Coronavirus

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Packchem91
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Wayland said:

Daviewolf83 said:

statefan91 said:

Daviewolf83 said:

"The goal isn't to eliminate SARS-CoV-2 infections. We can't, no matter how many booster shots the United States gives. The goal is to slow the spread, save lives, and eventually turn COVID-19 into something much less deadly -- something more like the flu."

"Entirely eliminating infections is an unrealistic goal, but successful vaccines will avoid the worst outcomes."

Americans Are Losing Sight of the Pandemic Endgame
Apologies that I haven't read the article yet, but I think part of the problem is definitely that the CDC / etc haven't given any indication as to what the endgame actually is.
I agree. I am not sure they know what the endgame is and if they do, they may not want to communicate it, due to potential backlash from the "offended" group. I do not know why the CDC and the other health policy advisors will not tell people zero-Covid is an unrealistic goal.

On top of this, you have institutions like Duke University. They have vaccinated 98% of their student population and have tested 15,000 from this population. From this testing, there are NO cases severe enough to require hospitalization and yet Duke is putting further restrictions in place (outdoor dining, restrictions on group meetings, outdoor masking). Their reason - the current surge in cases "is placing a significant stress on people, systems, and facilities that are dedicated to protecting our health."

It seems many of the policies being enacted now across the country now are reactive reactive and completely ad hoc. It might or might not have worked for the last surge, we do not have data to show it had any meaningful impact, so let's do it again. There is no strategy, no consistency, and clearly no endgame.



I have been screaming for a year and a half about the ad-hoc reactionary nature of COVID policy and lack of cost benefit analysis.... amazing people are starting to finally wake up.

The 'significant stress' Duke is feeling is not COVID related but related to their own bizarre policies. Remove the restrictions and isolation and weekly testing of everyone (who are all vaccinated)... the stress is relieved.


Wayland,
so what is the importance of the Canada case numbers? Or rather, clearly its very low compared to anything in the US --- but what are they doing differently to make this important? I looked at the first few tweets in that thread and didn't really get that, and I honestly don't know what Canada is doing differently?
Daviewolf83
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Staff
Thanks for posting. I saw his Tweets while crawling through Twitter this morning and smiled when I saw Nate had also used "ad hoc" in his comments. One of the other people I follow regularly on Twitter (@sailorrooscout) was Tweeting similar comments about the Duke story. Did you read some of the comments to Nate's Tweets? They make me so sad and angry, all at the same time. Zero-Covid is strong with so many people. The goal posts are now that we can not have vaccinated students in public without masks due to the high number of unvaccinated people in North Carolina. How dare they risk the lives of people who, in most cases, made a choice to not be vaccinated.

Building on my ad hoc comment, I also found this Tweet this morning rather interesting. Hawaii has 88% of their adult population vaccinated with at lease one dose and 99% of their senior population, but their Lt. Governor is proposing a 72-hour stay-at-home order over the Labor Day weekend. I love it when politicians help me prove my point.

Wayland
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Packchem91 said:

Wayland said:

Daviewolf83 said:

statefan91 said:

Daviewolf83 said:

"The goal isn't to eliminate SARS-CoV-2 infections. We can't, no matter how many booster shots the United States gives. The goal is to slow the spread, save lives, and eventually turn COVID-19 into something much less deadly -- something more like the flu."

"Entirely eliminating infections is an unrealistic goal, but successful vaccines will avoid the worst outcomes."

Americans Are Losing Sight of the Pandemic Endgame
Apologies that I haven't read the article yet, but I think part of the problem is definitely that the CDC / etc haven't given any indication as to what the endgame actually is.
I agree. I am not sure they know what the endgame is and if they do, they may not want to communicate it, due to potential backlash from the "offended" group. I do not know why the CDC and the other health policy advisors will not tell people zero-Covid is an unrealistic goal.

On top of this, you have institutions like Duke University. They have vaccinated 98% of their student population and have tested 15,000 from this population. From this testing, there are NO cases severe enough to require hospitalization and yet Duke is putting further restrictions in place (outdoor dining, restrictions on group meetings, outdoor masking). Their reason - the current surge in cases "is placing a significant stress on people, systems, and facilities that are dedicated to protecting our health."

It seems many of the policies being enacted now across the country now are reactive reactive and completely ad hoc. It might or might not have worked for the last surge, we do not have data to show it had any meaningful impact, so let's do it again. There is no strategy, no consistency, and clearly no endgame.



I have been screaming for a year and a half about the ad-hoc reactionary nature of COVID policy and lack of cost benefit analysis.... amazing people are starting to finally wake up.

The 'significant stress' Duke is feeling is not COVID related but related to their own bizarre policies. Remove the restrictions and isolation and weekly testing of everyone (who are all vaccinated)... the stress is relieved.


Wayland,
so what is the importance of the Canada case numbers? Or rather, clearly its very low compared to anything in the US --- but what are they doing differently to make this important? I looked at the first few tweets in that thread and didn't really get that, and I honestly don't know what Canada is doing differently?
I missed the original Canada tweet. It was just the second tweet that caught me, since that is essentially what I have been saying this whole time.
Wayland
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Daviewolf83 said:

Thanks for posting. I saw his Tweets while crawling through Twitter this morning and smiled when I saw Nate had also used "ad hoc" in his comments. One of the other people I follow regularly on Twitter (@sailorrooscout) was Tweeting similar comments about the Duke story. Did you read some of the comments to Nate's Tweets? They make me so sad and angry, all at the same time. Zero-Covid is strong with so many people. The goal posts are now that we can not have vaccinated students in public without masks due to the high number of unvaccinated people in North Carolina. How dare they risk the lives of people who, in most cases, made a choice to not be vaccinated.

Building on my ad hoc comment, I also found this Tweet this morning rather interesting. Hawaii has 88% of their adult population vaccinated with at lease one dose and 99% of their senior population, but their Lt. Governor is proposing a 72-hour stay-at-home order over the Labor Day weekend. I love it when politicians help me prove my point.


It is crazy what has become of people. I scanned the comments a little... some people will never be okay again.

I did talk with a friend of mine last night who is a member of Duke's faculty and gave them crap about the policy. As they are not a big social media user, they were surprised that it had already blown up and was trending. Had been getting e-mails, but didn't realize it was made public yet.

But they are super frustrated with the administration and other covid zero faculty. Agreed that Duke has no actual goal or end game.
Packchem91
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Wayland said:

Packchem91 said:

Wayland said:

Daviewolf83 said:

statefan91 said:

Daviewolf83 said:

"The goal isn't to eliminate SARS-CoV-2 infections. We can't, no matter how many booster shots the United States gives. The goal is to slow the spread, save lives, and eventually turn COVID-19 into something much less deadly -- something more like the flu."

"Entirely eliminating infections is an unrealistic goal, but successful vaccines will avoid the worst outcomes."

Americans Are Losing Sight of the Pandemic Endgame
Apologies that I haven't read the article yet, but I think part of the problem is definitely that the CDC / etc haven't given any indication as to what the endgame actually is.
I agree. I am not sure they know what the endgame is and if they do, they may not want to communicate it, due to potential backlash from the "offended" group. I do not know why the CDC and the other health policy advisors will not tell people zero-Covid is an unrealistic goal.

On top of this, you have institutions like Duke University. They have vaccinated 98% of their student population and have tested 15,000 from this population. From this testing, there are NO cases severe enough to require hospitalization and yet Duke is putting further restrictions in place (outdoor dining, restrictions on group meetings, outdoor masking). Their reason - the current surge in cases "is placing a significant stress on people, systems, and facilities that are dedicated to protecting our health."

It seems many of the policies being enacted now across the country now are reactive reactive and completely ad hoc. It might or might not have worked for the last surge, we do not have data to show it had any meaningful impact, so let's do it again. There is no strategy, no consistency, and clearly no endgame.



I have been screaming for a year and a half about the ad-hoc reactionary nature of COVID policy and lack of cost benefit analysis.... amazing people are starting to finally wake up.

The 'significant stress' Duke is feeling is not COVID related but related to their own bizarre policies. Remove the restrictions and isolation and weekly testing of everyone (who are all vaccinated)... the stress is relieved.


Wayland,
so what is the importance of the Canada case numbers? Or rather, clearly its very low compared to anything in the US --- but what are they doing differently to make this important? I looked at the first few tweets in that thread and didn't really get that, and I honestly don't know what Canada is doing differently?
I missed the original Canada tweet. It was just the second tweet that caught me, since that is essentially what I have been saying this whole time.
OK....that 2nd tweet makes sense, I was thrown by the first one though and how it ties (assume he was trying to make point Canada's approach was more hands-off, but is that really the case??)
packgrad
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Everpack
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Daviewolf83 said:

statefan91 said:

Daviewolf83 said:

"The goal isn't to eliminate SARS-CoV-2 infections. We can't, no matter how many booster shots the United States gives. The goal is to slow the spread, save lives, and eventually turn COVID-19 into something much less deadly -- something more like the flu."

"Entirely eliminating infections is an unrealistic goal, but successful vaccines will avoid the worst outcomes."

Americans Are Losing Sight of the Pandemic Endgame
Apologies that I haven't read the article yet, but I think part of the problem is definitely that the CDC / etc haven't given any indication as to what the endgame actually is.
I agree. I am not sure they know what the endgame is and if they do, they may not want to communicate it, due to potential backlash from the "offended" group. I do not know why the CDC and the other health policy advisors will not tell people zero-Covid is an unrealistic goal.

On top of this, you have institutions like Duke University. They have vaccinated 98% of their student population and have tested 15,000 from this population. From this testing, there are NO cases severe enough to require hospitalization and yet Duke is putting further restrictions in place (outdoor dining, restrictions on group meetings, outdoor masking). Their reason - the current surge in cases "is placing a significant stress on people, systems, and facilities that are dedicated to protecting our health."

It seems many of the policies being enacted now across the country now are reactive reactive and completely ad hoc. It might or might not have worked for the last surge, we do not have data to show it had any meaningful impact, so let's do it again. There is no strategy, no consistency, and clearly no endgame.


Unfortunately, all of this was inevitable the moment 15 days to stop the spread moved to day 16. Even that was based on a hope and a prayer, completely outside the pandemic playbook that was set by the CDC. As unfortunate as it could have been, in hind sight, our best option through this entire debacle was without any restrictions, minus attempting to protect nursing homes and health care facilities. Now we've created a cult of people who will struggle to ever recover and live normal lives. A lot of those people have zero idea of their risk profile, now or then, vaxxed or unvaxxed.
sf59
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packgrad said:


not to get overtly political, but the phase 3 moderna trial (the one that produced the EUA and is now studying subjects for 2 year post dose follow up) could be severely compromised by this push from the white house

there is a real potential that the 1-2 year follow up data will be completely lost and the study cancelled because subjects will be mandated to heed the WH mandates as opposed to study guidelines and ultimately be forced out of follow up

the left hand does not know what the right hand is doing
“Before you criticize someone, you should walk a mile in their shoes. That way when you criticize them, you are a mile away from them and you have their shoes.”
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packgrad
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" A judge in Chicago barred Rebecca Firlit, the mother of an 11-year-old boy, from seeing her son under partial parental custody because she is not vaccinated against COVID-19."

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/30/chicago-judge-rules-mom-cant-see-son-not-vaccinated/5647445001/

The left is going full bat **** crazy with power. The case was reversed, but the logic behind the judge making this decision is truly mind blowing. Judge should be relieved of duty.
GuerrillaPack
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packgrad said:

" A judge in Chicago barred Rebecca Firlit, the mother of an 11-year-old boy, from seeing her son under partial parental custody because she is not vaccinated against COVID-19."

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/08/30/chicago-judge-rules-mom-cant-see-son-not-vaccinated/5647445001/

The left is going full bat **** crazy with power. The case was reversed, but the logic behind the judge making this decision is truly mind blowing. Judge should be relieved of duty.
Judicial tyranny. There is no law (from the state legislature) on this. In our system, judges are only supposed to interpret/enforce existing law, and only our legislatures can make law.

We are increasingly becoming a lawless and tyrannical society, with governments acting unconstitutionally and outside their constitutionally delegated powers.
"Ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you." - John 15:19
ncsualum05
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Man are there still that many people in the US out there that are so stupid they think zero covid is achievable? It's never going away.
82TxPackFan
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ncsualum05 said:

Man are there still that many people in the US out there that are so stupid they think zero covid is achievable? It's never going away.
Not surprising given the insanity of the progressive democrat agenda & the lack of anyone in the current administration. Examples include reducing oil in the US while asking OPEC to pump more oil, allowing anyone who wants to cross the southern border & shipping them to other parts of the US (while not requiring any COVID testing), the debacle in Afghanistan including the killing of 13 American soldiers & leaving massive amounts of military behind, etc, etc, etc...................
bgr3
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ncsualum05 said:

Man are there still that many people in the US out there that are so stupid they think zero covid is achievable? It's never going away.
The crazy part is the Duke email that came out yesterday that everyone has seen that requires masks outdoors and shuts down indoor dining actually contains this quote as well:

"We cannot stop COVID-19, but what we can do is adapt to our local and national realities and seek to mitigate the spread of COVID-19 on campus."

So, they admit zero-covid is not possible while simutaneously enacting policies that would only be defensible if zero-covid was possible and the explicit goal. Pure doublespeak.
statefan91
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PackPA2015
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Update from our hospital system:

236 hospitalized with an average age of 58. 214 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 57. 22 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 68.

44 in the ICU with average age of 52. 42 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 51. 2 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 70.

21 on the vent with an average age of 52. 20 unvaccinated with an average age of 52. 1 vaccinated with age of 56.
Wayland
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PackPA2015 said:

Update from our hospital system:

236 hospitalized with an average age of 58. 214 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 57. 22 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 68.

44 in the ICU with average age of 52. 42 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 51. 2 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 70.

21 on the vent with an average age of 52. 20 unvaccinated with an average age of 52. 1 vaccinated with age of 56.
Thanks. Interesting to see the age breakdown.

So based on your last update a week ago, it looks like an increase in hospitalizations but decrease in ICU and vents.


Quote:

210 hospitalized (183 unvaccinated), 48 ICU (45 unvaccinated), 30 on vents (27 unvaccinated).
Wayland
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Going to pick on WRAL again.



In the article they say that 120 cases have been detected since the start of the traditional school year which was last week.

Let's assume ALL 120 cases are from last week (I don't care if they originated in schools or not, not important).

There are 160,000 students and 20,000 staff in WCPSS.

If we did it on a per capita basis that would be roughly ~67/100k.

There are 1.1 million people in Wake County. Last week there were 4000 reported cases or a per capita case rate of roughly 364/100k

That would mean the in school covid case rate is over 5 times LOWER than the community spread rate. That should be PHENOMINAL news... we should be doing a dance!

Instead it is fear porn.

Feel free to QA, I could be losing it on the numbers. I mean the gap seems SO large.
GuerrillaPack
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https://instagr.am/p/CTBacRuNX3f
"Ye are not of the world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world hateth you." - John 15:19
RunsWithWolves26
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PackPA2015 said:

Update from our hospital system:

236 hospitalized with an average age of 58. 214 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 57. 22 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 68.

44 in the ICU with average age of 52. 42 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 51. 2 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 70.

21 on the vent with an average age of 52. 20 unvaccinated with an average age of 52. 1 vaccinated with age of 56.


This tells me the vaccines are working. I'm sure some will say the numbers are made up but oh well.
packgrad
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Science.
Packchem91
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Wayland said:

Going to pick on WRAL again.



In the article they say that 120 cases have been detected since the start of the traditional school year which was last week.

Let's assume ALL 120 cases are from last week (I don't care if they originated in schools or not, not important).

There are 160,000 students and 20,000 staff in WCPSS.

If we did it on a per capita basis that would be roughly ~67/100k.

There are 1.1 million people in Wake County. Last week there were 4000 reported cases or a per capita case rate of roughly 364/100k

That would mean the in school covid case rate is over 5 times LOWER than the community spread rate. That should be PHENOMINAL news... we should be doing a dance!

Instead it is fear porn.

Feel free to QA, I could be losing it on the numbers. I mean the gap seems SO large.
Very interesting....and, to the point you've made, really simple math. And, also to the point you've made, a completely different perspective than what the story presents....which is of course, not accidental.

Bad thing about that is -- a lot of parents up in arms about the "high" case counts, may be much more encouraged if they had the real perspective...ie, it could be a better overall experience.
Wayland
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Packchem91 said:

Wayland said:

Going to pick on WRAL again.



In the article they say that 120 cases have been detected since the start of the traditional school year which was last week.

Let's assume ALL 120 cases are from last week (I don't care if they originated in schools or not, not important).

There are 160,000 students and 20,000 staff in WCPSS.

If we did it on a per capita basis that would be roughly ~67/100k.

There are 1.1 million people in Wake County. Last week there were 4000 reported cases or a per capita case rate of roughly 364/100k

That would mean the in school covid case rate is over 5 times LOWER than the community spread rate. That should be PHENOMINAL news... we should be doing a dance!

Instead it is fear porn.

Feel free to QA, I could be losing it on the numbers. I mean the gap seems SO large.
Very interesting....and, to the point you've made, really simple math. And, also to the point you've made, a completely different perspective than what the story presents....which is of course, not accidental.

Bad thing about that is -- a lot of parents up in arms about the "high" case counts, may be much more encouraged if they had the real perspective...ie, it could be a better overall experience.

Now WTVD had slightly higher numbers, but still much lower than the community rate. And this is with hyper focused first week testing.

Since it is still the first week, most of the cases are probably 'community' cases where the student just happened to start back. It is that other bizarre perspective that when schools are in session that students and teachers don't exist outside that realm and all cases are school cases. It should not be at all unexpected to have cases in schools when we have cases in the community.

There are certainly going to be school clusters and cases FROM school especially in the first few weeks. We just shook the snow globe and changed behavioral patterns, it is going to take a few weeks for the flakes to settle back into the ground.
PackPA2015
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Wayland,

I got an update on our local school system. I know you had asked how many positives. We have 971 students in active quarantine with 108 positive cases in students. 62% of those positive cases are believed to be from outside transmission (not inside the school).
Daviewolf83
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Staff
In alignment with the hospitalization information PackPA posted last night (thanks for the insight), the graph below shows the latest hospitalizations by age group. As you can see, the 60-69 age group has continued to creep up and is now even with the 50-59 age group. My assumption is this is mainly people aged in their early 60's, since some of this age group is still lagging behind the older age groups with respect to vaccinations. The levels for the 70+ age group continue to reflect good news with regards to the hospitalizations and the effect of vaccinations.







I also looked at the growth rate in daily hospitalizations and it continues to be flat. This indicates daily increases are not growing and as such, could point to the fact we are near the peak for the Summer Wave of cases and hospitalizations.

Daviewolf83
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Staff
Interesting results from a study out of the University of Waterloo regarding masks. In this study, if found the following:
  • Cloth and surgical masks (the two most prevalent) allowed 88 to 90 percent of aerosols to be breathed out in the experiment. While mask efficiency is better than these figures 40% for cloth and 47% for surgical, the fact masks are not worn properly causes the decrease in overall efficiency.
  • Various N95, KN95, and R95 masks allowed only 40 to 54 percent of aerosols to be breathed out.
  • N95 masks do leak and primarily, they leak around the nose. The study said this lead to "notably higher" concentrations of aerosols more than six feet away from the test mannequin.
  • N95 masks with valves lost half of their ability to stop aerosols. N95 masks without valves are the recommended choice.
  • Lose fitting and incorrectly worn N95 masks provide "negligible" filtration efficiency.
  • A key finding of the study - "increased ventilation/air-cleaning capacity significantly reduces the transmission risk in an indoor environment, surpassing the apparent mask filtration efficacy." They went on to say "Even modest ventilation rates were found to be as effective as the best masks in reducing the risk of transmission."

So, in my opinion, what does this mean for a virus that is spread primarily by aerosol?
  • People have a false sense of protection from masks and as such, act in ways that could put them more at risk. Someone wearing a cloth/surgical mask will perform activities much closer to others than they should and spend longer time in environments where transmission is possible. This is a big reason why I said last week that mask mandates will have little to no effect on slowing the current wave of infection and hospitalization. We did not see them do so in the Winter Wave (it declined due to vaccinations and a virus running out of potential victims), so why do we expect to make an impact now?
  • Ventilation and air filtration is a much better method to reduce the spread of the virus. We have know this fact of decades, going back to the Spanish Flu as an example. It is possible right now to build your own Hepa air filtration device out of four 24"x24" Hepa filters (purchase at any hardware store) and a box fan. Additionally, activities performed outside are much safer than those performed inside. This is why masking people who are outdoors is a really dumb and unproductive policy.

So, in conclusion. If you are wearing a cloth/surgical mask indoors, you need to spend as little time as possible in this environment and stay at least six feet away from other people. You will have very little protection in this type of environment. The masking of kids in schools is also something that will have minimal effect in stopping the spread of the virus. Add to this the policy of allowing kids to remove the masks to eat in the lunch rooms, makes the masking of kids the rest of the day relatively unproductive. If you have a choice, do things outside and do not worry about wearing a mask (yes, this is aimed at Duke University). Always remember, outside=good and inside=bad.

Here's the link to the study:

Experimental investigation of indoor aerosol dispersion and accumulation in the context of COVID-19: Effects of masks and ventilation
wilmwolf
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"People have a false sense of protection from masks and as such, act in ways that could put them more at risk. Someone wearing a cloth/surgical mask will perform activities much closer to others than they should and spend longer time in environments where transmission is possible."

I said that very soon after then mandates were put in place last year, I immediately noticed a change in how people interacted while wearing masks due to that false sense of security. That is again a fault of the poor job in messaging, some of which I understand because they were trying to get people to do what they could do, but making any face covering out to be a magic cure was a problem.
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Wayland
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Daviewolf83 said:

Interesting results from a study out of the University of Waterloo regarding masks. In this study, if found the following:
  • Cloth and surgical masks (the two most prevalent) allowed 88 to 90 percent of aerosols to be breathed out in the experiment. While mask efficiency is better than these figures 40% for cloth and 47% for surgical), the fact masks are not worn properly causes the decrease in overall efficiency.
  • Various N95, KN95, and R95 masks allowed only 40 to 54 percent of aerosols to be breathed out.
  • N95 masks do leak and primarily, they leak around the nose. The study said this lead to "notably higher" concentrations of aerosols more than six feet away from the test mannequin.
  • N95 masks with valves lost half of their ability to stop aerosols. N95 masks without valves are the recommended choice.
  • Lose fitting and incorrectly worn N95 masks provide "negligible" filtration efficiency.
  • A key finding of the study - "increased ventilation/air-cleaning capacity significantly reduces the transmission risk in an indoor environment, surpassing the apparent mask filtration efficacy." They went on to say "Even modest ventilation rates were found to be as effective as the best masks in reducing the risk of transmission."

So, in my opinion, what does this mean for a virus that is spread primarily by aerosol?
  • People have a false sense of protection from masks and as such, act in ways that could put them more at risk. Someone wearing a cloth/surgical mask will perform activities much closer to others than they should and spend longer time in environments where transmission is possible. This is a big reason why I said last week that mask mandates will have little to no effect on slowing the current wave of infection and hospitalization. We did not see them do so in the Winter Wave (it declined due to vaccinations and a virus running out of potential victims), so why do we expect to make an impact now?
  • Ventilation and air filtration is a much better method to reduce the spread of the virus. We have know this fact of decades, going back to the Spanish Flu as an example. It is possible right now to build your own Hepa air filtration device out of four 24"x24" Hepa filters (purchase at any hardware store) and a box fan. Additionally, activities performed outside are much safer than those performed inside. This is why masking people who are outdoors is a really dumb and unproductive policy.

So, in conclusion. If you are wearing a cloth/surgical mask indoors, you need to spend as little time as possible in this environment and stay at least six feet away from other people. You will have very little protection in this type of environment. The masking of kids in schools is also something that will have minimal effect in stopping the spread of the virus. Add to this the policy of allowing kids to remove the masks to eat in the lunch rooms, makes the masking of kids the rest of the day relatively unproductive. If you have a choice, do things outside and do not worry about wearing a mask (yes, this is aimed at Duke University). Always remember, outside=good and inside=bad.

Here's the link to the study:

Experimental investigation of indoor aerosol dispersion and accumulation in the context of COVID-19: Effects of masks and ventilation
  • Lose fitting and incorrectly worn N95 masks provide "negligible" filtration efficiency.

With a 3mm gap a KN95 was only 3% efficient (in a sterile lab... not even real word).... that is so glossed over in this lab study with a mannequin.


Daviewolf83
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Staff
wilmwolf80 said:

"People have a false sense of protection from masks and as such, act in ways that could put them more at risk. Someone wearing a cloth/surgical mask will perform activities much closer to others than they should and spend longer time in environments where transmission is possible."

I said that very soon after then mandates were put in place last year, I immediately noticed a change in how people interacted while wearing masks due to that false sense of security. That is again a fault of the poor job in messaging, some of which I understand because they were trying to get people to do what they could do, but making any face covering out to be a magic cure was a problem.

I agree and as such, I stand by my earlier posts. The current wave will end when enough people get vaccinated and enough people get protection from prior infection that the virus runs out of victims. Mask mandates and restrictions on activities will NOT significantly impact the current wave of infection and hospitalization.
TheStorm
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RunsWithWolves26 said:

PackPA2015 said:

Update from our hospital system:

236 hospitalized with an average age of 58. 214 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 57. 22 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 68.

44 in the ICU with average age of 52. 42 of those are unvaccinated with an average age of 51. 2 are fully vaccinated with an average age of 70.

21 on the vent with an average age of 52. 20 unvaccinated with an average age of 52. 1 vaccinated with age of 56.


This tells me the vaccines are working. I'm sure some will say the numbers are made up but oh well.
It also tells me that it's not a bunch of school aged kids as was angled out there 7-10 days ago...
caryking
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Who cares anymore?
packgrad
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Virus gonna virus.
Oldsouljer
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I think it's great that state and local governments are forking over $$ for violating people's 1st Amendment rights, too bad this is just an isolated case thus far.

https://redstate.com/jenniferoo/2021/09/01/state-of-ca-and-l-a-county-reach-800000-settlement-with-john-macarthurs-grace-community-church-n436473
WarrenPeace
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caryking said:

Who cares anymore?



It's crazy man. Neighborhood kid has it now. She has to stay out of school for 2 weeks. Her symptoms are a runny nose.


*** are we doing???
BBW12OG
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WarrenPeace said:

caryking said:

Who cares anymore?



It's crazy man. Neighborhood kid has it now. She has to stay out of school for 2 weeks. Her symptoms are a runny nose.


*** are we doing???
We are keeping politics out of it! Remember that's what the OP said! Words of wisdom....LMAO...

My nephew's football team was just sidelined for 13 days! A kid had a cough and a runny nose. According to county policy the team had to get tested. They had 3-4 positive tests with only the one player with any symptoms and the symptoms were that of a common cold. Two forfeits and a Senior year that is starting to resemble his Junior year.

All in the name of controlling the people. Good thing that only the lefties and their ilk like being led around like mindless sheep. They keep pushing and pushing the lefties are going to find out exactly why we kicked Great Britain's ass not once but twice.
Big Bad Wolf. OG...2002

"The Democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
- Thomas Jefferson
BBW12OG
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Like I have said before... this is all "rehearsal" for the most deadliest, dangerous variant ever to rear it's head in September/October of 2022 so in-person voting will be the death of every single American.

You lefties are really something else. I hope and pray you get everything you deserve.

Big Bad Wolf. OG...2002

"The Democracy will cease to exist when you take away from those who are willing to work and give to those who would not."
- Thomas Jefferson
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