Get the Vax

71,793 Views | 709 Replies | Last: 2 mo ago by The Hefty Lefty
ramblin_ag02
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AG
Same experience here with nurses. All of whom are licensed, experienced professionals as well
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ramblin_ag02
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AGC said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

AGC said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

diehard03 said:

Quote:

It's cool man. Thanks for the correction. It's not like I have been doing this for over a decade before covid hit or anything.

Im with you overall, but i think bears mentioning that the powers that be have put on a masterclass on how not to communicate in this situation. When you present yourself as an expert and use condescension as a tool, you lose the ability backtrack when the science leads you in another direction.


We are experts. Even when we end up being wrong, our wrong is based on tons of similar experience combined with all the most current information. When the most current information changes, then we update our opinions making them less wrong. That's how this works. We only know when we're wrong when new information proves it.

Compare that to a layperson. They can pretty much say anything with no evidence or experience and end up being right eventually. Even broken clocks are right twice a day. But it's not like we're going to take Joe Blow's unfounded opinion seriously even if he eventually ends up being correct.

I'm not always right, and no doctor or part of our medical system is. But my wrong opinion is better informed and judged than any layperson's accidentally correct opinion


Wow. That's a whole new level of arrogance. Does this mean lay people with different opinions don't have friends that are doctors that they rely on? Are their doctor friends not as smart as you and yours? Is statistical analysis, data collection, and experimentation something exclusive to the medical field that no one else can grasp and analyze? Is a lay person not smart enough to read literature and historical studies to derive an informed opinion? Are you ok with doctors of a different opinion talking this condescendingly to your lay friends?

Edit: if your wrong opinion hurts a lot of people with policy implications does any of that matter? This torbush level wow.


Correct. I have absolutely zero stock in the opinion of any layperson, no matter how educated or researched. I regularly make decisions and direct teams were the outcome is life and death. If you don't, then I don't care what you think.

The closest equivalent is an military officer in the middle of a conflict. Not a single one is going to start letting a civilian plan their operations, strategy and tactics, no matter how much independent research they've done. Any soldier would trust that officer over any civilian at every single point, and rightly so.


I'll pray that the Lord grants us both the humility we greatly need.


Stupid arrogant pilot won't listen to me when he's flying through turbulence. That jerk. Doesn't he know I've done my own research? How dare he think he's better than me?
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BlackGoldAg2011
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Sapper Redux said:

That's not what's being said. And I assume Zobel, like most of us, has life outside of TexAgs at times. The point being made is that equating what a layperson understands about a pathological or pharmacological process with what an experienced and trained MD/DO understands is, frankly, stupid. It doesn't mean Docs aren't often wrong. It doesn't mean you shouldn't check that their advice is within best practices. But it does mean you or I can't pretend we can go toe-to-toe with a licensed medical professional because we read an article or listened to our buddy's friend.
Then there is the also the part where what is being said most specifically applies as a generality. Sure, there are likely a few non medical individuals with incredible intelligence and a large knowledge base of background research who actually have more informed and accurate opinions on certain medical things than a lot of doctors. Just like there are a few actual doctors with incredible horrible takes on medical issues. (ie Peter McCollough and his "Here, in the United States, we have 100 million people vaccinated (with the COVID-19 bioweapon shots so far). This is far and away the most lethal, toxic, biologic agent ever injected into a human body in American history.")

But these outliers don't negate the facts that under most circumstances, the Dr. (in the appropriate field) will have a better, more informed opinion on medical matters than the non medically trained person. That doesn't mean the dr is always right and that the uneducated guess is always wrong, but in the absence of predicting the future, you will almost always be better off trusting the Dr. over the lay person and their "research". (especially since i have seen what most people call research and calling it hot garbage would be an insult to my trash can)
nortex97
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Oh let's not get into engineer v. Engineer battles!

The comedy of a doctor (with a tag!) on the TA R/P forum denigrating non-doctor opinions as unworthy of respect, is great, relative to Fauci-Flu in 2022. Thx very much all, this has been entertaining.
Howdy Dammit
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ramblin_ag02 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

AGC said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

diehard03 said:

Quote:

It's cool man. Thanks for the correction. It's not like I have been doing this for over a decade before covid hit or anything.

Im with you overall, but i think bears mentioning that the powers that be have put on a masterclass on how not to communicate in this situation. When you present yourself as an expert and use condescension as a tool, you lose the ability backtrack when the science leads you in another direction.


We are experts. Even when we end up being wrong, our wrong is based on tons of similar experience combined with all the most current information. When the most current information changes, then we update our opinions making them less wrong. That's how this works. We only know when we're wrong when new information proves it.

Compare that to a layperson. They can pretty much say anything with no evidence or experience and end up being right eventually. Even broken clocks are right twice a day. But it's not like we're going to take Joe Blow's unfounded opinion seriously even if he eventually ends up being correct.

I'm not always right, and no doctor or part of our medical system is. But my wrong opinion is better informed and judged than any layperson's accidentally correct opinion


Wow. That's a whole new level of arrogance. Does this mean lay people with different opinions don't have friends that are doctors that they rely on? Are their doctor friends not as smart as you and yours? Is statistical analysis, data collection, and experimentation something exclusive to the medical field that no one else can grasp and analyze? Is a lay person not smart enough to read literature and historical studies to derive an informed opinion? Are you ok with doctors of a different opinion talking this condescendingly to your lay friends?

Edit: if your wrong opinion hurts a lot of people with policy implications does any of that matter? This torbush level wow.


Correct. I have absolutely zero stock in the opinion of any layperson, no matter how educated or researched. I regularly make decisions and direct teams were the outcome is life and death. If you don't, then I don't care what you think.

The closest equivalent is an military officer in the middle of a conflict. Not a single one is going to start letting a civilian plan their operations, strategy and tactics, no matter how much independent research they've done. Any soldier would trust that officer over any civilian at every single point, and rightly so.

As an engineer, I need to start referring to the non engineer peasants in my life as laypersons or civilians. I know far more about everything there is to know about structures regardless of anyone else's education and experience.

Did I do it right?


Dear goodness I hope you're not deferring to laypeople or searching the internet when engineering structures.

Obviously my post was in jest. But the larger point remains that

1) I have taken many recommendations from people without P.E. behind their name
2) I do not believe that my degree gives me superior speaking power on engineering topics. I skipped tons of class and self taught myself via the internet for more classes than I'd care to admit. Who's to say others can't do that if interested.
3) there are tons of disciplines within engineering, and I am not qualified to speak on what some chemical engineer is working on. Feel like it is the same within the medical field. Just because you are in the overall field doesn't make you qualified to speak on all aspects of the field.
BlackGoldAg2011
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Howdy Dammit said:

BlackGoldAg2011 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

As an engineer, I need to start referring to the non engineer peasants in my life as laypersons or civilians. I know far more about everything there is to know about structures regardless of anyone else's education and experience.

Did I do it right?
if you weren't already believing this, I don't believe you are actually an engineer.




*I say as a Licensed PE



As a licensed PE, I have dealt with numerous contractors that have made me feel dumb. Not afraid to admit that. Calculations and experience are two very different things. Each year I bring the two closer together. Cheers
Sure, there is value to be gained from listening to experience, but here we aren't talking about the non licensed but experience medical professional. this would be more akin to you posting your designs on the internet, and a couple of random people chiming in on how they read a few structural articles and your design is terribly wrong. Sure maybe it makes you double check your work, but if you check it (and maybe even get it reviewed by a peer) and it still seems right, you should ignore the internet for being either crazy or stupid (or maybe both)

because yes, I too have been taught a great deal by the experience of guys who have been doing it in the field for a long time, but I have also had to have a number of heated arguments trying to convince the guys that what they are saying entirely violate the laws of physics and fluid dynamics. principles that no number of years building facilities in the field would teach you.


as a half joke, believing you are the smartest in the room doesn't mean believing you can't learn from anyone in the room.
Sapper Redux
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Howdy Dammit said:

BlackGoldAg2011 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

AGC said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

diehard03 said:

Quote:

It's cool man. Thanks for the correction. It's not like I have been doing this for over a decade before covid hit or anything.

Im with you overall, but i think bears mentioning that the powers that be have put on a masterclass on how not to communicate in this situation. When you present yourself as an expert and use condescension as a tool, you lose the ability backtrack when the science leads you in another direction.


We are experts. Even when we end up being wrong, our wrong is based on tons of similar experience combined with all the most current information. When the most current information changes, then we update our opinions making them less wrong. That's how this works. We only know when we're wrong when new information proves it.

Compare that to a layperson. They can pretty much say anything with no evidence or experience and end up being right eventually. Even broken clocks are right twice a day. But it's not like we're going to take Joe Blow's unfounded opinion seriously even if he eventually ends up being correct.

I'm not always right, and no doctor or part of our medical system is. But my wrong opinion is better informed and judged than any layperson's accidentally correct opinion


Wow. That's a whole new level of arrogance. Does this mean lay people with different opinions don't have friends that are doctors that they rely on? Are their doctor friends not as smart as you and yours? Is statistical analysis, data collection, and experimentation something exclusive to the medical field that no one else can grasp and analyze? Is a lay person not smart enough to read literature and historical studies to derive an informed opinion? Are you ok with doctors of a different opinion talking this condescendingly to your lay friends?

Edit: if your wrong opinion hurts a lot of people with policy implications does any of that matter? This torbush level wow.


Correct. I have absolutely zero stock in the opinion of any layperson, no matter how educated or researched. I regularly make decisions and direct teams were the outcome is life and death. If you don't, then I don't care what you think.

The closest equivalent is an military officer in the middle of a conflict. Not a single one is going to start letting a civilian plan their operations, strategy and tactics, no matter how much independent research they've done. Any soldier would trust that officer over any civilian at every single point, and rightly so.

As an engineer, I need to start referring to the non engineer peasants in my life as laypersons or civilians. I know far more about everything there is to know about structures regardless of anyone else's education and experience.

Did I do it right?
if you weren't already believing this, I don't believe you are actually an engineer.




*I say as a Licensed PE



As a licensed PE, I have dealt with numerous contractors that have made me feel dumb. Not afraid to admit that. Calculations and experience are two very different things. Each year I bring the two closer together. Cheers


As a Sapper I recommend lots and lots of C4 for every project.
BlackGoldAg2011
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Howdy Dammit
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BlackGoldAg2011 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

BlackGoldAg2011 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

As an engineer, I need to start referring to the non engineer peasants in my life as laypersons or civilians. I know far more about everything there is to know about structures regardless of anyone else's education and experience.

Did I do it right?
if you weren't already believing this, I don't believe you are actually an engineer.




*I say as a Licensed PE



As a licensed PE, I have dealt with numerous contractors that have made me feel dumb. Not afraid to admit that. Calculations and experience are two very different things. Each year I bring the two closer together. Cheers


as a half joke, believing you are the smartest in the room doesn't mean believing you can't learn from anyone in the room.


I'd have to be in a pretty small room to believe I was the smartest. Haha.
kurt vonnegut
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Howdy Dammit said:

BlackGoldAg2011 said:

Howdy Dammit said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

AGC said:

ramblin_ag02 said:

diehard03 said:

Quote:

It's cool man. Thanks for the correction. It's not like I have been doing this for over a decade before covid hit or anything.

Im with you overall, but i think bears mentioning that the powers that be have put on a masterclass on how not to communicate in this situation. When you present yourself as an expert and use condescension as a tool, you lose the ability backtrack when the science leads you in another direction.


We are experts. Even when we end up being wrong, our wrong is based on tons of similar experience combined with all the most current information. When the most current information changes, then we update our opinions making them less wrong. That's how this works. We only know when we're wrong when new information proves it.

Compare that to a layperson. They can pretty much say anything with no evidence or experience and end up being right eventually. Even broken clocks are right twice a day. But it's not like we're going to take Joe Blow's unfounded opinion seriously even if he eventually ends up being correct.

I'm not always right, and no doctor or part of our medical system is. But my wrong opinion is better informed and judged than any layperson's accidentally correct opinion


Wow. That's a whole new level of arrogance. Does this mean lay people with different opinions don't have friends that are doctors that they rely on? Are their doctor friends not as smart as you and yours? Is statistical analysis, data collection, and experimentation something exclusive to the medical field that no one else can grasp and analyze? Is a lay person not smart enough to read literature and historical studies to derive an informed opinion? Are you ok with doctors of a different opinion talking this condescendingly to your lay friends?

Edit: if your wrong opinion hurts a lot of people with policy implications does any of that matter? This torbush level wow.


Correct. I have absolutely zero stock in the opinion of any layperson, no matter how educated or researched. I regularly make decisions and direct teams were the outcome is life and death. If you don't, then I don't care what you think.

The closest equivalent is an military officer in the middle of a conflict. Not a single one is going to start letting a civilian plan their operations, strategy and tactics, no matter how much independent research they've done. Any soldier would trust that officer over any civilian at every single point, and rightly so.

As an engineer, I need to start referring to the non engineer peasants in my life as laypersons or civilians. I know far more about everything there is to know about structures regardless of anyone else's education and experience.

Did I do it right?
if you weren't already believing this, I don't believe you are actually an engineer.




*I say as a Licensed PE



As a licensed PE, I have dealt with numerous contractors that have made me feel dumb. Not afraid to admit that. Calculations and experience are two very different things. Each year I bring the two closer together. Cheers

As a licensed PE myself, I would like to say . . . . that I'm sorta surprised we have 3 PEs on this board.
Zobel
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*4
Zobel
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Re: engineering vs doctor discussion.

Engineering evidence is so freaking different than medical evidence. You can get a much higher degree of certainty in engineering than medicine. I think most of the angst people have about the pandemic is because people have an inappropriately high faith in medicine - they expect it to be like engineering. So when the collective world of medicine reaches the limits of it's ability, rather than saying "man we're doing the best we can" they assume that someone is holding out on them.

Quick and poor / low quality evidence yielding to new research or higher quality evidence becomes flip flopping.

Unjustified certainty that we should have found a cure already rapidly becomes we found a cure and they're hiding it.

Unjustified certainty that we should be able to manufacture unlimited supplies of monoclonal antibodies becomes a political scandal that supplies are being withheld.
Aggrad08
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kurt vonnegut said:

Howdy Dammit said:


As a licensed PE, I have dealt with numerous contractors that have made me feel dumb. Not afraid to admit that. Calculations and experience are two very different things. Each year I bring the two closer together. Cheers

As a licensed PE myself, I would like to say . . . . that I'm sorta surprised we have 3 PEs on this board.
Make it 4 5, also surprised

Sapper Redux
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That's 5 of you. I'm going to start posting my kid's math homework here.
ramblin_ag02
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Facts I now know about PE's
1) they are very smart and well-researched
2) they like to argue on the internet
3) they study religion/philosophy
4) they have a lot of free time at work
5) they don't get special tags
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Aggrad08
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We also have a ridiculous advantage in testing. We get to simply go break whatever we can afford to break and see why and when that happens.

You don't get to mad scientist experiment on people. We also have a huge headstart. Euler was developing theories we use today when the medicine at the time suggested bloodletting would be a good idea.
Zobel
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It's fine, we can just say it. Engineers are doing real, valuable work because our work has highly predictable outcomes. Doctors are just glorified guesswork mechanics hiding behind statistics they don't understand.
Aggrad08
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now you've gone and made them sad
ramblin_ag02
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Zobel said:

It's fine, we can just say it. Engineers are doing real, valuable work because our work has highly predictable outcomes. Doctors are just glorified guesswork mechanics hiding behind statistics they don't understand.


No argument except that statistics in medicine are more hated than misunderstood
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Zobel
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My ol lady is a doctor and it sounds horribly depressing. He also takes a kind of grim satisfaction in continually disabusing any trust I have in medicine ... misery loves company I guess.

Last night he told me that there's no statistical evidence that antibiotics for strep throat actually reduce time to clear symptoms, but there is for steroids. So, whatever, medicine sucks.
nortex97
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Aggrad08 said:

We also have a ridiculous advantage in testing. We get to simply go break whatever we can afford to break and see why and when that happens.

You don't get to mad scientist experiment on people. We also have a huge headstart. Euler was developing theories we use today when the medicine at the time suggested bloodletting would be a good idea.
True, but arguably medicine is catching up, thanks to gain of function testing/mengele's of the world. Covid-19 is a prime example.
kurt vonnegut
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Aggrad08 said:


Make it 4 5, also surprised
Isn't 747Ag an engineer too?
Howdy Dammit
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Zobel said:

It's fine, we can just say it. Engineers are doing real, valuable work because our work has highly predictable outcomes. Doctors are just glorified guesswork mechanics hiding behind statistics they don't understand.

Kinda like weathermen. The amount of highly educated science and math that goes into something so unpredictable would kill me.
chimpanzee
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I've lost track of the discussion, but here's some data on the effect I was describing other re: spiking infections after the first dose, which would not have been covered y published 2 dose + 14 day efficacy calculations. I've seen reference to the same effect in Israel and Britain, but don't have data, just talking heads interpreting it.

A confounder could be the timing of big vax rollouts and regional surges, but this is highly concentrated at the front end.

COVID-19 Alberta statistics | alberta.ca

Sapper Redux
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nortex97 said:

Aggrad08 said:

We also have a ridiculous advantage in testing. We get to simply go break whatever we can afford to break and see why and when that happens.

You don't get to mad scientist experiment on people. We also have a huge headstart. Euler was developing theories we use today when the medicine at the time suggested bloodletting would be a good idea.
True, but arguably medicine is catching up, thanks to gain of function testing/mengele's of the world. Covid-19 is a prime example.


Good freaking grief.

Oh, and Mengele, beyond his absolute evil, was an absolutely TERRIBLE researcher. Exactly none of his "work" has any value.
ramblin_ag02
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Being a doctor is like being a test pilot. Not only do you need robust practical skills, but also a comprehensive education and need for constant updating of that education.

Except for us, our planes are all unique in unpredictable ways, there is no manual, we can't take apart the plane, they are usually poorly maintained, they often don't follow instruction and they frequently lie
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Sapper Redux
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ramblin_ag02 said:

Being a doctor is like being a test pilot. Not only do you need robust practical skills, but also a comprehensive education and need for constant updating of that education.

Except for us, our planes are all unique in unpredictable ways, there is no manual, we can't take apart the plane, they are usually poorly maintained, they often don't follow instruction and they frequently lie


I'm just a volunteer EMT and the lies I get told are downright hilarious. I can only imagine what you have to deal with.
nortex97
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Sapper Redux said:

nortex97 said:

Aggrad08 said:

We also have a ridiculous advantage in testing. We get to simply go break whatever we can afford to break and see why and when that happens.

You don't get to mad scientist experiment on people. We also have a huge headstart. Euler was developing theories we use today when the medicine at the time suggested bloodletting would be a good idea.
True, but arguably medicine is catching up, thanks to gain of function testing/mengele's of the world. Covid-19 is a prime example.


Good freaking grief.

Oh, and Mengele, beyond his absolute evil, was an absolutely TERRIBLE researcher. Exactly none of his "work" has any value.
The work he did absolutely broke things/people, unfortunately, as have the latter day mengele's. It's interesting to note in the context of this thread that while of course no thinking person would defend Mengele (who was an evil, stupid person, who would nonetheless qualify for a 'doctor' tag today on TA; interestingly enough he studied philosophy in school), about a third of all Nobel's in science and medicine through 1939 were Germans.

Quote:

...most Nazi medical research was intensely professional; proportionately, more German physicians (48 percent) joined the Nazi party than any other occupation. And Germany was a science powerhouse; through 1939, Germans accounted for more than a third of all Nobel prizes in medicine, chemistry, and physics.

So yes, there's plenty of Nazi-era research that doctors have used and built on ever since. But the data gathered in the concentration camps tended towards the gruesome, unscientific, and fairly useless. Two cases where these experiments did have some clear public-health application, though, involved phosgene gas and hypothermia.

The latter was part of German efforts to save Luftwaffe pilots downed in the North Sea: working at Dachau, SS doctor Sigmund Rascher had prisoners strapped down naked in freezing weather or submerged in ice water for hours at a time; blood, urine, and mucus samples were taken regularly while their body temperature dropped. On one hand, Rascher obtained data that no responsible researcher ever could, and he developed the life-saving hypothermia treatment technique called rapid active rewarming. On the other hand, he killed as many as 90 people to do it.
I'd respectfully encourage folks who get so emotional at the mere suggestion I provided above to expand their news sources. I don't think the comparisons as between Fauci and Nazi's in the medical research field (human and animals) are entirely off base. Certainly, the popular propaganda both received/procured, and their hatred of any criticism/massive ego's are analogous.
diehard03
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Quote:

We are experts. Even when we end up being wrong, our wrong is based on tons of similar experience combined with all the most current information. When the most current information changes, then we update our opinions making them less wrong. That's how this works. We only know when we're wrong when new information proves it.

Compare that to a layperson. They can pretty much say anything with no evidence or experience and end up being right eventually. Even broken clocks are right twice a day. But it's not like we're going to take Joe Blow's unfounded opinion seriously even if he eventually ends up being correct.

I'm not always right, and no doctor or part of our medical system is. But my wrong opinion is better informed and judged than any layperson's accidentally correct opinion

From a communication/change management standpoint, you're part of the problem then.

I fully side with you about not wanting to hear from people who aren't in the arena with you. That's logical to anyone. But the challenge is to present the information in a way that gets people to act safely.

It's pretty silly use "your opinion doesn't matter to me because you don't do my job" when trying to convince people to side with you.

it's not a medical thing. it's a person to person thing.
Zobel
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...isn't this just a sampling artifact? You'd need to combine that with a base rate to see what the total cases is in the population leading up to vaccination. In other words if you converted it to a rate, you'd expect a flat rate up to the point of vaccination, then the rate would decrease sharply after ~14 days from vaccination.

By starting with the vaccinated group you've eliminated the previous plateau. It's not a spike in infections, it's the end of a cliff.

Sapper Redux
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Your definition of "news source" troubles me.
nortex97
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Sapper Redux said:

Your definition of "news source" troubles me.
I'm fine with that. Actually, it makes me smile.
Sapper Redux
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nortex97 said:

Sapper Redux said:

Your definition of "news source" troubles me.
I'm fine with that. Actually, it makes me smile.


I'm sure it does. The facts are not your primary concern.
chimpanzee
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Zobel said:

...isn't this just a sampling artifact? You'd need to combine that with a base rate to see what the total cases is in the population leading up to vaccination. In other words if you converted it to a rate, you'd expect a flat rate up to the point of vaccination, then the rate would decrease sharply after ~14 days from vaccination.

By starting with the vaccinated group you've eliminated the previous plateau. It's not a spike in infections, it's the end of a cliff.



It is not the end of a cliff. You can change the scale on the Alberta website (neat graphical tool). When you do, you see it ramp up from next to nothing at day 1 post vax to a maximum at day 10-11,

ramblin_ag02
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Maybe so. But the CDC at least has been very upfront that they are giving us the best recommendations and guidelines they can based on what we know right now. Everyone is medicine expected these to change frequently as new information became available. We all expected certain things to look like good ideas in one moment and then look like bad ideas later on. That's just how medicine works.

For some reason (*cough*politics*cough), a lot of non-medical people (and a handful of medical people) became emotionally attached to some treatments that looked promising for a minute before they didn't anymore. When the rest of us moved on like a good medical system, they got mad and don't trust us anymore. As far as I'm concerned it's not a problem with the medical field or it's messaging. It's all culture wars and politics spilling over into healthcare thanks to the pandemic
No material on this site is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. See full Medical Disclaimer.
 
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