Coronavirus COVID-19 - Global Health Pandemic #98

Status
Not open for further replies.
  • #321
  • #322
I remember when this all started to get attention, fortunately, many of us were ahead of the information, thank you @Amonet .I remember when we were told that everyone was going to go home for two weeks, until Easter, and this whole thing would blow away, like seasonal flu.

Even then, I knew that was some childish fantasy. Covid is here to stay. Delta variant, whatever the next one will be called...this isn't going away.

I believe it will go away--in its present lethal form- I believe we will achieve herd
immunity ,most likely by way of infections(natural immunity) and vaccines.I also
believe it will transform into an endemic virus, like the flu, that will take lives, like the flu, and for which we will need a yearly jab, like we get for the flu.
 
  • #323
Tragic pic of new mum with Covid

A tragic photo has captured the moment a mum held her newborn baby for the first and last time before she succumbed to Covid-19.

Kristen McMullen, from Florida in the US, briefly took off her mask and stared into her daughter’s face for the duration of two photos before she was wheeled away to a Covid-19 ICU ward.

Her daughter, named Summer Reign, was born on July 27.

Less than two weeks later, on July 8, Ms McMullen took her last breath.

She had only seen her daughter on that one occasion when she died.

Ms McMullen – who was only 30 – only got to hold her child for just “a few short minutes before she was rushed off to the ICU,” according to her aunt, Melissa Syverson.
That is a terrible story. It states it's unknown whether she was vaccinated, but being pregnant, she wouldn't be vaxxed.

I wish that aspect of the story had been emphasized, ie that not everyone is unvaxxed by choice, yet they pay the price, rather than what the story does, which is promote the 🤬🤬🤬 account. I feeling I'm seeing this more, the stories being written up as journalism but all the photos and narrative come from 🤬🤬🤬 to raise money. Then I wonder, are they all strictly true? It does seem to taint the stories somehow.
 
  • #324
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #325
  • #326
Respectfully snipped for focus. Testing should be free. If it's not, we're always going to have people who suffer at home and not bother going to get tested.

At this link, you'll see the flyer for the local hospital, which is the only place within about 13 miles that's offering testing for Covid--at a cost of $152.46. Plus, you need a doctor's order. Look at the small line of text just under the words...

"Important information for patients and visitors"

It reads..."As required by Section 3202(b) of the CARES Act, our cash charge for the COVID-19 diagnostic test is $152.46 with a physician order."

For those who have insurance, the cost is likely covered. Those who don't are just out of luck.

If we can't test efficiently, contact tracing means nothing.

This whole virus has been handled so poorly in the US from the get-go. The vaccine, masking, and social distancing are probably our best bets, but all the rest of the stuff..contact tracing, shutdowns, quarantines, all of that is a band-aid on a severed limb because there's no uniformity or consistency. What works in other nations will not work here because too many people resist. I'm not coming down on those who resist, they have their opinions and those opinions are just as valid as mine, but I'm disappointed in our leadership--both the old leadership and the new leadership.

It is my opinion that there is a huge problem with accepting the idea that everyone's opinion is equally valid. When that happens, people cannot comprehend the difference between expert opinion and their own untrained, ill-informed hunches.

I agree that everyone may be given the opportunity to voice their opinions, I cannot agree that all opinions are valid. Some opinions are just wrong. There should be no marks given for opinions that are contrary to the facts.

jmo
 
  • #327
  • #328
  • #329
  • #330
  • #331
  • #332
That's pretty misleading. There is no evidence the cases are connected to the party.

It is too early to know if people contracted the virus from the party: that said, that type of party could be considered the type of event that causes spread of the virus. To be determined whether it did or not. That article though was click bait.
 
  • #333
  • #334
There is no reason that pregnant women shouldn't get vaccinated. There are a lot of stories of pregnant women dying from covid that I have seen recently. So covid is extremely dangerous to pregnant women and they should be getting vaccinated.

I agree. IMO, if the woman who died had been vaccinated, she would have been protected from severe illness and death. CDC info below (BBM).

CDC Newsroom

New CDC Data: COVID-19 Vaccination Safe for Pregnant People
Media Statement
For Immediate Release: Wednesday, August 11, 2021
Contact: Media Relations
(404) 639-3286

CDC has released new data on the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines in pregnant people and is recommending all people 12 years of age and older get vaccinated against COVID-19.

“CDC encourages all pregnant people or people who are thinking about becoming pregnant and those breastfeeding to get vaccinated to protect themselves from COVID-19,” said CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky. “The vaccines are safe and effective, and it has never been more urgent to increase vaccinations as we face the highly transmissible Delta variant and see severe outcomes from COVID-19 among unvaccinated pregnant people.

---------
Cases, Data, and Surveillance

Pregnant and recently pregnant women are at a higher risk for severe illness from COVID-19 than nonpregnant women. Additionally, pregnant women with COVID-19 are at a higher risk for preterm birth and might have a higher risk for other adverse pregnancy outcomes.

CDC is supporting multiple efforts to increase our understanding of the impact of COVID-19 on pregnant women and infants. Data collected as part of these efforts can help direct public health action and inform clinical guidance for the care of affected pregnant women and their infants.
 
  • #335
Or it may prove in the end that they were the smartest of them all imo

I believe that not getting the vaccine is not only not smart, but is causing a huge problem in our country--- in the South where vaccines are the lowest percentage, the hospitals in some of those states is bulging with sick and dying patients. The doctors and nurses are worn out and buckling under and exhausted. On top of that the people that decided not to take the vaccine, and who are now populating those hospitals, are causing non covid patients to not be able to get the care they need.
 
  • #336
  • #337
I don't believe this. Everyone I know with advanced degrees have been vaccinated.

I clicked on the link and the tweet doesn't seem to be there any more.

I couldn't find it either
 
  • #338
I don't believe this. Everyone I know with advanced degrees have been vaccinated.

I clicked on the link and the tweet doesn't seem to be there any more.

I have a doctoral degree and have not been vaccinated and won't be.

Here's a link to the study from the Carnegie Mellon site and a quote:

Researchers Identify Groups Hesitant about COVID-19 Vaccine - Dietrich College of Humanities and Social Sciences - Carnegie Mellon University

The largest decrease in hesitancy between January and May by education group was in those with a high school education or less. Hesitancy held constant in the most educated group (those with a PhD); by May PhD’s were the most hesitant group. While vaccine hesitancy decreased across virtually all racial groups, Black people and Pacific Islanders had the largest decreases, joining Hispanics and Asians at having lower vaccine hesitancy than white people in May.
 
  • #339
  • #340
I believe that not getting the vaccine is not only not smart, but is causing a huge problem in our country--- in the South where vaccines are the lowest percentage, the hospitals in some of those states is bulging with sick and dying patients. The doctors and nurses are worn out and buckling under and exhausted. On top of that the people that decided not to take the vaccine, and who are now populating those hospitals, are causing non covid patients to not be able to get the care they need.

Yes, we know this is happening, and it did not need to be this way. The virus is going to attack unvaccinated people everywhere, causing serious illness and deaths, and wreaking havoc in overwhelmed health care systems. There will also be many breakthrough cases in unvaccinated people, mostly mild cases. All these cases of Covid will increase the chances of mutations that will be even more dangerous and transmissible.

Misinformation/disinformation about the virus and the vaccines is to blame for much of this mess. It's truly sickening to see this going on.

MOO
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Members online

Online statistics

Members online
114
Guests online
3,045
Total visitors
3,159

Forum statistics

Threads
632,558
Messages
18,628,407
Members
243,196
Latest member
turningstones
Back
Top