PredatorSlayer
WKR
- Joined
- Jul 20, 2019
- Messages
- 2,579
Because its been around long enough to know there are lifelong effects...SMH.Add to that 100's of thousands who will have lifelong effects from the infection. But, whatever.
Because its been around long enough to know there are lifelong effects...SMH.Add to that 100's of thousands who will have lifelong effects from the infection. But, whatever.
Because its been around long enough to know there are lifelong effects...SMH.
That is your opinion - I am just saying the beginning wasn’t that long ago, we have no idea what long term impacts there will be. If you were really in the medical field you would know that.I'm an RN who has been caring for patients since the beginning. I guarantee you there are many, many people who will never be the same after having this virus.
Also important to note only 6% of those deaths had no known underlying conditions.The small % who have died represents ~470K Americans, almost the population of Atlanta and more than the US lost In WW2. But no big deal....
I get the point that since it hasn’t been around long enough, it is by definition impossible to know the “long term” effects. But that doesn’t mean there are not known problems short of death. I have “ground glass opacities” in my lungs from the virus. I don’t know what that will mean for me - in the short or long term. But I doubt that it is a positive. And sure that’s one person’s anecdote, but I’m not alone. And there are other post-recovery conditions.That is your opinion - I am just saying the beginning wasn’t that long ago, we have no idea what long term impacts there will be. If you were really in the medical field you would know that.
No that's really not important to note. If you are color blind but die in a plane wreck, did it matter that you were color blind? If there was some consistency with what underlying conditions were affected, you might have a point. Do you know the percentage of americans with any type of underlying health condition?Also important to note only 6% of those deaths had no known underlying conditions.
Because you've been around long enough to know there won't be any... SMHBecause its been around long enough to know there are lifelong effects...SMH.
Simple answer, no one knows.Up until a few days ago, I have pretty consistently said that I would get the vaccine when it is available to me. I really don't have any concerns about the virus for me personally (had it and was not impressed), but I prefer not to be the guy spreading it because not everyone would have the same outcome I did. Now I'm hearing you can get the vaccine, but still get and transmit the virus? Could someone with some actual knowledge help clarify the points below?
I understand that the vaccine will take a little time - maybe up to three weeks - to do its thing in your body and that during that time you may be able to contract and transmit the virus. But after that period of time - do you have a 90-95% chance of immunity with the two major vaccines? Meaning, to a layman like me, I don't get the virus and I don't transmit it?
If a caveat to the above is that a person could still carry the virus in their nasal passages thereby making them able to spread the virus in spite of being immune themselves, I can understand that. But is that not such a low risk proposition as to make it barely worth discussing at all? That stinks of fear mongering a little to me, which I get is how news works these days.
I'm just trying to figure out if the vaccine actually protects folks beyond making symptoms milder. If I could get the vaccine, but still be susceptible to the virus and still transmit it, then I'd pass. But if I can get the vaccine and a month later have a pretty good idea that I would not be getting or transmitting the virus, I'd still be on board. There seems to be a lot of mystery around this, but it also seems that a good deal of it could be from misinformation and folks running with a narrative without necessarily having their facts straight.
I'm not particularly interested in long-term effects of either the virus or the vaccine, as it relates the questions posed above.
Friend of my was hospitalized pretty bad after second dose.I understand the argument. The difference is getting vaccinated doesnt take anything away from anyone. And I have lots of guns...lol. I also fully support anyone who chooses not to get it. However with 4 years of college, 4 years of medical school, 5 years of residency, and 2 years of fellowship training I would like to think my decision is a fairly educated one. And I dont care if Bill Gates wants to track me. Hope he can track me down in the NWT during my sheep hunt in August. At least that would mean they opened to Canadian border to vaccinated people lol...
Those who are aware that limbs don't grow back after an amputation know.Because its been around long enough to know there are lifelong effects...SMH.
That is your opinion - I am just saying the beginning wasn’t that long ago, we have no idea what long term impacts there will be. If you were really in the medical field you would know that.
So if one has an underlying condition, we should be fine with them dying prematurely because of that? I can't say I follow the logic there.Also important to note only 6% of those deaths had no known underlying conditions.
But what do I know, I am not in the medical or science field. Just an ignorant dumb azz that needs to blindly follow the sound science
This just isn’t true either - healthcare experts have been all over the place with their advice, definitely not consistent. Healthcare experts are not immune to political bias or personal bias. You can find a healthcare expert to say whatever you want them to. I know several doctors, real experienced doctors, who believe there was no reason to shut the economy down or violate constitutional rights to combat a virus with a 99.5% survival rate.but the healthcare experts have been property constant in their advice ever since last summer,