Pandemic 2020

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printer

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Israel was down to a handful of daily COVID cases. Now it's around 11,000. What happened?
Just months ago, Israel was a world leader in vaccinating its population and appeared to be putting a stranglehold on the virus that causes COVID-19, wrestling down its daily case count to double digits — and at times, near zero.

But any potential celebration was short-lived, as the more contagious delta variant gained traction and spread quickly, to the point where Israel's most recent daily case count was around 11,000 — a level not seen since January.

According to some Israeli scientists, this reversal of fortune provides lessons for countries like Canada, as we enter a fourth wave, to remain cautious about letting any guard down — to avoid some of the mistakes their country made.

"This is a very clear warning sign for the rest of the world," said Dr. Ran Balicer, chief innovation officer at Clalit Health Services (CHS), in a recent interview with the magazine Science.

"If it can happen here, it can probably happen everywhere."

While Israel often topped the list of population vaccinated by Oxford University-based Our World in Data, now it's leading in another category: It has the world's highest seven-day rolling average of new daily coronavirus cases per million people.

Daily record
On Tuesday, Israel's Ministry of Health reported that the country had set a new daily record for diagnosed coronavirus cases at nearly 11,000, which comes as the delta variant surges across much of the world.

There were 716 people in the country hospitalized and in serious condition with COVID-19 complications, including 159 on ventilators, the Times of Israel reported.

And while Israel went several weeks in May without a death, more than 550 people have died of COVID-19 in August, including over 100 of them in the last five days, the Times reported.

"It seems that some mistakes were made when we thought we won the war, and now we understand we only won the battle. The war is still here, and we have to continue and to explain and push all the people to get vaccinated," Israel's coronavirus czar, Prof. Salman Zarka, said in a recent interview with the Times.

Meanwhile, Israeli health officials reported what appeared to be a waning efficacy of the vaccine, including among those who had been double vaccinated. Data showed that of the serious cases being admitted to hospital, around 60 per cent of patients were people who had been fully vaccinated, though most were over 60 or with underlying health conditions.

Herd immunity believed reached
"Many public health professionals feel that what happened in Israel was a demonstration of population immunity, or herd immunity. [But the] delta variant, with its higher infectious rate, coupled with waning immunity, has proven us wrong," said Dr. Eyal Leshem, a clinical associate professor in internal medicine and infectious diseases at the Sackler School of Medicine in Tel Aviv University, in an interview with CBC News.

In May, with herd immunity believed to have been established and cases dwindling down to double digits, with few deaths, Israel began easing up on its public health restrictions. Businesses and schools were returning to normal.

Then, at the beginning of June, capacity limits at stores and restaurants were lifted, as well as for indoor and outdoor gatherings. Israelis also no longer needed proof of vaccination to enter various venues.

By mid-June, indoor mask requirements were lifted.

"The government … decided we shouldn't impose restrictions; we will rely on vaccines for protection. But then we realized that it is very difficult to stop the infections with the delta variant," said Cyrille Cohen, head of the lab of immunotherapy at Bar-Ilan University and a member of the Israeli Health Ministry's advisory committee for clinical trials on COVID-19 vaccines.

"What we should have done is to keep some restrictions — for example, wearing of the mask inside," he said.

As the country's cases rapidly increased again, the government reversed course. Mandatory masks and its green pass regime were again required to enter indoor public spaces.

Between January and March, Israel had been very proactive and innovative, explained Nadav Davidovitch, director of the School of Public Health at Ben Gurion University of the Negev. "And then we became much more passive."

Significant number still unvaccinated
Israel has so far fully vaccinated around 62 per cent of its population. But that still leaves a significant number of people unvaccinated, said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases physician and member of Ontario's COVID-19 vaccine task force.

"You've got a million unvaccinated folks, plus a very contagious delta variant, plus opportunities for the virus to be transmitted," he said. "So you can't get surprised that there's a big rise in cases."

The most cautionary tale for Canada could be observations that the rate of infection has been found to be higher in people vaccinated back in January, compared with people who were vaccinated in April, said Leshem.

"In simple words: That protection against infection is waning over time."

These results were observed in people who were double vaccinated, regardless of age or whether they were immunocompromised, he said.

Leshem said this development, along with the fear that a rise in severe infections would overwhelm the health-care system, prompted Israel to become the first country to launch a booster shot campaign, with a third dose going to those aged 60 and over. Boosters are now available to everyone aged 30 or older.

So far, the results of the booster campaign suggest the third dose is probably effective both in preventing infection and in reducing the number of severe breakthrough infections and hospitalization, Leshem said.

"So what we're seeing on the ground in COVID wards — in my hospital and other hospitals — is that while the number of cases continue to increase, we've seen a stabilization in the number of severe cases," he said. "The most plausible reason is that this older population that was boosted is more protected against severe infection, hospitalization and death."

The disease is still expanding, Leshem said, and Israel is still seeing more and more cases every day — "but at a slower rate."

According to Cohen, the lesson countries like Canada can learn from Israel's experience is that a focus must be maintained on the populations at highest risk.

"As the number of infections rises, you really want to make sure this population is protected in an optimal way," he said.

Limit gatherings
In terms of policy, governments need to maintain some level of restriction, like limiting gatherings, said Cohen.

"I was a proponent of having … tighter restrictions like a month-and-a-half ago. That was actually my personal advice when I was asked by officials here so that we would not end up in this situation," Cohen said. "They decided against that."

To Canadians and Canadian lawmakers, his advice is to open up gradually — and the moment there is a steady rise in cases, don't wait to act. "Because the higher the rise, the more difficult it is to stop with simple measures."

He also advises that people keep masking while indoors and to use rapid testing for vulnerable people attending family gatherings.

And his message to Canadians who were vaccinated more than six months ago: "You are vulnerable. You are more vulnerable than what you were three months ago, especially when facing the delta variant."
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
Yeah, but its after the first month. Current job ends it on your last day. Just some sort of weird gap and corporate bs. It certainly sucks, going to try and have it as short as possible.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Idaho governor activates National Guard to combat surge in COVID-19 hospitalizations
Idaho Gov. Brad Little (R) on Tuesday said he would be deploying additional National Guard personnel to assist state hospitals overwhelmed by recent surges in COVID-19 cases among unvaccinated communities.

The move comes just two months after the Republican governor announced a timeline for drawing down the state National Guard’s COVID-19 Task Force as the situation had begun to improve.

However, Little said Tuesday that “nearly all Idaho hospitals are overwhelmed with unvaccinated COVID-19 patients,” adding that only four adult ICU beds were currently available in the entire state.

“We are dangerously close to activating statewide crisis standards of care – a historic step that means Idahoans in need of healthcare could receive a lesser standard of care or may be turned away altogether,” Little said. “ In essence, someone would have to decide who can be treated and who cannot.”

“This affects all of us, not just patients with COVID-19,” he added.

As part of the order Tuesday, up to 370 personnel will be deployed across the state, including up to 150 guardsmen to “support short-staffed medical facilities.”

Additionally, 200 medical and administrative personnel will be made available through a contract with the U.S. General Services Administration, and a 20-person Department of Defense medical response team will be sent to North Idaho, which has reported the lowest vaccination rates in the state.

As of Tuesday, just 44 percent of Idaho’s total population has received at least one dose, with only 39 percent fully vaccinated against COVID-19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Little said in a statement that Idaho’s healthcare system is “not designed to withstand the prolonged strain caused by an unrestrained global pandemic.”

“It is simply not sustainable,” he added. “Please choose to receive the vaccine now to support your fellow Idahoans who need you.”
beds can be put anywhere but you can't pull nurses out of your ass; each nurse has a bed count.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Israel was down to a handful of daily COVID cases. Now it's around 11,000. What happened?
Just months ago, Israel was a world leader in vaccinating its population and appeared to be putting a stranglehold on the virus that causes COVID-19, wrestling down its daily case count to double digits — and at times, near zero.

But any potential celebration was short-lived, as the more contagious delta variant gained traction and spread quickly, to the point where Israel's most recent daily case count was around 11,000 — a level not seen since January.

According to some Israeli scientists, this reversal of fortune provides lessons for countries like Canada, as we enter a fourth wave, to remain cautious about letting any guard down — to avoid some of the mistakes their country made.

"This is a very clear warning sign for the rest of the world," said Dr. Ran Balicer, chief innovation officer at Clalit Health Services (CHS), in a recent interview with the magazine Science.

"If it can happen here, it can probably happen everywhere."

While Israel often topped the list of population vaccinated by Oxford University-based Our World in Data, now it's leading in another category: It has the world's highest seven-day rolling average of new daily coronavirus cases per million people.

Daily record
On Tuesday, Israel's Ministry of Health reported that the country had set a new daily record for diagnosed coronavirus cases at nearly 11,000, which comes as the delta variant surges across much of the world.

There were 716 people in the country hospitalized and in serious condition with COVID-19 complications, including 159 on ventilators, the Times of Israel reported.

And while Israel went several weeks in May without a death, more than 550 people have died of COVID-19 in August, including over 100 of them in the last five days, the Times reported.

"It seems that some mistakes were made when we thought we won the war, and now we understand we only won the battle. The war is still here, and we have to continue and to explain and push all the people to get vaccinated," Israel's coronavirus czar, Prof. Salman Zarka, said in a recent interview with the Times.

Meanwhile, Israeli health officials reported what appeared to be a waning efficacy of the vaccine, including among those who had been double vaccinated. Data showed that of the serious cases being admitted to hospital, around 60 per cent of patients were people who had been fully vaccinated, though most were over 60 or with underlying health conditions.

Herd immunity believed reached
"Many public health professionals feel that what happened in Israel was a demonstration of population immunity, or herd immunity. [But the] delta variant, with its higher infectious rate, coupled with waning immunity, has proven us wrong," said Dr. Eyal Leshem, a clinical associate professor in internal medicine and infectious diseases at the Sackler School of Medicine in Tel Aviv University, in an interview with CBC News.

In May, with herd immunity believed to have been established and cases dwindling down to double digits, with few deaths, Israel began easing up on its public health restrictions. Businesses and schools were returning to normal.

Then, at the beginning of June, capacity limits at stores and restaurants were lifted, as well as for indoor and outdoor gatherings. Israelis also no longer needed proof of vaccination to enter various venues.

By mid-June, indoor mask requirements were lifted.

"The government … decided we shouldn't impose restrictions; we will rely on vaccines for protection. But then we realized that it is very difficult to stop the infections with the delta variant," said Cyrille Cohen, head of the lab of immunotherapy at Bar-Ilan University and a member of the Israeli Health Ministry's advisory committee for clinical trials on COVID-19 vaccines.

"What we should have done is to keep some restrictions — for example, wearing of the mask inside," he said.

As the country's cases rapidly increased again, the government reversed course. Mandatory masks and its green pass regime were again required to enter indoor public spaces.

Between January and March, Israel had been very proactive and innovative, explained Nadav Davidovitch, director of the School of Public Health at Ben Gurion University of the Negev. "And then we became much more passive."

Significant number still unvaccinated
Israel has so far fully vaccinated around 62 per cent of its population. But that still leaves a significant number of people unvaccinated, said Dr. Isaac Bogoch, an infectious diseases physician and member of Ontario's COVID-19 vaccine task force.

"You've got a million unvaccinated folks, plus a very contagious delta variant, plus opportunities for the virus to be transmitted," he said. "So you can't get surprised that there's a big rise in cases."

The most cautionary tale for Canada could be observations that the rate of infection has been found to be higher in people vaccinated back in January, compared with people who were vaccinated in April, said Leshem.

"In simple words: That protection against infection is waning over time."

These results were observed in people who were double vaccinated, regardless of age or whether they were immunocompromised, he said.

Leshem said this development, along with the fear that a rise in severe infections would overwhelm the health-care system, prompted Israel to become the first country to launch a booster shot campaign, with a third dose going to those aged 60 and over. Boosters are now available to everyone aged 30 or older.

So far, the results of the booster campaign suggest the third dose is probably effective both in preventing infection and in reducing the number of severe breakthrough infections and hospitalization, Leshem said.

"So what we're seeing on the ground in COVID wards — in my hospital and other hospitals — is that while the number of cases continue to increase, we've seen a stabilization in the number of severe cases," he said. "The most plausible reason is that this older population that was boosted is more protected against severe infection, hospitalization and death."

The disease is still expanding, Leshem said, and Israel is still seeing more and more cases every day — "but at a slower rate."

According to Cohen, the lesson countries like Canada can learn from Israel's experience is that a focus must be maintained on the populations at highest risk.

"As the number of infections rises, you really want to make sure this population is protected in an optimal way," he said.

Limit gatherings
In terms of policy, governments need to maintain some level of restriction, like limiting gatherings, said Cohen.

"I was a proponent of having … tighter restrictions like a month-and-a-half ago. That was actually my personal advice when I was asked by officials here so that we would not end up in this situation," Cohen said. "They decided against that."

To Canadians and Canadian lawmakers, his advice is to open up gradually — and the moment there is a steady rise in cases, don't wait to act. "Because the higher the rise, the more difficult it is to stop with simple measures."

He also advises that people keep masking while indoors and to use rapid testing for vulnerable people attending family gatherings.

And his message to Canadians who were vaccinated more than six months ago: "You are vulnerable. You are more vulnerable than what you were three months ago, especially when facing the delta variant."
aren't they the ones that came up with Ivermectin? someone recently posted something from Jerusalem Post that was disinformation.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Yeah, but its after the first month. Current job ends it on your last day. Just some sort of weird gap and corporate bs. It certainly sucks, going to try and have it as short as possible.
i'd say fuck it and go the month without it rather than pay double. there's no penalty anymore for not having continuous insurance like the old days.

you probably already did it for the month but this way you'll know in case there's a next time.

you can get ACA for the month too..change in circumstances.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
WHO labels a new variant of interest: mu, first detected in Colombia
The mu variant has been found in 39 countries in South America and Europe.

The variant, labelled “mu,” has been detected in 39 countries in South America and Europe, according to the report. The variant is also known as B.1.621.

The mu variant was first identified in Colombia in January of this year. As of Aug. 29, 4,500 sequences of the variant have been reported. Globally, this variant makes up less than 0.1 percent. The prevalence of this variant in Colombia has consistently increased over time and is now around 39 percent and is at 13 percent in Ecuador.

According to the report, the WHO says that this variant “has a constellation of mutations that indicate potential properties of immune escape.”

“[Mu] also has mutations in other parts of the virus genome that may make it behave slightly differently from the other variants – but lab and real-world studies will be needed to fully characterise the impact of this,” says Julian Tang, who is a clinical virologist at the University of Leicester, to The Telegraph. The WHO says they will continue to monitor its progress along with the delta variant that is also circulating.

According to The Guardian, at least 32 cases of the mu variant have been found in the U.K. Experts say that the cases were mostly in London and among people in their 20s. “At the moment, it looks like there’s genuine cause for concern in USA, Central America, South America, but as we saw with Delta, a potent variant can traverse the globe in the blink of an eye,” says Danny Altmann, who is an immunology expert at Imperial College London, to The Telegraph.

The WHO states in the report that there is no evidence that the mu variant is outcompeting the delta variant and “it appears unlikely that it is more transmissible.” However, more data will be necessary to see if the mu variant is able to escape the vaccine. The WHO writes, “Immune escape may contribute to future changes in growth.”
 

C. Nesbitt

Well-Known Member
Oh I see! That's why the pea-brains are taking ivermectin.

They're preparing for the Moo variant. :lol:


:mrgreen:
We give liquid ivermectin to our dog monthly as a heart worm preventative (way cheaper than heartguard). Was shocked to see that a 50mL bottle was 3x as expensive two weeks ago than it was the last time we ordered a couple years ago. It was out of stock most places too. Guess you really can’t fix stupid.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
That's a must. A bitchin', classic roadster.
View attachment 4977630
What? Ooh, well that's different. Nevermind.
I wanted to build one but was not crazy about the cost of a body from the US. Since then they changed the rules here and you need an engineer to sign off on your car. I had a 4.1 L Buick engine for it, had a 4 bbl and manifold for it and a fuel injection one. Lost my job and had to grow up after that. I do see the occasional one around and guess they are registered before. Shame I got rid of all my crap, would be a fun project.
 
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