Yes
No
I think the evidence is becoming clear that immunity wanes over time and that boosters are in order after six months(possibly a little longer with Moderna). The CDC dropped the ball by not approving boosters back in September. I think the uptick is the result of waning immunity. That said I think its still agreed that those that were vaccinated are faring better than those not vaccinated. -Mike
There were some, a few, back in Spring who realized that breakthroughs (transmission) were more common than reported. And then there are some now…
Behar at 1:48
https://mobile.twitter.com/TheView/s...77901431488518
Do anti vaxxers refuse to vaccinate their pets?
slow.
I officially have my booster. Process is different at the pharmacy. They don't make you wait 15 minutes, at least in my case
I have an appointment for my Pfizer booster on Monday. Looking forward to extra protection over the holidays. Also looking forward to January 4, 2022 when the vaccine mandate goes into effect for federal contractors. No more wondering about which co-workers are unvaccinated.
Greg
I'm betting on the relaxation of rules and norms on indoor gatherings, the seasonal increase of indoor gatherings, and fatigue from maintaining the discipline to wear masks and maintain distances -- that's mainly responsible for the spikes we're seeing.
That said, presently concerned about family from NH planning to visit soon.
What the well-dressed man will be wearing.
Last edited by thollandpe; 11-19-2021 at 03:24 PM.
Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter
Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin
My wife called this morning at 3:30, telling me our son had a heart attack and our daughter was driving him to the ER.
Short story is he's in a cardiac unit. Provisional diagnosis is myocarditis. Tested positive for the blood marker indicating inflammation. She is pissed, blaming it on the vaccine, which she has eschewed. Tells me to "do my own research." Seriously.
I trust medical science. He is in a good place to deal with whatever is wrong, likely a response to a recent respiratory virus.
I have buckled my seat belt.
Jay Dwight
We're averaging two cases a day at work out of a workforce of 550. These are younger (20-40) folks who are not vaccinated. Out of all the cases (195 since tracking started last year), only one was a breakthrough. In the county, we've seen a big spike in cases that is roughly equivalent to other counties in the state for cases per 100K population, but the fatality rate is one of the highest in the state, only behind Apache county. This county also has one of the lowest vaccination rates in the state.
Bottom line, the spike in cases is consistent with other locations in the state, but more people are dying here. I think it would be a disservice to not link the low vaccination rate to the high fatality rate. As of yesterday at noon, there are six ICU beds available in the county. I want to be compassionate about coworkers who are out with Covid, but I think we're past the point of encouraging folks to get vaccines, we're just letting nature run its course and see who lives. The real victims here are the folks that need medical care or surgery that are being put off until the hospitals have freed up enough beds. I am thankful that my emergency appendectomy in August was before the spike.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
When I received the first dose of the Moderna vaccine, I felt a little "off" for a day or two but that's it.
When I received the second dose, I came down with a full-blown case of flu-like symptoms and stayed home from work for two days. It was brutal, but it cleared up amazingly quickly on the second day.
Yesterday, I learned a local community organization was hosting a free-clinic for all the various vaccines, boosters, and newly updated target groups. I'm in; even rode my bike there!
Got a booster shot of the Moderna. Within 8 hours I'm back with the flu-like symptoms; fever, cold sweats, full body aches. As I sit here typing this, I'm crushed. Good grief, I can't catch a break. But I'll do it because not only is it good for me; it's good for society.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
I had the Johnson Vaccine about 6 months and was scheduled for the booster today. Couple of guys at work who were not vaccinated came down with covid and worked, several days with minor symptoms before they went to the Doctor. Today I went to the ready med to check on what i thoght was a kidney stone and found out I'm positive for Covid. I didn't have a fever yesterday morning but had a low grade last night, dry cough and aches. Not happy with my co workers right now.
Frank Beshears
The gentlest thing in the world
overcomes the hardest thing in the world.
This guy is talking about the vaccine database and CDC reporting leading to the Sign of the Beast..haha.
https://twitter.com/NeverSleever/sta...38753691144192
And this is the 2nd most vaccinated county in Arizona (88.9%/80.5%). 41k out of a total population of 46k. Very high positivity rate 14.6% and pretty high case rate at the moment as well, 67/100k.
Arizona is so weird.
Retired Sailor, Marine dad, semi-professional cyclist, fly fisherman, and Indian School STEM teacher.
Assistant Operating Officer at Farm Soap homemade soaps. www.farmsoap.com
^That wasn't the point and I didn't think it necessary to add too much commentary. Your bias is showing again. I should be explicit. Here are my "points."
1. There's high transmission in Arizona at the moment. This is unfortunate and, likely, heterogenous.
2. A county that borders Mexico where more than 80% of the residents are Latinx has a sheriff who doesn't reflect its demographics and likely voting patterns. This looks to me to be illustrative of the type of exploitation that is still common in low SES rural communities in the southwest.
3. The database that the sheriff believes is tied to federal funding is, in my opinion, a good source of data. We should know who is vaccinated and who isn't and these numbers should be reported in real time to get a true idea of breakthrough rates, ie, a system similar to the one in the UK.
4. Apocalyptic Christian eschatology in 2021 is funny to me.
edit for above: yikes, Sheriff is a Democrat.
County Sheriff
TOTAL
DEM HATHAWAY, JAMES "DAVID" 13,714
IND AGOSTTINI, JOSÉ 3,261
IND IBARRA, ANDREW 1,515
Write-In Totals 175
Write-In: Invalid Write-In 175
Not Assigned 0
Total Votes Cast 18,665
https://www.santacruzcountyaz.gov/Do...FICIAL-Results
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