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lightsaber wrote:The Minnesota case attended an Anime convention in NYC.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-w ... NewsSearch
Scooby says rhoo rhoo
casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:The Minnesota case attended an Anime convention in NYC.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-w ... NewsSearch
Scooby says rhoo rhoo
Yep. So much for Travel bans. It is now a question of whether it beats out Delta or not,
Kent350787 wrote:casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:The Minnesota case attended an Anime convention in NYC.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-w ... NewsSearch
Scooby says rhoo rhoo
Yep. So much for Travel bans. It is now a question of whether it beats out Delta or not,
Is anyone seeing anything more on Omicron severity? In Australia we've only identified 8 cases to date - 7 adults and one child. All the adults have been fully vaccinated, the child too young to be vaccinated. 6 of the 8 adults have been asymptomatic (returned traveller identified via surveillance testing), and the other adult and child had ":sniffles" (term used in the media).
lightsaber wrote:The worrying bit is all the really young kids going into the hospital. 10% of hospitalized are toddlers:
https://gulfnews.com/amp/world/africa/c ... 1.84075071
Lightsaber
lightsaber wrote:The Minnesota case attended an Anime convention in NYC.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-w ... NewsSearch
Scooby says rhoo rhoo
lightsaber wrote:Kent350787 wrote:casinterest wrote:
Yep. So much for Travel bans. It is now a question of whether it beats out Delta or not,
Is anyone seeing anything more on Omicron severity? In Australia we've only identified 8 cases to date - 7 adults and one child. All the adults have been fully vaccinated, the child too young to be vaccinated. 6 of the 8 adults have been asymptomatic (returned traveller identified via surveillance testing), and the other adult and child had ":sniffles" (term used in the media).
South Africa is seeing hospitalizations:
https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/8 ... frica/amp/
135 to 418 over the past 14 days – confirming fears that it could be more transmissible.
Cases doubled in a day:
https://www.stltoday.com/news/world/sou ... 504d9.html
Unfortunately, this is an unknown. The worrying bit is all the really young kids going into the hospital. 10% of hospitalized are toddlers:
https://gulfnews.com/amp/world/africa/c ... 1.84075071
Lightsaber
New York has confirmed five cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant, its governor said on Thursday, bringing to five the number of U.S. states having detected the variant, with 10 reported infections nationwide.
California, Colorado and Minnesota have found cases of the coronavirus variant among patients who were fully vaccinated and developed mild symptoms, while Hawaii reported a case with an unvaccinated person, who had moderate symptoms.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/02/health/covid-booster-shots-mix-and-match.html
Antibodies and T cell levels increased in people who received a Covid-19 booster shot compared with those who got the meningitis vaccine. The range was quite large, however. People who got the Valneva booster after a Pfizer vaccine saw only a 30 percent increase above the control group. But a Moderna booster produced at least a 1,000 percent increase.
flyguy89 wrote:lightsaber wrote:The worrying bit is all the really young kids going into the hospital. 10% of hospitalized are toddlers:
https://gulfnews.com/amp/world/africa/c ... 1.84075071
Lightsaber
That’s 10% of ALL hospital admissions, not COVID hospitalizations.
casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:The Minnesota case attended an Anime convention in NYC.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/man-w ... NewsSearch
Scooby says rhoo rhoo
Yep. So much for Travel bans. It is now a question of whether it beats out Delta or not,
casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:Kent350787 wrote:
Is anyone seeing anything more on Omicron severity? In Australia we've only identified 8 cases to date - 7 adults and one child. All the adults have been fully vaccinated, the child too young to be vaccinated. 6 of the 8 adults have been asymptomatic (returned traveller identified via surveillance testing), and the other adult and child had ":sniffles" (term used in the media).
South Africa is seeing hospitalizations:
https://www.thescottishsun.co.uk/news/8 ... frica/amp/
135 to 418 over the past 14 days – confirming fears that it could be more transmissible.
Cases doubled in a day:
https://www.stltoday.com/news/world/sou ... 504d9.html
Unfortunately, this is an unknown. The worrying bit is all the really young kids going into the hospital. 10% of hospitalized are toddlers:
https://gulfnews.com/amp/world/africa/c ... 1.84075071
Lightsaber
Based on all the reports, it looks like Omicron has been around quite a bit longer than we thought, and is already in more places than travel bans will help out in. It is in 5 states from NY to HI and it is highly likely that there are other states in between.
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/omicro ... 021-12-02/New York has confirmed five cases of the Omicron coronavirus variant, its governor said on Thursday, bringing to five the number of U.S. states having detected the variant, with 10 reported infections nationwide.
California, Colorado and Minnesota have found cases of the coronavirus variant among patients who were fully vaccinated and developed mild symptoms, while Hawaii reported a case with an unvaccinated person, who had moderate symptoms.
This should lead to an increase in booster pushing if preliminary reports are correct that they are still effective.https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/02/health/covid-booster-shots-mix-and-match.htmlAntibodies and T cell levels increased in people who received a Covid-19 booster shot compared with those who got the meningitis vaccine. The range was quite large, however. People who got the Valneva booster after a Pfizer vaccine saw only a 30 percent increase above the control group. But a Moderna booster produced at least a 1,000 percent increase.
c933103 wrote:Report from South Africa indicate children are becoming vulnerable to Omicron.
https://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/news/covid ... -symptoms/
10% hospital admission are infants age between 0-2.
Rate of admission of kids age between 0-5 is now second only to the age group of people age 60+.
Vaccination probably isn't the cause given South Africa is only 30%1-dose vaccinated.
art wrote:c933103 wrote:Report from South Africa indicate children are becoming vulnerable to Omicron.
https://www.newstalkzb.co.nz/news/covid ... -symptoms/
10% hospital admission are infants age between 0-2.
Rate of admission of kids age between 0-5 is now second only to the age group of people age 60+.
Vaccination probably isn't the cause given South Africa is only 30%1-dose vaccinated.
Are there moves to push the approval of vaccines for infants anywhere?
lightsaber wrote:Hostility in ICUs:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medica ... NewsSearch
As the delta variant rages, COVID-19 patients are younger and more hostile, many believing they are part of an evil conspiracy theory in which doctors and hospitals, not the coronavirus, kill people.
art wrote:lightsaber wrote:Hostility in ICUs:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medica ... NewsSearch
As the delta variant rages, COVID-19 patients are younger and more hostile, many believing they are part of an evil conspiracy theory in which doctors and hospitals, not the coronavirus, kill people.
So what do these people do? Do they try to persuade the doctors to stop harming them and to start helping them?
alanb976 wrote:The NSW cases are interesting. Everyone at the nightclubs should have been fully vaccinated, and likely within the last 4 months with Pfizer/Moderna. It seems surprising the number of cases caused by the two events. At face value it appears the vaccines aren't doing a great job at stopping infections with Omicron.
alanb976 wrote:The NSW cases are interesting. Everyone at the nightclubs should have been fully vaccinated, and likely within the last 4 months with Pfizer/Moderna. It seems surprising the number of cases caused by the two events. At face value it appears the vaccines aren't doing a great job at stopping infections with Omicron.
“Omicron is indeed very infectious and seems to be spreading more rapidly in the U.K. than in South Africa,” Paul Hunter, a professor of medicine at the University of East Anglia, said about Omicron’s rise. He added that the latest R number in South Africa is about 2.2, while in the U.K. this figure is estimated at 3.7, which indicates a doubling every two to three days.
lightsaber wrote:alanb976 wrote:The NSW cases are interesting. Everyone at the nightclubs should have been fully vaccinated, and likely within the last 4 months with Pfizer/Moderna. It seems surprising the number of cases caused by the two events. At face value it appears the vaccines aren't doing a great job at stopping infections with Omicron.
The 2 dose regimen of Pfizer is 23% effective preventing illness (1st link) and 70% effective keeping someone out of the hospital (2nd link):
https://time.com/6127710/omicron-pfizer/
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medica ... uxbndlbing
Boosters are 75% effective vs. symptomatic infection:
https://news.yahoo.com/booster-shots-75 ... 30222.html
Boosters are doing a great job keeping people out of the hospital, this study says boosters 95% effective against serious illness:
https://news.sanfordhealth.org/coronavi ... t-spreads/
It is my opinion everyone will be exposed to Omicron. The best description I've heard of vaccination:
1. First dose is elementary school, an introduction.
2. 2nd dose is high school. An education, but not ready for the full real world.
3. 3rd dose is college, a broader understanding, but not perfect.
If someone gets the sniffles, so what? It is the poor overloaded medical staff who need a break. Reducing their workload 95% is excellent.
Lightsaber
CometII wrote:lightsaber wrote:alanb976 wrote:The NSW cases are interesting. Everyone at the nightclubs should have been fully vaccinated, and likely within the last 4 months with Pfizer/Moderna. It seems surprising the number of cases caused by the two events. At face value it appears the vaccines aren't doing a great job at stopping infections with Omicron.
The 2 dose regimen of Pfizer is 23% effective preventing illness (1st link) and 70% effective keeping someone out of the hospital (2nd link):
https://time.com/6127710/omicron-pfizer/
https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/medica ... uxbndlbing
Boosters are 75% effective vs. symptomatic infection:
https://news.yahoo.com/booster-shots-75 ... 30222.html
Boosters are doing a great job keeping people out of the hospital, this study says boosters 95% effective against serious illness:
https://news.sanfordhealth.org/coronavi ... t-spreads/
It is my opinion everyone will be exposed to Omicron. The best description I've heard of vaccination:
1. First dose is elementary school, an introduction.
2. 2nd dose is high school. An education, but not ready for the full real world.
3. 3rd dose is college, a broader understanding, but not perfect.
If someone gets the sniffles, so what? It is the poor overloaded medical staff who need a break. Reducing their workload 95% is excellent.
Lightsaber
With all this booster talk, I still quire not understand, do you now need three vaccines to be protected? What I mean is, let's imagine someone NOT vaccinated yet decides to get vaccinated. Will the original two vaccines still protect you from serious illness? My confusion is whether if a person getting the original two doses today will have the same strong immunity as someone who got a booster (whose immunity was waning), or is the boosted person significantly more protected than the person with the fresh batch of two vaccines.
c933103 wrote:In fact, as I linked in the vaccine thread, a study of 78000 infected South African shows that 2-dose vaccine only have 33% efficiency against infection and only 70% efficiency against hospitalization
sierrakilo44 wrote:c933103 wrote:In fact, as I linked in the vaccine thread, a study of 78000 infected South African shows that 2-dose vaccine only have 33% efficiency against infection and only 70% efficiency against hospitalization
Another study showed the hospitalisation rate of Omicron in South Africa was about 1/3rd of Delta and Beta.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/14/worl ... study.html
How can this translate to a 70% efficiency against hospitalisation with Pfizer against Omicron if Pfizer was 90%+ efficiency against hospitalisation against Delta?
Medicos on the ground in South Africa don’t seem too concerned with Omicron, nor to SA health authorities, and that’s with 23% vaccinated. Other nations with much higher vaccination rates are panicking, unnecessarily it seems.
More than 60% of confirmed COVID-19 cases among people under 20 were asymptomatic; nearly 50% in people 20 to 39; about 32% in people 40 to 59, and about 33% in those over 60.
“If we had a more comprehensive testing program that sampled everyone in an unbiased way, we would pick up more (asymptomatic cases),” Wells said.
While 40% of COVID-19 infections overall were asymptomatic, they represented only .25% of the tested population.
casinterest wrote:Here is the number of Asymptomatic cases. It gives a pretty good reason why when we find a case, it usually means there are a lot of unknown cases.
40% are Asymptomatic.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/hea ... 495693001/More than 60% of confirmed COVID-19 cases among people under 20 were asymptomatic; nearly 50% in people 20 to 39; about 32% in people 40 to 59, and about 33% in those over 60.
Most people unless in a testing program don't get tested if they don't feel sick.“If we had a more comprehensive testing program that sampled everyone in an unbiased way, we would pick up more (asymptomatic cases),” Wells said.
While 40% of COVID-19 infections overall were asymptomatic, they represented only .25% of the tested population.
StarAC17 wrote:casinterest wrote:Here is the number of Asymptomatic cases. It gives a pretty good reason why when we find a case, it usually means there are a lot of unknown cases.
40% are Asymptomatic.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/hea ... 495693001/More than 60% of confirmed COVID-19 cases among people under 20 were asymptomatic; nearly 50% in people 20 to 39; about 32% in people 40 to 59, and about 33% in those over 60.
Most people unless in a testing program don't get tested if they don't feel sick.“If we had a more comprehensive testing program that sampled everyone in an unbiased way, we would pick up more (asymptomatic cases),” Wells said.
While 40% of COVID-19 infections overall were asymptomatic, they represented only .25% of the tested population.
In a lot of places if you are deemed a contact of a confirmed infection then you are tested and if you did get it from them then that is finding some of infections that might not be found otherwise.
I think they are not mentioning how severe cases are which they should do. There are pros and cons to this, if more people have mild symptoms and are not symptomatic the less people take it seriously. However not being transparent about the actual severity of the cases makes many people (including myself who is vaccinated) doubt how effective the vaccines actually are or are those in public health trying to achieve an essentially impossible metric.
Saying you need a booster because of waning immunity means that the vaccines are not that effective. How this differs from the flu shot is that the strains of influenza are different each year that are put into the flu shot, this is the same booster.
777luver wrote:
False. Waning immunity does not mean vaccines are not as effective, the antibodies are still activate when it recognizes the virus. The media might have you think otherwise, but the vaccine still works, so to say it's not that effective is misleading. You still have protection
sierrakilo44 wrote:777luver wrote:
False. Waning immunity does not mean vaccines are not as effective, the antibodies are still activate when it recognizes the virus. The media might have you think otherwise, but the vaccine still works, so to say it's not that effective is misleading. You still have protection
Yes.
Antibodies are one thing, but it’s Memory T cells that are the key in this fight.
The Memory T cells “remember” the virus they were exposed to when vaccinated, and are ready to start producing antibodies straight away when they detect a Covid infection. They are also less affected by mutations which is why the vaccine is still very effective against hospitalisation and severe illness versus Omicron.
Now we just need to start concentrating less on case numbers and antibody levels and concentrating more on getting as many people vaccinated with the initial two dose regime.
777luver wrote:Case numbers really shouldn't matter in the media anymore. Let's focus on vaccinating as many people as we can in other countries
777luver wrote:StarAC17 wrote:casinterest wrote:Here is the number of Asymptomatic cases. It gives a pretty good reason why when we find a case, it usually means there are a lot of unknown cases.
40% are Asymptomatic.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/hea ... 495693001/
Most people unless in a testing program don't get tested if they don't feel sick.
In a lot of places if you are deemed a contact of a confirmed infection then you are tested and if you did get it from them then that is finding some of infections that might not be found otherwise.
I think they are not mentioning how severe cases are which they should do. There are pros and cons to this, if more people have mild symptoms and are not symptomatic the less people take it seriously. However not being transparent about the actual severity of the cases makes many people (including myself who is vaccinated) doubt how effective the vaccines actually are or are those in public health trying to achieve an essentially impossible metric.
Saying you need a booster because of waning immunity means that the vaccines are not that effective. How this differs from the flu shot is that the strains of influenza are different each year that are put into the flu shot, this is the same booster.
False. Waning immunity does not mean vaccines are not as effective, the antibodies are still activate when it recognizes the virus. The media might have you think otherwise, but the vaccine still works, so to say it's not that effective is misleading. You still have protection
sierrakilo44 wrote:777luver wrote:
False. Waning immunity does not mean vaccines are not as effective, the antibodies are still activate when it recognizes the virus. The media might have you think otherwise, but the vaccine still works, so to say it's not that effective is misleading. You still have protection
Yes.
Antibodies are one thing, but it’s Memory T cells that are the key in this fight.
The Memory T cells “remember” the virus they were exposed to when vaccinated, and are ready to start producing antibodies straight away when they detect a Covid infection. They are also less affected by mutations which is why the vaccine is still very effective against hospitalisation and severe illness versus Omicron.
Now we just need to start concentrating less on case numbers and antibody levels and concentrating more on getting as many people vaccinated with the initial two dose regime.
sierrakilo44 wrote:Some data analysis from the UK showing the hospitalisation numbers and an Omicron “spike” may be overinflated:
https://twitter.com/drraghibali/status/ ... 02145?s=20
2/3rds of those tested positive in hospitals were admitted for non Covid reasons, and the chart in growth shows its matching the 2021 summer Delta wave which was quite manageable for the health system.
This news was drowned out by all the talk of lockdowns and panic over Omicron so I thought it necessary to post for some clarity
lightsaber wrote:That requires knowing if the Covid19 exacerbated the prior conditions. I suspect in a majority of cases, in particular heart trouble, strokes, miscarriages, and lung issues, that is the case.
My relative in the coronavirus wards has had to choose if a patient dies of coronavirus or cancer, you cannot fight both. Same with certain kidney diseases. In those cases, a clear coronavirus death as numerous had cancers that would have been a short hospitalization without Covid19 with the patient walking again within weeks.
sierrakilo44 wrote:lightsaber wrote:That requires knowing if the Covid19 exacerbated the prior conditions. I suspect in a majority of cases, in particular heart trouble, strokes, miscarriages, and lung issues, that is the case.
Uni suspect that but there’s no evidence of it. I would suspect that if Omicron is causing mostly mild symptoms, someone presents to a hospital because of a heart or pregnancy issue and then through routine testing tests positive, not coming in with classic Covid symptoms, then I would suspect their symptoms are so mild or asymptomatic they couldn’t have exacerbated their pre exisiting condition.My relative in the coronavirus wards has had to choose if a patient dies of coronavirus or cancer, you cannot fight both. Same with certain kidney diseases. In those cases, a clear coronavirus death as numerous had cancers that would have been a short hospitalization without Covid19 with the patient walking again within weeks.
I’ve known people working in healthcare who’ve done that all the time, including pre pandemic. It’s a part of their job.
The good thing is data from South Africa has shown those resources won’t be stretched with omicron and a high level of immunity/vaccination so health staff won’t have to make those decisions as much.
c933103 wrote:The South Africa data claim ~0.3% hospitalization rate vs 1.3% for original variant. That'd be about 1/4. But with vaccine effect against hospitalization being 70% instead of 95+%, it mean vaccinated would see 6+ times less protections once infected. (~30% chance of breakthrough the protection and be hospitalized instead of <5%.) So overall it'd still be more dangerous to individuals who are only 2-dose vaccinated, despite still relatively low risk.
sierrakilo44 wrote:c933103 wrote:The South Africa data claim ~0.3% hospitalization rate vs 1.3% for original variant. That'd be about 1/4. But with vaccine effect against hospitalization being 70% instead of 95+%, it mean vaccinated would see 6+ times less protections once infected. (~30% chance of breakthrough the protection and be hospitalized instead of <5%.) So overall it'd still be more dangerous to individuals who are only 2-dose vaccinated, despite still relatively low risk.
Well somewhere those stats are wrong, because data has shown South African hospital admission rates and times are lower with Omicron than Delta. That’s not just a theoretical guess using predictions of rates and severity, it’s actual recorded data during the wave which has already peaked.:
https://www.smh.com.au/world/africa/new ... 59gub.html
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/14/worl ... study.html
This is also backed up by plenty of anecdotal statements from doctors on the ground.