New CDC data shows the impact of vaccinations.
— Ben Wakana (@benwakana46) October 1, 2021
States with lower vaccination rates (in blue) have higher rates of COVID cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.
Lot happening on this slide but worth clicking. pic.twitter.com/rVN3wNufCd
NC coronavirus update : Hospitalizations trending downward, but people getting sicker; 1 in 5 hospitalized are on a ventilator. https://t.co/AK4SNCHd6m
— WRAL NEWS in NC (@WRAL) October 1, 2021
statefan91 said:New CDC data shows the impact of vaccinations.
— Ben Wakana (@benwakana46) October 1, 2021
States with lower vaccination rates (in blue) have higher rates of COVID cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.
Lot happening on this slide but worth clicking. pic.twitter.com/rVN3wNufCd
Draymond Green with the best covid statement I’ve seen since March 2020. Listen:
— Gary Sheffield Jr. (@GarysheffieldJr) October 1, 2021
pic.twitter.com/zueGKNRhqR
statefan91 said:
I assume those hesitant to take the vaccine would also be hesitant to take this since it would be approved under EUA.
It also doesn't really contribute to getting to a level of immunity unless the person gets COVID, then takes the pill and hopefully recovers. The links I posted above show significantly lower levels of transmission in highly vaccinated areas.
Just to mix things up. Here are 7 other counties between 49% Adult 1 Dose and 70% Adult 1 Dose.Wayland said:statefan91 said:New CDC data shows the impact of vaccinations.
— Ben Wakana (@benwakana46) October 1, 2021
States with lower vaccination rates (in blue) have higher rates of COVID cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.
Lot happening on this slide but worth clicking. pic.twitter.com/rVN3wNufCd
I am pro-vaccine, but I am genuinely interested to see what those same charts look like in two months. And if you could separate out the regional impact.
I checked out the updated adult vaccination rate of those 7 counties from my previous chart. And they are between 70% (Guilford) and 82% (Wake) of all 18+ with at least one dose.
If you go by total population of the 7 counties only Wake would be Green (on the tweet's chart). The other 6 would be Yellow on that chart.
Doing quick napkin math, the 7 counties would appear to peak case wise over the yellow trend line.... regional seasonality? Would these 7 counties, if they were in Massachusetts with the same vaccination percent have less cases?
I need to look at smaller counties... but effort...
100% correct. I don't care about immunity and the ability to not worry every time I get an e-mail / call from school or daycare that they're shutting down for two weeks, that I have to take time off work, etc. I just really care mostly about tracking who is vaccinated and who isn't.packgrad said:statefan91 said:
I assume those hesitant to take the vaccine would also be hesitant to take this since it would be approved under EUA.
It also doesn't really contribute to getting to a level of immunity unless the person gets COVID, then takes the pill and hopefully recovers. The links I posted above show significantly lower levels of transmission in highly vaccinated areas.
You don't care about immunity. You only care about the label. I'm sure you think that about the people that haven't taken the vaccine. You've chosen a side and the shaming has to continue if this new option becomes available.
statefan91 said:100% correct. I don't care about immunity and the ability to not worry every time I get an e-mail / call from school or daycare that they're shutting down for two weeks, that I have to take time off work, etc. I just really care mostly about tracking who is vaccinated and who isn't.packgrad said:statefan91 said:
I assume those hesitant to take the vaccine would also be hesitant to take this since it would be approved under EUA.
It also doesn't really contribute to getting to a level of immunity unless the person gets COVID, then takes the pill and hopefully recovers. The links I posted above show significantly lower levels of transmission in highly vaccinated areas.
You don't care about immunity. You only care about the label. I'm sure you think that about the people that haven't taken the vaccine. You've chosen a side and the shaming has to continue if this new option becomes available.
Holy **** not sure what you're smoking but give it a break.
packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Mormad said:packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Do you mind explaining why you think this potentially eliminates the tribalism?
statefan91 said:100% correct. I don't care about immunity and the ability to not worry every time I get an e-mail / call from school or daycare that they're shutting down for two weeks, that I have to take time off work, etc. I just really care mostly about tracking who is vaccinated and who isn't.packgrad said:statefan91 said:
I assume those hesitant to take the vaccine would also be hesitant to take this since it would be approved under EUA.
It also doesn't really contribute to getting to a level of immunity unless the person gets COVID, then takes the pill and hopefully recovers. The links I posted above show significantly lower levels of transmission in highly vaccinated areas.
You don't care about immunity. You only care about the label. I'm sure you think that about the people that haven't taken the vaccine. You've chosen a side and the shaming has to continue if this new option becomes available.
Holy **** not sure what you're smoking but give it a break.
packgrad said:Mormad said:packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Do you mind explaining why you think this potentially eliminates the tribalism?
Do you mind explaining why it wouldn't? I feel like it's obvious why it would.
Edit. My reasoning
Symptomatic… and there is a treatment. Scoreboard of vaccinated or unvaccinated is irrelevant.
Mormad said:packgrad said:Mormad said:packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Do you mind explaining why you think this potentially eliminates the tribalism?
Do you mind explaining why it wouldn't? I feel like it's obvious why it would.
Edit. My reasoning
Symptomatic… and there is a treatment. Scoreboard of vaccinated or unvaccinated is irrelevant.
Yeah, well i didn't think it was so obvious. No reason to be an arsehole about it. I wasn't challenging you, dude. I was simply asking a fcking question.
LOL, you have not paid attention the last 100 pages on this thread. Some people have to be angry about every. single. thing. He is ours.Mormad said:packgrad said:Mormad said:packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Do you mind explaining why you think this potentially eliminates the tribalism?
Do you mind explaining why it wouldn't? I feel like it's obvious why it would.
Edit. My reasoning
Symptomatic… and there is a treatment. Scoreboard of vaccinated or unvaccinated is irrelevant.
Yeah, well i didn't think it was so obvious. No reason to be an arsehole about it. I wasn't challenging you, dude. I was simply asking a fcking question.
I wasn't. The left has been pushing the narrative that the red states are the problem, and they are going to continue pushing that narrative. Even though it's wrong. Virus did the same things there. Just on different timelines. I'm sure that someone with a different opinion could make a chart that shows the opposite, just as easy as the left made this one.Wayland said:Just to mix things up. Here are 7 other counties between 49% Adult 1 Dose and 70% Adult 1 Dose.Wayland said:statefan91 said:New CDC data shows the impact of vaccinations.
— Ben Wakana (@benwakana46) October 1, 2021
States with lower vaccination rates (in blue) have higher rates of COVID cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.
Lot happening on this slide but worth clicking. pic.twitter.com/rVN3wNufCd
I am pro-vaccine, but I am genuinely interested to see what those same charts look like in two months. And if you could separate out the regional impact.
I checked out the updated adult vaccination rate of those 7 counties from my previous chart. And they are between 70% (Guilford) and 82% (Wake) of all 18+ with at least one dose.
If you go by total population of the 7 counties only Wake would be Green (on the tweet's chart). The other 6 would be Yellow on that chart.
Doing quick napkin math, the 7 counties would appear to peak case wise over the yellow trend line.... regional seasonality? Would these 7 counties, if they were in Massachusetts with the same vaccination percent have less cases?
I need to look at smaller counties... but effort...
Note, scale is different than the high population counties, but I was a little surprised when I put them out there what is there.
Absolutely hilarious. Especially coming from you.Packchem91 said:
LOL, you have not paid attention the last 100 pages on this thread. Some people have to be angry about every. single. thing. He is ours.
packgrad said:Mormad said:packgrad said:Mormad said:packgrad said:Wayland said:If this works, it is great. I am continually skeptical with results that look THIS good.dogplasma said:
Merck announces they have an antiviral pill that cuts the risk of hospitalization in half in at-risk patients who are showing early signs of Covid. They stopped their randomized trials early because of the hugely successful results and are applying for emergency use authorization in the US. The US has apparently placed an advance order (I forget the amount - a couple million doses I think).
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/mercks-covid-19-pill-cuts-risk-death-hospitalization-by-50-study-2021-10-01/
But if it is real, would certainly be a game changer.Quote:
A planned interim analysis of 775 patients in Merck's study found that 7.3% of those given molnupiravir were either hospitalized or had died by 29 days after treatment, compared with 14.1% of placebo patients. There were no deaths in the molnupiravir group, but there were eight deaths of placebo patients.
Complete game changer. Eliminates the tribalism of the vaccinated vs unvaccinated. Although, that's a big part of one segment of society's entire belief structure now, so I expect it will take time.
Do you mind explaining why you think this potentially eliminates the tribalism?
Do you mind explaining why it wouldn't? I feel like it's obvious why it would.
Edit. My reasoning
Symptomatic… and there is a treatment. Scoreboard of vaccinated or unvaccinated is irrelevant.
Yeah, well i didn't think it was so obvious. No reason to be an arsehole about it. I wasn't challenging you, dude. I was simply asking a fcking question.
Wasn't being an *******. Maybe you should look in the fcking mirror if you want to call names, dude.
What makes you think I'm angry about anything? I'm happy as can be. Life is good. Not perfect, but certainly not somethign to walk around griping about every dayTheStorm said:Absolutely hilarious. Especially coming from you.Packchem91 said:
LOL, you have not paid attention the last 100 pages on this thread. Some people have to be angry about every. single. thing. He is ours.
The big issue with natural immunity is that nobody gets rich.
— Robert J. O'Neill (@mchooyah) October 2, 2021
Unfortunately, whether that's true or not, it certainly has become the perception... Fauci and team do absolutely nothing to change the perception.WPNfamily said:
Best take I have seen in a long timeThe big issue with natural immunity is that nobody gets rich.
— Robert J. O'Neill (@mchooyah) October 2, 2021
Says the guy that starts an argument on the very first page of the post game thread last night... and of course arguing against your own team.Packchem91 said:What makes you think I'm angry about anything? I'm happy as can be. Life is good. Not perfect, but certainly not somethign to walk around griping about every dayTheStorm said:Absolutely hilarious. Especially coming from you.Packchem91 said:
LOL, you have not paid attention the last 100 pages on this thread. Some people have to be angry about every. single. thing. He is ours.
WPNfamily said:
Best take I have seen in a long timeThe big issue with natural immunity is that nobody gets rich.
— Robert J. O'Neill (@mchooyah) October 2, 2021
Lockdowns "slow the spread" of natural immunity. Once the pathogenic mechanisms of Covid were generally understood, we should have returned to normal activity immediately with exceptions concerning extra precautions for the associated risk groups within the population. The human body beat the corporations in the race for a vaccine. The reputations of NIH and CDC are one of the major casualties of Covid.Mormad said:
What's more interesting to consider is who's getting poor off of covid. Two Harvard economists estimated the pandemic will cost the US 16 trillion. I assume much of that is self inflicted with poor policy. Certainly gaining natural immunity is one way to get us to the endpoint of endemicity and costs will wane, but is it really preferred over avoiding infection all together at whatever level is ultimately attainable (from either a health or economic standpoint)? The direct and indirect costs of infection are sucking the life out of us it seems.
The vast majority of that 16 trillion is not from the Wu flu itself, but from the impact of the communist/draconian government response -- ie, the shutdowns that destroyed tens of thousands of businesses and lost productivity, and the astronomical government spending/debt (eg, unemployment "benefits" paying people to stay home).Mormad said:
What's more interesting to consider is who's getting poor off of covid. Two Harvard economists estimated the pandemic will cost the US 16 trillion. I assume much of that is self inflicted with poor policy. Certainly gaining natural immunity is one way to get us to the endpoint of endemicity and costs will wane, but is it really preferred over avoiding infection all together at whatever level is ultimately attainable (from either a health or economic standpoint)? The direct and indirect costs of infection are sucking the life out of us it seems.
Basically what I said in March 2020 ".. try to protect susceptible populations and carry forward".Oldsouljer said:Lockdowns "slow the spread" of natural immunity. Once the pathogenic mechanisms of Covid were generally understood, we should have returned to normal activity immediately with exceptions concerning extra precautions for the associated risk groups within the population. The human body beat the corporations in the race for a vaccine. The reputations of NIH and CDC are one of the major casualties of Covid.Mormad said:
What's more interesting to consider is who's getting poor off of covid. Two Harvard economists estimated the pandemic will cost the US 16 trillion. I assume much of that is self inflicted with poor policy. Certainly gaining natural immunity is one way to get us to the endpoint of endemicity and costs will wane, but is it really preferred over avoiding infection all together at whatever level is ultimately attainable (from either a health or economic standpoint)? The direct and indirect costs of infection are sucking the life out of us it seems.
TraCha4 said:
Well - we had a 45 year old father of three (8,10,12) at our church die this week of Covid. Really really sad.