Wayland,Wayland said:Daviewolf83 said: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.statefan91 said: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.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
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.COVID policy has become purely ad hoc and reactive. There's no strategy, there's no endgame, there's no philosophy, there's no internal consistency, there's no cost-benefit analysis, there's no metrics to define success, there's no consensus on what we want to accomplish.
— Nate Silver (@NateSilver538) August 31, 2021
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.
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?