses.
The classical definition of herd immunity has been completely turned upside down by Covid. And let me go through the steps. Herd immunity is based on two premises: one, that the virus doesn’t change, and two, that when you get infected or vaccinated, the durability of protection is measured in decades, if not a lifetime. With SARS-CoV-2, we thought protection against infection was going to be measured in a long period of time. And we found out — wait a minute, protection against infection, and against severe disease, is measured in months, not decades. No. 2, the virus that you got infected with in January 2020 is very different from the virus that you’re going to get infected with in 2021 and 2022.

--
Wallace-Wells: So were we wrong to ever expect that after a given amount of infection and vaccination, the disease would disappear? Because that was an extremely conventional view in 2020.

Fauci: It depends on what you mean by “disappear.” If you control community infection at a low-enough level that it doesn’t disrupt society, to some people that means it disappears. To other people, it means, well, it’s there, but it doesn’t bother society very much.
But be careful: No, it was not completely out of line to think that you could get protection against infection — that even if you got some virus in you, it wouldn’t be of a high-enough titer to transmit to somebody else.

And then we found out something that was stunning. When you looked at the titer of the virus in infected and asymptomatic people and a virus in the nose of symptomatic infected people, it was the same. What the hell is going on here? That was a big surprise. So we were wrong, but we weren’t wrong because we didn’t interpret data in front of us. We never had those data. We did not know early on that 50 to 60 percent of the transmissions would be asymptomatic. That was like, whoa. When I saw those data, I said: This is different. We’re dealing with a disease the likes of which we’ve never seen before.

---
Wallace-Wells: In the vaccine rollout, did we make a mistake in prioritizing health care workers as opposed to seniors?

Fauci: I don’t know if it was a mistake. A mistake is such a charged word. “Fauci made a mistake, people died. Fauci lied, people died.” Come on. I don’t know if it was a mistake. I think the standard way of protecting people who are at greater risk every day was a sound principle.

---
Wallace-Wells: But the particular responsibility shakes out a little bit differently if it’s ultimately some vendor in a wet market who is illegally transporting animals or if it’s the product of this international research apparatus, right? I don’t want to overstate the American authority or oversight over every experiment at the Wuhan Institute of Virology — let alone the Wuhan C.D.C. But there is a large American component to the development of this whole international enterprise, going back several decades, and you’ve played a role in developing and funding that.

Fauci: First of all, all of the intelligence groups agree that this was not an engineered virus. And if it’s not an engineered virus, what actually leaked from the lab? If it wasn’t an engineered virus, somebody went out into the field, got infected, came back to the lab and then spread it out to other people. That ain’t a lab leak, strictly speaking. That’s a natural occurrence.

Wallace-Wells: Even in that case, the research itself is still playing a role. But when you say everyone agrees it was not an engineered virus — I don’t think they do. I think they generally agree it was not purposefully engineered to be a bioweapon. I don’t believe they’ve ruled out other forms of engineering — direct genetic interventions or serial passage of viruses.

Fauci: David, you could have taken a virus and serially passaged it in 1920. I could do that tomorrow in your kitchen. You don’t need to do engineering.13

Footnote: 13
The term “gain of function” is used by different people in different ways. To some, it refers to any effort to produce new features in a virus, whether through direct genetic manipulation or simply accelerating natural evolution. When the N.I.H. resumed funding gain-of-function research after a three-year safety review, they did so under what was called the "P3CO" framework, under which research with pathogens known to be infectious and dangerous to humans was held to a higher level of scrutiny.

--

Read the whole thing it's get a little heated.

And if you look at the viruses that the $120,000-a-year grant was given through EcoHealth to the Wuhan Institute to do surveillance on, and you look at the viruses that they studied that they published in the literature, and that was in all of their progress reports, those viruses could not possibly ever turn into SARS-CoV-2, even if they tried to turn them into SARS-CoV-2, because they were evolutionarily so far from SARS-CoV-2 that anybody who knows anything about virology would say there’s nothing you could do to those viruses that would turn them into SARS-CoV-2. Yet what gets conflated is that the N.I.H. funded them, therefore you are liable for the lab leak if it’s a lab leak. It had nothing to do with what we did, because the viruses were unable to be made into SARS-CoV-2.

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Fri May-05-23 08:46 AM

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55. "05/05/2023"
In response to Reply # 0
Fri May-05-23 09:07 AM by handle

          

WHO downgrades COVID pandemic, says it’s no longer emergency

https://apnews.com/article/who-declares-covid-emergency-over-pandemic-8b6445735df5218b5d9d6ec32fa047ca

The World Health Organization said Friday that COVID-19 no longer qualifies as a global emergency, marking a symbolic end to the devastating coronavirus pandemic that triggered once-unthinkable lockdowns, upended economies worldwide and killed at least 7 million people worldwide.

WHO said that even though the emergency phase was over, the pandemic hasn’t come to an end, noting recent spikes in cases in Southeast Asia and the Middle East. The U.N. health agency says that thousands of people are still dying from the virus every week.

“It’s with great hope that I declare COVID-19 over as a global health emergency,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

“That does not mean COVID-19 is over as a global health threat,” he said, adding he wouldn’t hesitate to reconvene experts to reassess the situation should COVID-19 “put our world in peril.”

Tedros said the pandemic had been on a downward trend for more than a year, acknowledging that most countries have already returned to life before COVID-19. He bemoaned the damage that COVID-19 had done to the global community, saying the virus had shattered businesses and plunged millions into poverty.

“COVID has changed our world and it has changed us,” he said, warning that the risk of new variants still remained.

(more at link)

---
900,000 New Yorkers Lost at Least 3 Loved Ones to Covid
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/05/nyregion/new-york-covid-losses.html

An estimated two million New Yorkers — nearly one in four — lost at least one person close to them to Covid within the first 16 months of the virus’s arrival, according to the data, which was collected in mid-2021 by federal census workers on behalf of the city. Nearly 900,000 New Yorkers lost at least three people they said they were close to, an open-ended category that included relatives and friends, the survey found.

(more at link)

--
COVID dropped to 4th leading cause of death in U.S. last year
https://www.inquirer.com/health/coronavirus/covid-19-coronavirus-deaths-cdc-20230504.html

COVID-19 deaths trailed those caused by heart disease, cancer and injuries such as drug overdoses, motor vehicle fatalities and shootings. In 2020 and 2021, only heart disease and cancer were ahead of the coronavirus.

U.S. deaths usually rise year-to-year, in part because the nation's population has been growing. The pandemic accelerated that trend, making 2021 the deadliest in U.S. history, with more than 3.4 million deaths. But 2022 saw the first drop in deaths since 2009.

--

Free at-home COVID tests end May 11 for some. Here’s how to stock up
https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-05-05/free-at-home-covid-tests-end-may-11-how-to-stock-up

The expiration of the national COVID-19 public health emergency Thursday evening will mean the end of free at-home tests for some, though many Californians will still be able to get their hands on screening kits.

At the end of the scheduled May 11 sunset date, a federal rule requiring insurers to reimburse policyholders for the cost of up to eight at-home COVID tests per month will end.

This tightening of the testing tap will affect some Medicare beneficiaries and threatens to limit or cut off access to no-cost testing across a swath of the country.

But in California, state lawmakers and Gov. Gavin Newsom have taken steps to avoid that scenario.

How will testing access change?
For many in California, there won’t be any near-term changes. State legislators have already ordered health insurers to continue reimbursement for eight monthly at-home tests for most health plans.

What are the details?
Following the passage of Senate Bills 510 and 1473, health plans regulated by the California Department of Managed Health Care will still be required to cover the costs of eight over-the-counter rapid tests a month for each person insured.

Besides employer-based healthcare coverage, this includes Medi-Cal-managed plans and Covered California plans.

Starting Nov. 11, insurers regulated by the state Department of Managed Health Care still must cover COVID tests if they’re provided in network, but can charge for tests purchased out of network.

This covers most insured Californians, including those with plans through their employers — but not everyone. For instance, it’s possible Medicare beneficiaries in the state could lose access.

--
Edit:Adding this

CDC opens probe after 35 test positive for covid following CDC conference
Attendees say many people did not mask, socially distance or take other precautions recommended earlier in the pandemic

https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2023/05/02/covid-outbreak-cdc-annual-conference/

Disease detectives at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are probing a new outbreak: the roughly three-dozen coronavirus cases linked to their own annual conference last week.

“CDC is working with the Georgia Department of Health to conduct a rapid epidemiological assessment of confirmed COVID-19 cases that appear to be connected to the 2023 EIS Conference to determine transmission patterns,” CDC spokesperson Kristen Nordlund said in an email.

Nordlund said the CDC reported the cases to state health officials who have authority over the location where the conference occurred. Attendees said many people at the gathering did not mask, socially distance or take other precautions that the CDC had recommended earlier in the pandemic.

Fewer than 100,000 confirmed coronavirus cases were reported across the United States last week — the lowest levels in nearly two years. But public health experts have cautioned that the vast majority of cases are not being tracked, with many Americans testing at home, if at all, and opting not to report the results. The virus also remains on pace to be one of the top 10 causes of death this year, with fatalities concentrated among older and immunocompromised individuals.

Experts said an outbreak of coronavirus cases at a CDC conference — the first time the meeting of disease detectives was held in person in four years — illustrates the persistence of an evolving virus. The four-day conference for epidemic intelligence service officers and alumni, held near CDC headquarters in Atlanta last week, drew about 2,000 attendees who were likely to be fully vaccinated.

“This is, unfortunately, the new normal,” Jay Varma, an infectious-disease expert at Weill Cornell Medicine, wrote in a text message. “While it is unsettling to see widespread COVID-19 transmission at CDC’s premier public health conference, it’s probably the clearest example yet” of the global situation.

Varma added that individuals and organizations should continue to take coronavirus precautions to protect themselves and the most vulnerable as needed. “I hope that organizers of large conferences, especially for health professionals, should, at a minimum, make high-quality masks as abundant and available as toilet paper and ensure that there is adequate ventilation and/or disinfection of air,” he wrote.

Nordlund said about 35 people linked to the conference had reported testing positive as of Tuesday.

“Conducting a rapid investigation now will help understand transmission that occurred and assist in refining future public health guidance as we move out of the public health emergency and to the next phase of COVID-19 surveillance and response,” she wrote. “Whenever there are large gatherings, especially indoors, such as at a conference, there is the possibility of COVID-19 spread, even in periods of low community spread.”

Conference attendees also received an email from the CDC that encouraged them to participate in the survey with the Georgia health department, according to an email shared with The Washington Post.

“If you attended the conference in person, you may have been exposed to someone with COVID-19,” the email read. “If you are experiencing symptoms, we recommend you follow CDC guidance for isolation and testing.”

The Biden administration has been winding down its pandemic response, with most federal vaccine mandates and the coronavirus public health emergency set to be lifted next week. Public health experts say that while the pandemic’s perils have largely receded, they remain wary of future variants and note that the virus continues to evolve.

For instance, a new omicron subvariant, XBB.1.16, nicknamed Arcturus, is becoming more prevalent throughout the United States. The latest CDC tracker shows the variant made up almost 12 percent of cases nationwide for the week ending April 29, up from about 7 percent the week ending April 15. Most of the infections in the United States right now come from XBB.1.5, also an omicron subvariant.

------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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18512 posts
Thu May-11-23 08:38 AM

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56. "05/11/2023 - "
In response to Reply # 0


          

FYI, with the emergency ending today, the surveillance capabilities shifting (meaning much less accurate, switching to trend tracking), and the immigration shit storm that will start up tomorrow, remember that 1,100 people in the United States died from Covid last week.

The "good news" is that more people are dying from diabetes than Covid now!!!

Article:
As Emergency Ends, a Look at Covid’s U.S. Death Toll
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/05/11/us/covid-deaths-us.html

---
https://www.wbur.org/npr/1174112653/cdc-to-change-how-it-reports-covid-information-and-stop-reporting-new-cases

One of the biggest change is that the agency will no longer regularly track and release the number of new COVID infections. That's largely because states will no longer be required to report new cases. In addition, home testing, which mostly isn't reported to authorities, has made new infections a less reliable metric, Shah says.

Instead, the agency will start relying on the number of people being hospitalized for COVID as an indicator of how much the virus is spreading. A CDC analysis of the new approach released Friday confirmed it will be effective, Shah says.

The CDC will also continue to monitor and report how many people are dying from COVID as well as how often people are getting so sick they end up requiring care in emergency rooms.

Wastewater monitoring for the virus will provide additional crucial metrics, he says.

In addition, the agency will continue to monitor genetic analyses of the virus, including among arriving international travelers, to spot any new, potentially worrisome variants.



---

https://www.cnn.com/2023/05/11/health/coronavirus-booster-vaccine-pandemic-wellness/index.html
What does the end of the Covid-19 national emergency mean? Our medical analyst explains

--



Huge number of asylum seekers at US-Mexico border as COVID-19 restrictions end, new rules begin
https://apnews.com/article/migrants-mexico-border-asylum-title-42-4a4c55366e42b53f266ff88a8602dd0d

CIUDAD JUAREZ, Mexico (AP) — The Biden administration on Thursday will begin denying asylum to migrants who arrive at the U.S.-Mexico border without first applying online or seeking protection in a country they passed through. It marks a fundamental shift in immigration policy as the U.S. readies for the end of a key pandemic restriction.

Asylum seekers have been showing up at the border in huge numbers in anticipation of this week’s end of the use of a restriction known as Title 42. That rule has allowed the government to quickly expel migrants to Mexico. U.S. officials warned of difficult days ahead as the program tied to the COVID-19 pandemic expires this week.

The rule announced Wednesday is part of new measures meant to crack down on illegal border crossings while creating new legal pathways. Families who cross the border will face curfews and monitoring; the head of household will wear an ankle bracelet as their cases are heard within 30 days.

But there’s also a plan to open 100 regional migration hubs across the Western Hemisphere and granting humanitarian parole to 30,000 people a month to enter the country from four countries. U.S. officials have detailed steps they’ve taken, including increasing deportation flights, as they prepare for what many are expecting to be a substantial increase in migrants at the U.S.-Mexico border.

---


------------


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http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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handle
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57. "05/24/2023"
In response to Reply # 0
Wed May-24-23 09:41 AM by handle

          

Several people out in my team with COVID. (None serious)

--
China’s New Covid Wave Set to See 65 Million Cases a Week
https://www.cnbctv18.com/world/china-braces-for-new-covid-19-wave-with-up-to-65-million-weekly-cases-16728131.htm

XBB is expected to result in 40 million infections per week by the end of May before peaking at 65 million a month later. This comes nearly six months after Beijing dismantled its Covid Zero curbs, allowing the virus to spread rapidly among the country’s 1.4 billion residents.

(If %0.1 of people die from it it's still 40,000 dead the first month. That's the rate of COVID deaths/infection that Korea has.)

--
COVID-19 vaccines may undergo major overhaul this fall
https://www.science.org/content/article/covid-19-vaccines-may-undergo-major-overhaul-fall

Earlier this year, U.S. regulators settled on a new strategy for COVID-19 vaccines. Like the annual flu shot, the vaccines will be updated each year based on the virus’ evolution, then rolled out in the fall. Accordingly, on 15 June, advisers to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will weigh which strain or strains of SARS-CoV-2 should make up the next iteration of vaccine, so that the agency can greenlight a version for companies to mass-produce.

Regulators may well jettison the original SARS-CoV-2 strain that emerged in China and is long extinct—but which people are still being vaccinated against today. Many scientists favor eliminating it. The ancestral strain “should go out of the formulation,” says William Messer, an infectious disease specialist and viral immunologist at Oregon Health & Science University. Last week, the World Health Organization (WHO) agreed. But other questions loom, including whether to bundle multiple virus strains into the vaccine or just one.

To date, COVID-19 vaccines have been modified only once, when a bivalent version based on both the original strain and the BA.5 Omicron variant was introduced in September 2022. Uptake was disappointing: Only 17% of people in the United States have rolled up their sleeves. (By comparison, about 50% get an annual flu shot.) Furthermore, many researchers say the bivalent vaccine packed less of a punch than it could have. The decision to preserve the ancestral strain sprang from worries that if an entirely new variant emerged, an Omicron-only vaccine might falter against it.

------------


Gone: My Discogs collection for The Roots:
http://www.discogs.com/user/tomhayes-roots/collection

  

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