Ill put this here, again: https://vaccine-hesitancy.healthdata.org/
Check by County and ZIP
Move upside and let the man go through...
BS.
I have no political horse to back. If your posts didn’t constantly make you look stupid, I might actually look at them with anything but derision.
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But, srsly, guys:
https://www.tetongravity.com/forums/...25#post6412325
I might add that one of these could be used to respond to *any* of Monfucky's posts as well.
Thanks...was just getting ready to find that shit post and reply with same link. Work got a hold of me and I got distracted.
Glad Oregon is taking care of theirs, but hey....looks pretty dismal on a whole...
https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tra...raphics-trends
Fair point, but it's not just one NBC poll. The WashingtonPost and WSJ articles pull in additional data sources such as the Kaiser Family Foundation and Pew Research. There are also Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI)/Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC) polls and Axios-Ipsos polls showing Republicans and those with a high school education or less remain most resistant to the vaccine.
Don't remember where i saw this, but i believe it was reputable.
Vaccination rates, from high to low
Asian
White
Hispanic
Black
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Dear God. Just try, its not that difficult. Its a link in the article. When you can't even find a link highlighted in the article, your level of credibility should be what?
https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/mee...rawal-n1277368
The link was plain as day in the orginal NBC article, Where I bold/underlined below.
how hard was that to find?
"Well, our most recent NBC News poll sheds some light on those question, with the survey finding that 69 percent of all adults say they’ve already been vaccinated, versus 13 percent saying they won’t get vaccinated under any circumstance."
Singapore recently had a surge of breakthrough infections even with 80% of their total population vaccinated. In spite of the surge 98% of more than 13,000 cases were asymptomatic or mild. So while vaccinating 80% of the population isn't enough to completely stop all Delta spread, it's enough to prevent almost all hospitalizations and deaths. Whereas in the U.S. the unvaccinated make up the overwhelming number of severe cases and deaths.
The other false narrative that gets pushed is “vaccinated people are just as likely to spread the coronavirus.” The fact is: Vaccinated people are not as likely to spread the coronavirus as the unvaccinated. Even in the United States, where more than half of the population is fully vaccinated, the unvaccinated are responsible for the overwhelming majority of transmission.
Apparently, the UK is having another surge, led by unvaxed school-aged kids, who just started school. Idk what mitigation techniques are being followed there. Anybody?
And this is what’s to be expected with a vaccine that is not sterilizing, right?
The concern is long covid amongst those infected and vaxed. Hopefully, there will be good data coming out of surges like that in Singapore, and better therapeutics.
I'd call the influenza wards a century ago supportive care. Keeping people fed, hydrated, and clean was critical. Salvageable patients were dying for lack of basic nursing care. IV therapy was still in its infancy. Oxygen therapy had come to be more common through a combination of Haldane's "The therapeutic administration of oxygen" in early 1917 and the application for it to treat pulmonary and blister agent casualties (gas warfare), but it was very limited versus today.
Today salvageable patients, COVID and non-COVID, are suffering worse outcomes or dying because of subpar care, delayed care, unavailability of standard of care, all because the system is beyond its capacity.
This is all true. It is made all the worse by COVID where even now an extra 15 or 30 or 100% patient census in a particular specialty area can't be absorbed even when things like procedures are canceled.
We should also recognize that was coming because the camel only needed a couple of straws because the bullshit way the hospital systems are run.
COVID is not the straw that broke the camel's back, it is weight of a full rider: pestilence.
The only reason the system struggled on so long is the pure dedication, altruism, and intrinsic motivation of the dedicated healthcare workers who kept going when nobody else would. Well, everyone has breaking points.
Originally Posted by blurred
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