Omicron isn't mild, its killing plenty of people despite them being vaccinated.
BA5 has pretty well escaped the vaccines no?
BA5 has pretty well escaped the vaccines no?
Fuck Israel
In order to avoid the pitfalls of absolute numbers, it is useful to instead look at incidence rates—usually expressed as the number of deaths per 100,000 people. Standardizing the denominator across all groups offers a very different picture.
Weekly average deaths as of Mar 2022, the smaller group of unvaccinated account for a higher weekly average than the larger group of single-course vaccinated and boosted combined.“Unvaccinated people had eight times the rate of death as compared to people who only had a primary series,” suggesting that boosters increase the level of protection.
It is also important to consider the ages of those who are dying. People 65 and older make up the group that is both the most likely to be vaccinated (and boosted) and the most likely to die of COVID. (Being older is one of the biggest risk factors for severe COVID because the immune system weakens with age.) So when you separate the age groups, it becomes even clearer that vaccination reduces the risk of death. And because immune protection from vaccination wanes with time, and because some older people do not mount a good immune response to the primary series, being boosted reduces that risk even further.
omicron is mild for triple vaccinated/recently boostered.Dilbert_X wrote:
Omicron isn't mild, its killing plenty of people despite them being vaccinated.
BA5 has pretty well escaped the vaccines no?
the cull is working and great for the labour market. covid has been the best thing for employees in the long run.uziq wrote:
omicron is mild for triple vaccinated/recently boostered.Dilbert_X wrote:
Omicron isn't mild, its killing plenty of people despite them being vaccinated.
BA5 has pretty well escaped the vaccines no?
if there’s a lot of people who refuse to look after their health, 3 years into a pandemic, then that’s on them. you can’t close a border for 5 years to cater to people who are anti-vax. again, not a policy.
Unless they're old, or immunocompromised etc - for them its anything but mild.uziq wrote:
omicron is mild for triple vaccinated/recently boostered.
The effectiveness of the vaccine is poor at best and fades fast. At 90% effectiveness 10% of triple vaccinated/recently boostered stand a fair chance of dying.if there’s a lot of people who refuse to look after their health, 3 years into a pandemic, then that’s on them. you can’t close a border for 5 years to cater to people who are anti-vax. again, not a policy.
precisely. every society has elderly and vulnerable people. those same people are vulnerable to flu or any other number of seasonal illnesses.Cybargs wrote:
wear an n95 mask.Dilbert_X wrote:
Unless they're old, or immunocompromised etc - for them its anything but mild.uziq wrote:
omicron is mild for triple vaccinated/recently boostered.
nope. new zealand, taiwan, south korea and china all failed because of cluster outbreaks escaping from their facilities.Dilbert_X wrote:
Erm yes we could have, nations could have been sealed off, locked down and covid eradicated.
Any nations which failed - bad luck for them.
Multiple nations succeeded, reopening travel to failed nations did for them.
They didn't lock them down well enough.uziq wrote:
nope. new zealand, taiwan, south korea and china all failed because of cluster outbreaks escaping from their facilities.
locking down borders did not extinguish covid at all. the NZ government declared it an impossibility, for one.
Last edited by uziq (2022-08-01 02:59:08)
There wasn't going to be a "perfect lockdown" unless a country could lock everyone into individual closets and have robots perform essential tasks. You're chasing a pipe dream, not actionable measures.Dilbert_X wrote:
They didn't lock them down well enough.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2022-08-01 02:59:38)
this guy expects international freight and deliveries to keep functioning ... lmao. whilst also simultaneously managing complete border sterility.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
There wasn't going to be a "perfect lockdown" unless a country could lock everyone into individual closets and have robots perform essential tasks. You're chasing a pipe dream, not actionable measures.
Presumably that wasn't 90 days straight, so is irrevelant.uziq wrote:
china had a pre-omicron escape case of an incoming 'essential' traveler who had spent 90 days in various quarantines and had taken no fewer than 6/7 tests. he still ended up introducing an unsymptomatic, test-evasive cluster of covid cases into a major chinese city.
Engineers are the ones trained to manage error and risk, maybe we should have a go at running things - everyone else has failed.sorry, your fantasy of total control is very silly and very infantile stuff. aren't engineers trained to put up with acceptable margins of error?
presumably you're also trained to only manage risk in areas in which you have provable expertise. so why are you arguing against the wisdom of the entire world's epidemiological community, who have been looking at the stats and models for the last 3 years?Engineers are the ones trained to manage error and risk
Last edited by uziq (2022-08-01 03:21:19)
Because they've failed?uziq wrote:
why are you arguing against the wisdom of the entire world's epidemiological community, who have been looking at the stats and models for the last 3 years?
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2022-08-01 04:03:38)
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/worl … 31726.htmlDilbert_X wrote:
Um nope.
Australia gave up. The experts said vaccines had solved everything, no need for any precautions, no need for masks, and the business bigwigs wanted to get their businesses back on track - which is to say Alan Joyce wanted to make his bonuses.
So Australia opened up and here we are - one of the worst death rates in the word.