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Although the vaccine seems to work with the India Variant, according to outbreaks in the UK, the India Variant is more infectious (transmissible) than the UK Kent variation. According to memory, the UK variation was more transmissible that the original virus.
I'm curious whether global variations are becoming more transmissible on an exponential basis - where each variation has double the transmission of earlier virus variations. For example, the UK version was more infectious than the original version, the India variation is more infectious than the UK version.
Is the risk that the virus will not become more deadly, but it will spread more easily? That seems to be the point of argument amongst experts in Canada - how big is the air that carries the virus.
Otto, I believe the risk is two-fold, its more easily transmitted and its more virulent. As its mutating, it seems to be getting stronger at this time.
We will know shortly, as it is rampant in parts of England where many were eligible for the shot but didnt bother getting it.
Also, I believe there are 45 cases of the India variant in Ontario as of yesterday.
Lets see how we fare over the next week or two.
With the long weekend ahead, I expect all COVID numbers to go up again as people meet up and enjoy themselves.
In my neighbourhood, lots of people have been playing tennis, soccer etc for weeks now. Kids sneak under the locked gates and now the openings are large enough for adults to get through.
Many dont seem to care anymore.
I believe the Indian variation is up to 50% more transmissible/potent than the Kent variant.
50 physicians died on Sunday in India. 269 doctors have died in the second wave in India.
Once again, governments are choosing how to 'count' the dead.
One family member said his father died of COVID (he had fever and other symptoms) not tested tho, yet on the death certificate it said he had a cardiac arrest.
When the family member questioned this, he was told it 'no point in testing his father as he was already dead'.
This is the opposite of what was happening in Britain, where if one had tested positive and died a few months later in a car accident, they were classified as a COVID death.
^^^^^ but the older you are, the more likely you are to stroke, in general.
The older you are, the more likely you are to have AFib, one of the stronger indicators of impending stroke as well.
Yes, some younger people have naturally occurring strokes but the odds go up with each decade, moreso after 65.
It would be very hard to differentiate 'natural' from vaccine related stroke at this point in time. Perhaps after much more research if we have a protracted length of COVID time. (I'm hoping not!)