Vaccination rate

3,571 Views | 23 Replies | Last: 3 yr ago by Irwin M. Fletcher
GBMont3
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Is there any sign (or a dataset you can point me too) that the pace of vaccinations is accelerating now that's it's increasingly obvious we should have it if we can?

Just curious if delta prevalence, staffing-driven hospital capacity issues, reintroduction of restrictions are starting to have any effect.

Seems like vaccinations + natural immunity is the only real way out of this.
txaggie79
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https://apps.texastribune.org/features/2020/texas-coronavirus-cases-map/

Vaccination rates in Texas are trending up.
KidDoc
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I predict outrage in the coming weeks of people "getting COVID from the shot".

Too little too late for the hot spots.


But I still am happy the rates are increasing! It just takes a solid 6 weeks to get good protection.
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Ag Natural
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HEB is giving out $100 in gift cards for getting both doses.
barbacoa taco
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They appear to be trending up across the board. Some positive news in a sea of negative news.

Teslag
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Ag Natural said:

HEB is giving out $100 in gift cards for getting both doses.

I might as well get another vax since it's not tracked.
GBMont3
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Thanks for the link. Glad it's picking up but wish it would go faster. Is there vaccination data by county? I'd rather a see a goal of 70%+ vaccination/herd immunity for urban areas than for the whole state - it seems less necessary in rural areas and would be nice to have a county by county approach
fightingfarmer09
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Salute The Marines said:

Ag Natural said:

HEB is giving out $100 in gift cards for getting both doses.

I might as well get another vax since it's not tracked.


Hold out for $500.
ToddyHill
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This certainly isn't scientific...but last Sunday my wife and I got our first Covid shot at a CVS in Knoxville. When I asked, the Pharmacist said the number of people coming in to get immunized was definitely on the uptick. In fact, we live outside of Knoxville and had to go there as the two local CVS Pharmacies in our area were out of Covid shots.
Seersucker Ag 2011
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ToddyHill said:

This certainly isn't scientific...but last Sunday my wife and I got our first Covid shot at a CVS in Knoxville. When I asked, the Pharmacist said the number of people coming in to get immunized was definitely on the uptick. In fact, we live outside of Knoxville and had to go there as the two local CVS Pharmacies in our area were out of Covid shots.
I wonder what percentage are people going in to get a third shot as a "booster."
BusterAg
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GBMont3 said:

Is there any sign (or a dataset you can point me too) that the pace of vaccinations is accelerating now that's it's increasingly obvious we should have it if we can?

Just curious if delta prevalence, staffing-driven hospital capacity issues, reintroduction of restrictions are starting to have any effect.

Seems like vaccinations + natural immunity is the only real way out of this.
What do the vaccines provide that natural immunity does not?

If I have strong T-cell response to COVID, why get a vaccine?
Zobel
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Some things we think we know about the two.

The vaccines appear to cause a more predictable antibody response.

Antibody response seems to be highly predictive of protection.

Vaccine antibodies are more focused on the receptor binding domain (at least for Moderna)

Vaccine antibodies also seem like they might work better on a broader range of receptor binding domain "single letter" mutations.

Recovered antibodies focus more broadly (N-terminal domain and S2 subunit). Maybe this is bad, maybe this is good, for example perhaps they aren't as good against one specific variant, but maybe broadly better in general, but maybe weaker against other specific variants

Summary... we are pretty sure they're different, they may differ in how they handle different variants, and so we don't really know. ((Reply hazy, try again))

CDub06
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Salute The Marines said:

Ag Natural said:

HEB is giving out $100 in gift cards for getting both doses.

I might as well get another vax since it's not tracked.
It specifically IS tracked...
CDub06
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This is the website I keep tabs on. You can break it down by county.

https://tabexternal.dshs.texas.gov/t/THD/views/COVID-19VaccineinTexasDashboard/VaccineDosesAdministered?%3Aorigin=card_share_link&%3Aembed=y&%3AisGuestRedirectFromVizportal=y
BusterAg
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Zobel said:

Some things we think we know about the two.

The vaccines appear to cause a more predictable antibody response.

Antibody response seems to be highly predictive of protection.

Vaccine antibodies are more focused on the receptor binding domain (at least for Moderna)

Vaccine antibodies also seem like they might work better on a broader range of receptor binding domain "single letter" mutations.

Recovered antibodies focus more broadly (N-terminal domain and S2 subunit). Maybe this is bad, maybe this is good, for example perhaps they aren't as good against one specific variant, but maybe broadly better in general, but maybe weaker against other specific variants

Summary... we are pretty sure they're different, they may differ in how they handle different variants, and so we don't really know. ((Reply hazy, try again))


Is that going to be enough data to get you through FDA approval?

Zobel
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Different question altogether isn't it?
torrid
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GBMont3 said:

Is there any sign (or a dataset you can point me too) that the pace of vaccinations is accelerating now that's it's increasingly obvious we should have it if we can?

Just curious if delta prevalence, staffing-driven hospital capacity issues, reintroduction of restrictions are starting to have any effect.

Seems like vaccinations + natural immunity is the only real way out of this.
It's starting to look to me that the main advantage of the vaccines is prevention of hospitalization and death, not that they are going to magically end the pandemic. As a vaccinated person, it almost makes me wonder if getting exposed now and boosting my natural immunity would not be a bad thing.

I would be open to getting a booster, but preferably one tailored towards whatever variant is raging at the time.
Knucklesammich
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I think for 99% of us two outcomes are welcome:

1) wipe out the virus.don't think that is reasonable to expect nor was it ever possible

2) Reduce infection at scale to that of a head cold if you get it all.

If a vaccine gets us to option 2 then majority of folks will
Take that approach. Everyone else will get there via natural immunity (to certain variants or maybe all variants who knows)

Along the way to the non vaxxed population getting to natural immunity is via pain and suffering for a small percentage of but still very large number of people while facilitating a large and probably largely unnecessary burden on healthcare systems and workers.

At some point we will then quantify the burdens that long COVID does or does not put on our HC system.

Maybe we deliver truly proven and successful therapeutics over time? Who knows, It would be nice not to tout every pre print of something as a wonder drug but that horse appears out of the barn.

In my opinion everything else is theatermasks, ivermectin, hcq, kids and covid or whatever else we chose to argue over.
DadHammer
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Either through natural recovery from covid or shots. This will end.

Not sure why so many panic. The death rate is already very very low.
Zobel
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Agree on all points.
ORAggieFan
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Knucklesammich said:

I think for 99% of us two outcomes are welcome:

1) wipe out the virus.don't think that is reasonable to expect nor was it ever possible

2) Reduce infection at scale to that of a head cold if you get it all.

If a vaccine gets us to option 2 then majority of folks will
Take that approach. Everyone else will get there via natural immunity (to certain variants or maybe all variants who knows)

Along the way to the non vaxxed population getting to natural immunity is via pain and suffering for a small percentage of but still very large number of people while facilitating a large and probably largely unnecessary burden on healthcare systems and workers.

At some point we will then quantify the burdens that long COVID does or does not put on our HC system.

Maybe we deliver truly proven and successful therapeutics over time? Who knows, It would be nice not to tout every pre print of something as a wonder drug but that horse appears out of the barn.

In my opinion everything else is theatermasks, ivermectin, hcq, kids and covid or whatever else we chose to argue over.


The only possible option is #2. It's ridiculous we have not come to accept this as our strategy. It's even more ridiculous that countries still think #1 is possible.
Irwin M. Fletcher
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DadHammer said:

Either through natural recovery from covid or shots. This will end.

Not sure why so many panic. The death rate is already very very low.
I agree. Officially we have 38 million cases and 165 million fully vaccinated. So that is 203 million people with some level of immunity. Conservatively there are probably another 50 million that have had it and were never tested, and likely more. So we have 250 million with some level of immunity. This thing is about to peter out as we reach herd immunity.
amercer
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Irwin M. Fletcher said:

DadHammer said:

Either through natural recovery from covid or shots. This will end.

Not sure why so many panic. The death rate is already very very low.
I agree. Officially we have 38 million cases and 165 million fully vaccinated. So that is 203 million people with some level of immunity. Conservatively there are probably another 50 million that have had it and were never tested, and likely more. So we have 250 million with some level of immunity. This thing is about to peter out as we reach herd immunity.


Much like the guys who predicted peak oil every year for decades, this will eventually be right. (This board has been predicting imminent herd immunity since July 2020.)

The case numbers in Texas and Florida indicate that we aren't close though. I think we may have wildly overestimated the number of undetected cases, or it may be that asymptomatic/mild cases don't provide much immunity.
Gordo14
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ORAggieFan said:

Knucklesammich said:

I think for 99% of us two outcomes are welcome:

1) wipe out the virus.don't think that is reasonable to expect nor was it ever possible

2) Reduce infection at scale to that of a head cold if you get it all.

If a vaccine gets us to option 2 then majority of folks will
Take that approach. Everyone else will get there via natural immunity (to certain variants or maybe all variants who knows)

Along the way to the non vaxxed population getting to natural immunity is via pain and suffering for a small percentage of but still very large number of people while facilitating a large and probably largely unnecessary burden on healthcare systems and workers.

At some point we will then quantify the burdens that long COVID does or does not put on our HC system.

Maybe we deliver truly proven and successful therapeutics over time? Who knows, It would be nice not to tout every pre print of something as a wonder drug but that horse appears out of the barn.

In my opinion everything else is theatermasks, ivermectin, hcq, kids and covid or whatever else we chose to argue over.


The only possible option is #2. It's ridiculous we have not come to accept this as our strategy. It's even more ridiculous that countries still think #1 is possible.


At least in Australia and New Zealand and Japan's case they've done a poor job of getting the vaccines out and into people's arms. I can justify their response in some ways at least until they get vaccines in arms on the desired scale. But they ultimately did a **** job acquiring these vaccines.

China on the otherhand makes no sense. They, allegedly have given out vaccines at similar rates as the US. Seems uselss to react the way they are in the long term.
Irwin M. Fletcher
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amercer said:

Irwin M. Fletcher said:

DadHammer said:

Either through natural recovery from covid or shots. This will end.

Not sure why so many panic. The death rate is already very very low.
I agree. Officially we have 38 million cases and 165 million fully vaccinated. So that is 203 million people with some level of immunity. Conservatively there are probably another 50 million that have had it and were never tested, and likely more. So we have 250 million with some level of immunity. This thing is about to peter out as we reach herd immunity.


Much like the guys who predicted peak oil every year for decades, this will eventually be right. (This board has been predicting imminent herd immunity since July 2020.)

The case numbers in Texas and Florida indicate that we aren't close though. I think we may have wildly overestimated the number of undetected cases, or it may be that asymptomatic/mild cases don't provide much immunity.
You might be correct in the asymptomatic cases not providing much immunity, but we are still at over 200 million either vaccinated or having had it officially. I know there is some cross over in those that had both, but still that is almost two thirds of the country. Another monty or two and if vaccinated numbers keep going up as they have been plus 100k a day or so getting it then it will get there.
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