KlinkerAg11 said:
The uncoupling of deaths and infections needs to trigger a change in Covid policy.
I'm not sure we are there yet, but I know we will be very close if not there after this summer wave.
KlinkerAg11 said:
The uncoupling of deaths and infections needs to trigger a change in Covid policy.
I'm not sure we are there yet, but I know we will be very close if not there after this summer wave.
coolerguy12 said:Quote:
The OP is proof that vaccines protect you from serious illness
But if I were to post a story about someone getting better after taking invermectim all I would hear is "aNEcDoTAl" and "CoRrELatION DoES nOt EquAL cAUsaTIOn"
Try to at least be consistent when you pretend to follow the science.
Cases are up, but deaths are not. To me, this tells me the variant is either less deadly than it was last year, or it's hitting a younger population who is better able to handle it. And if I had to guess, it would be a combination of the two.larry culpepper said:Of course life is full of risks. But we also do things to minimize risk like wearing seatbelts. I am in my early 30s and healthy. I think I had asymptomatic covid last year because I know I was exposed multiple times. I still got vaccinated so i would be less likely to spread it, and contribute to herd immunity. I think most people know the athletes have very little risk of serious illness.aTm2004 said:
No, the best way to get over this is for everyone to accept that life is full of risks and COVID is not going away. We need to learn to live with it and go about our lives like we were living in 2019. There is no need to continue to test athletes who are of little risk. Out of all of the athletes who tested positive last season, how many died or ended up in the hospital? Most of them probably would never have known they had it had it not been from the mandatory tests.Wellllllllllll... you may not like this but the unvaccinated do bear blame here. Had everyone gotten vaccinated when they became publicly available we wouldnt be where we are now. Now ICUs are filling up again and this is pretty much becoming a pandemic of the unvaccinated considering they are the only ones getting seriously sick and dying now.Quote:
You continuing to try to place blame on unvaccinated people is only further fueling the flames for the vaccinated vs. unvaccinated divide that is growing. Unvaccinated people are not your enemy nor are they willfully trying to harm/kill you or others. Just because people don't make the same decisions you do doesn't mean they're bad people. You're only blaming them because they're the easy target for the lazy.
I would have a live and let live attitude but all of their reasons for not getting vaccinated are pretty much anti-vax BS not rooted in reality. They say covid is no big deal but the vaccines are dangerous. Just totally backwards logic. And then we have people like Tucker Carlson who have gotten vaccinated but is persuading his audience of millions to distrust the scientists and not get vaccinated.... for ratings. How can we not be irritated by that?
I'm not worried covid will kill or even hurt me. The OP is proof that vaccines protect you from serious illness. But yes I am bothered by the fact that the delta variant has become a huge problem. And the high numbers in states with large unvaccinated populations like Florida and Arkansas prove what we've been saying all along.
larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Quote:
As of July 26, 2021, more than 163 million people in the United States had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.
During the same time, CDC received reports from 49 U.S. states and territories of 6,587 patients with COVID-19 vaccine breakthrough infection who were hospitalized or died.
*1,598 (26%) of 6,239 hospitalizations reported as asymptomatic or not related to COVID-19.
309 (24%) of 1,263 fatal cases reported as asymptomatic or not related to COVID-19.
larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
PJYoung said:coolerguy12 said:Quote:
The OP is proof that vaccines protect you from serious illness
But if I were to post a story about someone getting better after taking invermectim all I would hear is "aNEcDoTAl" and "CoRrELatION DoES nOt EquAL cAUsaTIOn"
Try to at least be consistent when you pretend to follow the science.
Because the studies are unclear on ivermectim. The doctors on here talked about it. There's not some giant vaccine conspiracy to eliminate therapies.
Science is frustratingly slow and when 99% of covid outcomes are fine you will have several therapies that appear to work but make no difference in strict double blinded studies.
TarponChaser said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
While the number of vaccinated getting breakthrough covid and dying is fairly low the number of those instances is not 0.
Per the CDC, as of today, there have been 1,263 people die of covid after being fully vaccinated. Now, to be fair that's somewhere south of 1% of the 163'ish million people vaccinated. However, death occurs in less than 1% the cases in the unvaccinated too.
planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
94chem said:planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
Yeah, but my company never had to close a plant because too many people got diabetes.
TarponChaser said:94chem said:planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
Yeah, but my company never had to close a plant because too many people got diabetes.
There was no reason to close it for covid either.
"somewhere south of 1%" is one way to put it.TarponChaser said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
While the number of vaccinated getting breakthrough covid and dying is fairly low the number of those instances is not 0.
Per the CDC, as of today, there have been 1,263 people die of covid after being fully vaccinated. Now, to be fair that's somewhere south of 1% of the 163'ish million people vaccinated. However, death occurs in less than 1% the cases in the unvaccinated too.
rafer69 said:
I can think of a couple that were pretty close.
Smallpox, polio, MMR.
The covid injection doesn't compare to those.
94chem said:planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
Yeah, but my company never had to close a plant because too many people got diabetes.
If by "plant" you're referring to one of the refineries around town...COVID shouldn't be the main concern.94chem said:planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
Yeah, but my company never had to close a plant because too many people got diabetes.
She was one of the unfortunate ones to get it after being vaccinated. Her case has been mild but may not have been if she had not been vaccinated. My gripe is now she is out of work for 10 days and they are very busy at work. FWIW, I've never heard anyone say I sure am glad I got Covid instead of the shot. I've heard plenty of people say they are glad they got the shot.rafer69 said:
Again this make zero sense.
If "those two" getting injected would have kept you daughter from contracting covid, why didn't the fact that she was injected prevent her from getting it?
Hope she has a mild case and recovers quickly btw.
farmrag said:She was one of the unfortunate ones to get it after being vaccinated. Her case has been mild but may not have been if she had not been vaccinated. My gripe is now she is out of work for 10 days and they are very busy at work. FWIW, I've never heard anyone say I sure am glad I got Covid instead of the shot. I've heard plenty of people say they are glad they got the shot.rafer69 said:
Again this make zero sense.
If "those two" getting injected would have kept you daughter from contracting covid, why didn't the fact that she was injected prevent her from getting it?
Hope she has a mild case and recovers quickly btw.
planoaggie123 said:94chem said:planoaggie123 said:larry culpepper said:
Deaths are down because vaccines work. The only ones who are still dying from covid are unvaccinated. that's my point.
I travelled internationally 2 weeks ago and went to bars. I'm living my life. I'm just annoyed seeing things regress back into 2020 levels because covid is getting out of hand again.
Just live your life. You are vaccinated. You are good to go.
Do you get annoyed at the number of Type 2 diabetes diagnosis each year? There are about 1.5M new cases each year. Does it weight on you daily? Do you beg people that are overweight or eating unhealthy to change their ways?
https://www.diabetes.org/resources/statistics/statistics-about-diabetes.
Average daily deaths with diabetes and 2021 covid are pretty consistent (342 per day vs 285 per day)
https://www.healthsystemtracker.org/brief/covid-19-continues-to-be-a-leading-cause-of-death-in-the-u-s-in-june-2021/
Yeah, but my company never had to close a plant because too many people got diabetes.
I would think any reasonable company / plant would handle a rush of COVID like they would the flu. Every year we have flu/cold that hits companies. People get sick. Sure, maybe a few extra via COVID but, since the vaccine has been out, I have yet to hear of "whole-plant" closures. How many people work in your plant and how many got COVID all at the same time to require shut-down? Was that pre-vaccine or post-vaccine?
We have a vaccine. It works. If you have co-workers who refuse to get the vaccine yet they are taking weeks off for being sick, that is between them and your employer and will work itself out quickly.
farmrag said:She was one of the unfortunate ones to get it after being vaccinated. Her case has been mild but may not have been if she had not been vaccinated. My gripe is now she is out of work for 10 days and they are very busy at work. FWIW, I've never heard anyone say I sure am glad I got Covid instead of the shot. I've heard plenty of people say they are glad they got the shot.rafer69 said:
Again this make zero sense.
If "those two" getting injected would have kept you daughter from contracting covid, why didn't the fact that she was injected prevent her from getting it?
Hope she has a mild case and recovers quickly btw.
coolerguy12 said:
I have seen it posted on TexAgs quite a few times. I'm still not sure if I have had Covid because the blood bank stopped testing for antibodies, but I would take getting Covid over having the vaccine 10 times out of 10.
I'm glad I got Covid instead of the shot.farmrag said:She was one of the unfortunate ones to get it after being vaccinated. Her case has been mild but may not have been if she had not been vaccinated. My gripe is now she is out of work for 10 days and they are very busy at work. FWIW, I've never heard anyone say I sure am glad I got Covid instead of the shot. I've heard plenty of people say they are glad they got the shot.rafer69 said:
Again this make zero sense.
If "those two" getting injected would have kept you daughter from contracting covid, why didn't the fact that she was injected prevent her from getting it?
Hope she has a mild case and recovers quickly btw.
You should probably call her boss and tell him you're angry at him now.farmrag said:She was one of the unfortunate ones to get it after being vaccinated. Her case has been mild but may not have been if she had not been vaccinated. My gripe is now she is out of work for 10 days and they are very busy at work. FWIW, I've never heard anyone say I sure am glad I got Covid instead of the shot. I've heard plenty of people say they are glad they got the shot.rafer69 said:
Again this make zero sense.
If "those two" getting injected would have kept you daughter from contracting covid, why didn't the fact that she was injected prevent her from getting it?
Hope she has a mild case and recovers quickly btw.
Zobel said:
If people treated polio, measles, and smallpox the way they're treating covid we would still be having outbreaks in the US.
It's not fundamentally unserious. The severity of the disease is not the comparison I was making. Regardless of disease severity, if people looked at those vaccines the way they look at the covid vaccine the impact would be different.TarponChaser said:Zobel said:
If people treated polio, measles, and smallpox the way they're treating covid we would still be having outbreaks in the US.
Comparing covid to those diseases marks you as fundamentally unserious. Polio had like a 15-30% case fatality rate depending on the strain and was a 50/50 shot of severe physical handicap afterward like FDR. Smallpox, depending on the strain was 30%-100% case fatality rate. Measles was much lower at a 5% CFR but that was almost all in children under 5 years of age and caused significant incidence of acute hearing loss and even brain damage due to persistent high fevers.
Covid has absolutely minuscule incidence of serious cases, death, and long-term effects in comparison.
If covid were remotely as deadly as the aforementioned diseases it changes the risk calculus significantly.
Quote:
Death rates for mandatory vaccinations for school include:
Measles- which you mentioned as 2 in 1000
Mumps- which you mentioned as 1 in 10000
Varicella Zoster (chickenpox)- 1-20 deaths per 100,000 cases depending on age
Rubella- almost no deaths. 1 in 5000 chance of encephalitis, most fully recover
Polio- 2-30% but basically 0% if you start talking about using iron lungs
H Flu- 3-6% under 6 years old, higher over 65 years old, almost no deaths between those ages
Pertussis- 1-4% only in those less than 5 years old. Very rare deaths otherwise
Tetanus- 30%
Diptheria- 5-10%
Pneumococcal pneumonia- 5-7%
So Covid's death rates fall right in line with measles, mumps, varicella zoster, rubells and pertussis, especially when you figure the fact that is more contagious than any of these except for measles and it has a vulnerable population in the elderly.
I think measles is the closest comparison. Extremely contagious, most people will have mild to moderate symptoms like a cold or flu, some people will have severe disease with long term problems, and some people will die. Yet the measles vaccine has been entirely uncontroversial for 50 years and no one yells about "freedom" when it comes to mandatory measles vaccines.