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c933103 wrote:http://www.breakingthenews.net/news/details/57012863
Germany: 95.6% Omicron cases are vaccinated
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Isn't it higher than total vaccinated rate of the country?
Assuming it's not enhancing antibodies, why? What make vaccinated more likely to get it than unvaccinated?
People lowering their guard after vaccinations?
yonahleung wrote:c933103 wrote:http://www.breakingthenews.net/news/details/57012863
Germany: 95.6% Omicron cases are vaccinated
---
Isn't it higher than total vaccinated rate of the country?
Assuming it's not enhancing antibodies, why? What make vaccinated more likely to get it than unvaccinated?
People lowering their guard after vaccinations?
This is a very odd statistic. But I guess the most important figure from this is that only 1.2% requires hospitalisation and 0.03% died. This is a phenomenally benign figure which is comparable to the seasonal flu. We are truly entering the endemic phase (outside China).
c933103 wrote:https://canoe.com/opinion/columnists/brampton-mayor-speaks-out-on-ontarios-misleading-covid-hospital-data/wcm/3b0f1fc4-d4b4-46cb-830d-5d3710ae021d
Ontario, Canada: ~50% covid hospitalizations are incidental findings, as in those people aren't admitted into hospital for coronavirus, but rather for other reasons, but only discovered they have coronavirus when tested when they are admitted into hospital
In my opinion this indicate two things:
1. A lot of cases there aren't being caught and are only discovered when being randomly sampled for unrelated reason (hospitalization for other clauses)
2. Hospitalization rate in Ontario have been overestimated
c933103 wrote:https://www.newsweek.com/fauci-children-hospital-covid-omicron-1664676
Fauci dismiss children hospitalization concern, claim some of them are found to have COVID when admitted for reasons like broken legs, instead of admitted because of COVID.
I think they need to get a PR department to better deliver pandemic related messages.
flyguy89 wrote:c933103 wrote:https://www.newsweek.com/fauci-children-hospital-covid-omicron-1664676
Fauci dismiss children hospitalization concern, claim some of them are found to have COVID when admitted for reasons like broken legs, instead of admitted because of COVID.
I think they need to get a PR department to better deliver pandemic related messages.
Is he wrong?
flyguy89 wrote:c933103 wrote:https://www.newsweek.com/fauci-children-hospital-covid-omicron-1664676
Fauci dismiss children hospitalization concern, claim some of them are found to have COVID when admitted for reasons like broken legs, instead of admitted because of COVID.
I think they need to get a PR department to better deliver pandemic related messages.
Is he wrong?
TokyoImperialPa wrote:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-30/south-africa-may-lift-curfew-in-change-to-lockdown-rules-news24
It seems that South Africa has in fact been under a quasi-lockdown of sorts, despite what the rest of the world has been made to believe by mainstream media. We are playing with fire by not having lockdowns.
777luver wrote:TokyoImperialPa wrote:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-30/south-africa-may-lift-curfew-in-change-to-lockdown-rules-news24
It seems that South Africa has in fact been under a quasi-lockdown of sorts, despite what the rest of the world has been made to believe by mainstream media. We are playing with fire by not having lockdowns.
You want more lockdowns? Do you work from home?
lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:TokyoImperialPa wrote:https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-30/south-africa-may-lift-curfew-in-change-to-lockdown-rules-news24
It seems that South Africa has in fact been under a quasi-lockdown of sorts, despite what the rest of the world has been made to believe by mainstream media. We are playing with fire by not having lockdowns.
You want more lockdowns? Do you work from home?
If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns. We need 90%+ of the resources being used on Covid19 patients for other medical matters. Alas, we have to get through this horrid wave first. I fully realize no one believes how bad it is in the hospitals. My friends and relatives working the coronavirus wards are shocked at the patients being sent home by the ER with oxygen and a few pills as... there really isn't any other choice in some areas (patients who would have been hospitalized before).
https://ourworldindata.org/covid-hospitalizations
My relative's hospital isn't bad, but so many patients, my relative had to work 11 days straight (recall, hospital shifts are 12 to 17 hours) as so many staff are retiring as they just have no more empathy to give. 85% of patients unvacs:
https://health.mesacounty.us/covid19/datadashboard/
When this is done we'll have to get everyone keeping their new year's resolution to lose weight and somehow increase vaccinations.
Lightsaber
casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:
You want more lockdowns? Do you work from home?
If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns. We need 90%+ of the resources being used on Covid19 patients for other medical matters. Alas, we have to get through this horrid wave first. I fully realize no one believes how bad it is in the hospitals. My friends and relatives working the coronavirus wards are shocked at the patients being sent home by the ER with oxygen and a few pills as... there really isn't any other choice in some areas (patients who would have been hospitalized before).
https://ourworldindata.org/covid-hospitalizations
My relative's hospital isn't bad, but so many patients, my relative had to work 11 days straight (recall, hospital shifts are 12 to 17 hours) as so many staff are retiring as they just have no more empathy to give. 85% of patients unvacs:
https://health.mesacounty.us/covid19/datadashboard/
When this is done we'll have to get everyone keeping their new year's resolution to lose weight and somehow increase vaccinations.
Lightsaber
Lockdowns might help., but it seems Omicron is ready to run the gauntlet. Here in NC, I have had many friends that have tested positive on home kits in the last week. I expect all hell to be let loose when schools start back. I fear we are going to really start seeing some serious effects of the current outbreak in the next few weeks as the virus migrates south. The numbers out of Florida are not good, and Texas and California are starting to really show some high numbers.
This variant is showing to be really transmittable. It may be 50% milder, but is that going to help when it spreads at 300% of Delta's transmission rate, and it seems to have no problem using the vaccinated as hosts/
lightsaber wrote:If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns.
flyguy89 wrote:lightsaber wrote:If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns.
To what end? It would neither stop nor slow cases.
c933103 wrote:casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns. We need 90%+ of the resources being used on Covid19 patients for other medical matters. Alas, we have to get through this horrid wave first. I fully realize no one believes how bad it is in the hospitals. My friends and relatives working the coronavirus wards are shocked at the patients being sent home by the ER with oxygen and a few pills as... there really isn't any other choice in some areas (patients who would have been hospitalized before).
https://ourworldindata.org/covid-hospitalizations
My relative's hospital isn't bad, but so many patients, my relative had to work 11 days straight (recall, hospital shifts are 12 to 17 hours) as so many staff are retiring as they just have no more empathy to give. 85% of patients unvacs:
https://health.mesacounty.us/covid19/datadashboard/
When this is done we'll have to get everyone keeping their new year's resolution to lose weight and somehow increase vaccinations.
Lightsaber
Lockdowns might help., but it seems Omicron is ready to run the gauntlet. Here in NC, I have had many friends that have tested positive on home kits in the last week. I expect all hell to be let loose when schools start back. I fear we are going to really start seeing some serious effects of the current outbreak in the next few weeks as the virus migrates south. The numbers out of Florida are not good, and Texas and California are starting to really show some high numbers.
This variant is showing to be really transmittable. It may be 50% milder, but is that going to help when it spreads at 300% of Delta's transmission rate, and it seems to have no problem using the vaccinated as hosts/
https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/12/28 ... s.amp.html
And Omicron is still only ~59% of all new American cases
777luver wrote:flyguy89 wrote:lightsaber wrote:If one looks at the United stateshospitalizatons, we *need* lockdowns.
To what end? It would neither stop nor slow cases.
It's been proven to not work. Maybe at the start when we didn't know what we were dealing with but now we do, nearly 2 years on......
lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:flyguy89 wrote:To what end? It would neither stop nor slow cases.
It's been proven to not work. Maybe at the start when we didn't know what we were dealing with but now we do, nearly 2 years on......
Lockdowns mitigate hospital loading. They work amazingly well. It is obvious a week+ after lockdown and obvious when done.
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/co ... RA~NLD~BEL
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/curr ... ?tab=chart
casinterest wrote:lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:
It's been proven to not work. Maybe at the start when we didn't know what we were dealing with but now we do, nearly 2 years on......
Lockdowns mitigate hospital loading. They work amazingly well. It is obvious a week+ after lockdown and obvious when done.
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/co ... RA~NLD~BEL
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/curr ... ?tab=chart
Wow, I can't wait to see how much the US beats out the UK and france in cases per million in the next 2 weeks.
Lockdowns are too political. At this point the Party B is in a mood for "i told you so" and Party C are in a mood of "we blame you because we don't understand".
lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:flyguy89 wrote:To what end? It would neither stop nor slow cases.
It's been proven to not work. Maybe at the start when we didn't know what we were dealing with but now we do, nearly 2 years on......
Lockdowns mitigate hospital loading. They work amazingly well. It is obvious a week+ after lockdown and obvious when done.
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/co ... RA~NLD~BEL
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/curr ... ?tab=chart
Late edit: Omicron is just getting started, look at the rate of increase.
flyguy89 wrote:[twoid][/twoid]lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:
Mask up and get vaxxed if you already haven’t. That’s all you can do at this point.
flyguy89 wrote:[twoid][/twoid]lightsaber wrote:777luver wrote:
It's been proven to not work. Maybe at the start when we didn't know what we were dealing with but now we do, nearly 2 years on......
Lockdowns mitigate hospital loading. They work amazingly well. It is obvious a week+ after lockdown and obvious when done.
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/co ... RA~NLD~BEL
https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/curr ... ?tab=chart
Late edit: Omicron is just getting started, look at the rate of increase.
It is FAR too late and Omicron much too transmissible to be affected by a restriction-weary population. Late-January is the estimate for a peak in cases in the US, and Europe is already farther along than the US. Mask up and get vaxxed if you already haven’t. That’s all you can do at this point.
acavpics wrote:I'm surprised that nobody has pointed this out on here, but S. Africa's omicron wave seems to have declined almost as quickly as it grew. With that data, is it fair to expect the US, Europe etc to follow a similar trend?
Perhaps, we will see a peak sometime within the next 2 weeks instead of months?
acavpics wrote:I'm surprised that nobody has pointed this out on here, but S. Africa's omicron wave seems to have declined almost as quickly as it grew. With that data, is it fair to expect the US, Europe etc to follow a similar trend?
Perhaps, we will see a peak sometime within the next 2 weeks instead of months?
casinterest wrote:acavpics wrote:I'm surprised that nobody has pointed this out on here, but S. Africa's omicron wave seems to have declined almost as quickly as it grew. With that data, is it fair to expect the US, Europe etc to follow a similar trend?
Perhaps, we will see a peak sometime within the next 2 weeks instead of months?
It is difficult to forecast. From what I know, this one travels quick and fast.
I think we will have at least 6 weeks, just because of the propagation to rural areas, but the cities may go quickly. Especially the ones that sent kids back to school this week.
lightsaber wrote:The lockdowns worked spectacularly well in Austria, Netherlands, Belgium, and Germany. However, the non-locked down countries are spiking very high.
lightsaber wrote:Massachusetts ERs slammed:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/er-pr ... NewsSearch
“We are overwhelmed,” the statement said. “Our Emergency Departments are at critical capacity and things will get worse.”
It is a milder variant with only 20% to 40% of the hospitalizations, but the complete Wild West antics is going to create one hell of a surge. We'll start the year with a holiday surge and have one hell of a work and school surge.
Lightsaber
77Phoebe wrote:I would like to see some member of a health service, somewhere, come up with the number of deaths that lockdown causes, two years on I simply don't believe they do any good at all.
Sorry, I'm wrong, they do do good, they benefit politicians, sparing them bad headlines. Covid deaths are measurable the deaths caused by lockdowns re: suicides, child abuse, drug and alcohol deaths, missed heart disease and cancer diagnosis, ongoing child development issues not so much.
I believe none of these measures (bar the vaccines - and they aren't that good.) have done any good whatsoever, apart from moving deaths from the ancient, unhealthy and chronically sick to the younger members of society.
77Phoebe wrote:I would like to see some member of a health service, somewhere, come up with the number of deaths that lockdown causes, two years on I simply don't believe they do any good at all.
Sorry, I'm wrong, they do do good, they benefit politicians, sparing them bad headlines. Covid deaths are measurable the deaths caused by lockdowns re: suicides, child abuse, drug and alcohol deaths, missed heart disease and cancer diagnosis, ongoing child development issues not so much.
I believe none of these measures (bar the vaccines - and they aren't that good.) have done any good whatsoever, apart from moving deaths from the ancient, unhealthy and chronically sick to the younger members of society.
TriJets wrote:lightsaber wrote:Massachusetts ERs slammed:
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/er-pr ... NewsSearch
“We are overwhelmed,” the statement said. “Our Emergency Departments are at critical capacity and things will get worse.”
It is a milder variant with only 20% to 40% of the hospitalizations, but the complete Wild West antics is going to create one hell of a surge. We'll start the year with a holiday surge and have one hell of a work and school surge.
Lightsaber
Living this reality now, although not in Massachusetts. The ER is a scary place to be right now.
casinterest wrote:I think we will have at least 6 weeks, just because of the propagation to rural areas, but the cities may go quickly. Especially the ones that sent kids back to school this week.
acavpics wrote:casinterest wrote:I think we will have at least 6 weeks, just because of the propagation to rural areas, but the cities may go quickly. Especially the ones that sent kids back to school this week.
So is it safe to say that states such as Massachusetts and NY, which encountered the surge early on (November-ish) can expect to peak by mid-Jan?
I'm sure Texas, Florida, and other southern and central states still have a long way to go and may peak as late as next month.
lightsaber wrote:South Africa locked down to mitigate the peak. We are taking all the risk.
South Africa's National Coronavirus Command Council (NCCC) has retained its lockdown at 'adjusted level 1', or the lowest of a five-tier system of restrictions, in the battle on the Omicron variant, health authorities said on Thursday.
flyguy89 wrote:lightsaber wrote:South Africa locked down to mitigate the peak. We are taking all the risk.
Where are you getting your info exactly?
From Dec. 16:South Africa's National Coronavirus Command Council (NCCC) has retained its lockdown at 'adjusted level 1', or the lowest of a five-tier system of restrictions, in the battle on the Omicron variant, health authorities said on Thursday.
https://www.reuters.com/world/africa/so ... 021-12-16/
South Africa has been at this level since Oct. 1. Level 1 is simply a curfew. No adjustments were made when Omicron arrived.