ghostguy123
Footballguy
Two years in, I am guessing a very low percentage of people (maybe 5%??) would actually follow this.
Two years in, I am guessing a very low percentage of people (maybe 5%??) would actually follow this.
Sad, but likely true.Two years in, I am guessing a very low percentage of people (maybe 5%??) would actually follow this.
Over the next 6 months most people are going to come in contact with someone who is positive on at least a monthly basis. How many times can you quarantine and expect to keep your job? How many times can your kid quarantine and still function in school well enough to pass their grade? How many times can you quarantine before you blow your own head off?Sad, but likely true.
Extremely weak. The flu is more dangerous that Omicron. Do not listen to biden, fauci or the media.It is not a weak strain. You are basing things on weeks old misleading headlines.
It gets even better. Employees are not required to be vaccinated. Two years into this mess and we still come up with nonsensical rules.This i just don’t get. Events, sure, but bars and restaurants you know what you’re getting yourself into. You’re not going to be masked the entire time you’re eating or drinking. It’s a risk and you can choose if you want to take it. Having everyone vaccinated will only make a minimal difference.
Terminalxylem said:
What specifically has changed about your attitude/behavior in the age of omicron?
fatguyinalittlecoat said:
I think the ease with which omicron spreads makes the “stay vigilant so I don’t infect anyone else” argument a lot less powerful. For most of the pandemic very few of my relatives or friends in my social circle ever got Covid. So I really felt a responsibility to take serious precautions not to spread it to them. But now I know lots of people in my social circles that have gotten it. I’m not convinced that I can make any difference in the amount of spread of the virus anymore. It doesn’t really matter if I spread Covid to somebody that was just going to get it anyway.
That’s also some of what I meant about having a greater understanding of some other people’s perspectives from earlier in the pandemic. Some folks here live in social circles where basically everybody they know has gotten Covid at least once. It’s hard to convince someone to take precautions to stop the spread to people that are just going to get it anyway from somewhere else.
Terminalxylem said:
I think you’re underestimating your ability to mitigate the risk of getting infected. I’m not advocating avoiding all human contact, but it may be reasonable at least to wear a surgical mask in public, and avoid large gatherings/crowded areas until the surge eases off. This is especially true in places where healthcare infrastructure is overwhelmed - IIRC, you live in DC, correct? From what I gather, hospitals are struggling there atm.
But I understand different perspectives exist, particularly when everyone you know has already been infected. I can assure you this isn’t the case everywhere, however. As an example, I have only one close friend who has been infected, and a handful of acquaintances and coworkers, out of 100+ people with whom I come in contact. Considering most of them are healthcare workers, they have a much higher exposure risk than average. So clearly, infection is not a foregone conclusion.
fatguyinalittlecoat said:
I think the ease with which omicron spreads makes the “stay vigilant so I don’t infect anyone else” argument a lot less powerful. For most of the pandemic very few of my relatives or friends in my social circle ever got Covid. So I really felt a responsibility to take serious precautions not to spread it to them. But now I know lots of people in my social circles that have gotten it. I’m not convinced that I can make any difference in the amount of spread of the virus anymore. It doesn’t really matter if I spread Covid to somebody that was just going to get it anyway.
Doug B said:
I'm bolding the part that most hits home for my immediate sphere -- the three most careful families we know of (to include ourselves) have or still are going through COVID waves in their homes.
To be sure, we all let our guard down in some ways around Christmas and New Years. Two of the families -- my own and my sister-in-law's got together with two other careful-ish family households on Christmas Day. The next week, my son spent three days & nights with some super-careful family friends (wrote about them in the FFA thread, comorbidities out the yin-yang). The super-careful family and my son went to see the new Spiderman film IN the theater on 12/30. My careful sister- and brother-in-law did the same thing on the same day (I believe different theaters, though).
Also the week after Christmas: my family had to scrap an outdoor-dining date with vaxxed out-of-town friends, so at the last minute my family of four ended up eating indoors (large room to ourselves) with the friends. Two days later, my wife and I (sans kids) ate outdoors with those same out-of-town friends, my super-careful SIL + BIL, and another couple we rarely see (I'd say they're careful-ish).
So ... I guess some careful people were being less careful than they could have conceivably been. I don't know -- joining fully-vaxxed (and mostly boosted) households for Christmas didn't seem capital R "risky". Going to see a movie in person in a 1/4 capacity theater also didn't seem capital R "risky".
Connecting all the dots now that a bunch of folks have been PCR-tested and gotten results ... everyone that ended up testing positive went to see Spiderman in a theater on 12/30. Several others (including my wife and I) had symptoms but tested negative on a PCR![]()
At this point, I don't know what to think. It will be a long time before I can comfortably enter retail space or a grocery store without a mask. But I no longer think that's strictly a coldly logical position -- there's definitely some inertia and "can't hurt" mentality lingering on my part.
Weirdly, if I were to know definitely that someone caught COVID from me and then suffered a severe outcome ... I'd feel guilt if I were around them indoors + unmasked, but feel absolved if I were with them outdoors and/or masked. Not logical, but there you go.
We've been cautious overall thru the pandemic and I'd really like to get through the next ~4 weeks or so (the O wave is starting to receed in our area already) with no one in my house getting it. I figure by March it's harder to get again and the pills will be more available if you get unlucky. By putting it off this long we've made our range of outcomes look miles better than they would have been in Spring of 2020 and putting it off one or two more months makes material improvements to that.
But...
We visited my family for Xmas with my brother going out nightly (he got it less than a week after we left), my sister's entire fam (super careful) got it right before Xmas, and my kid's (fully masked) school reported 13 cases in the first week back from 3 weeks off. So I'm resigned to us not making it another month. I figure almost everyone in the school will get it next week and unless we get really lucky so will my household. It makes taking a hard line on other stuff impossible when you know that it's likely to happen anyhow. We did what we could. It was a run.
Unfortunately, that doesn't count for much these days...unless it is with people I know are vaccinated.
This is where i am at as well. We have been pretty cautious and really the only vector for us is school at this point. Prior to omicron i was traveling pretty heavy for work, but i was taking all the right precautions(strong well sealed N95 mask worn everywhere and often the only masked person in meetings, etc.) But now ive put travel on hold. Ill likely get back out there in March or when Hospitalizations settle down. I know we will get it. But being immunocompromised i would prefer not to get it when it will be challenging to get the right treatment if i end up hospitalized. So for now, we are hunkered down and im hoping the other families in our kids class are being responsible.I have essentially the same thinking as your first paragraph. The only real vector for my family to get infected right now is via school. We kept the kids home the first week back from break, and have sent them with KN95 masks (which may or may not work great for kids, but are better than cloth). My wife takes the kids and has to enter the building and crowded hallways for drop off, but other than that we aren't interacting with people indoors.
Are we all going to get exposed and/or infected at some point? Yes. This will be here forever, like the other circulating coronaviruses. But I am not volunteering to get it this wave. The more vaccine induced immunity and memory my body has, the better. So when I get it, it really is just a cold. Jab me again - who cares.
Not as much in terms of transmission, but it is a measure of whether they generally have been taking it seriously.Unfortunately, that doesn't count for much these days...
True. That can be used as a proxy for likelihood of adhering to any policies and also some higher likelihood of being covid positive.Not as much in terms of transmission, but it is a measure of whether they generally have been taking it seriously.
That all seems like a recipe to overwhelm a health care system.It's amazing how people have done a 180. Going to watch the Cowboys game tomorrow with someone that tested + yesterday. And others are coming that haven't had a + test themselves yet, but just don't care. It's chicken pox parties of my youth. Out and about zero masks anywhere
I definitely would not do this. (Not telling you what to do, just that this particular part is well past my own personal risk threshold.)Going to watch the Cowboys game tomorrow with someone that tested + yesterday.
A reminder to not lose sight of how to think about this pandemic and others.That all seems like a recipe to overwhelm a health care system.
I mean everyone usually gets sick after watching the Cowboys.....I definitely would not do this. (Not telling you what to do, just that this particular part is well past my own personal risk threshold.)
I wouldn't either, but he did just get over Covid, so he's probably as safe as anyone for the immediate future.IvanKaramazov said:I definitely would not do this. (Not telling you what to do, just that this particular part is well past my own personal risk threshold.)
IvanKaramazov said:I definitely would not do this. (Not telling you what to do, just that this particular part is well past my own personal risk threshold.)
Ah, my notebook was not up to date. Got it.I had it over new years and have been - since 1/8 or so. Short of something really odd, I don't think you can get reinfected with like delta or something if that turns out to be his flavor or vice versa.
Who cares about the poor slob sitting in the next seat over. Or behind him at the concession.I had it over new years and have been - since 1/8 or so. Short of something really odd, I don't think you can get reinfected with like delta or something if that turns out to be his flavor or vice versa.
Culdeus can explain for sure ... but I took it that he was attending a TV-watching hangout at a friend's place, not going to JerryWorld.Who cares about the poor slob sitting in the next seat over. Or behind him at the concession.
I read it as going to the stadium.Culdeus can explain for sure ... but I took it that he was attending a TV-watching hangout at a friend's place, not going to JerryWorld.
I really think the mods should be deleting accounts of people like this who post total misinformationExtremely weak. The flu is more dangerous that Omicron. Do not listen to biden, fauci or the media.
They just want to jab you. The truth that I told here is starting to come out. This crap is dangerous.
That's what I thought on my first read, went back, re-read and changed my interpretation.I read it as going to the stadium.
Stop quoting the misinformation and block them like everyone else, dudeI really think the mods should be deleting accounts of people like this who post total misinformation
I was basing it off of the phrasing he used:I read it as going to the stadium.Culdeus can explain for sure ... but I took it that he was attending a TV-watching hangout at a friend's place, not going to JerryWorld.
Ok, thank goodness. I was really questioning the judgment of having a known c+ person going to a stadium.No I'm not gonna go pay 18 bucks for a Miller lite or whatever Jerry wants.
We ready to call this one over and done yet? You’re about due for another proclamation.Fully 50% of my sister's school is out with positive or a household positive. They will come back from MLK on Wednesday rather than Tuesday and have dramatically shortened the stay at home periods for anyone. So more or less anyone that was declared positive prior to Friday can come back Wednesday with no fever. No test requirement, and they are discouraging people getting tests without symptoms.
It's amazing how people have done a 180. Going to watch the Cowboys game tomorrow with someone that tested + yesterday. And others are coming that haven't had a + test themselves yet, but just don't care. It's chicken pox parties of my youth. Out and about zero masks anywhere.
yeah, you can. Not sure if I posted the story of my extended family in this thread or not. Long story short....they all had covid several months ago (august or sept? time is one big blur for me these days)....wife's aunt in the hospital etc. Her aunt has it again. Fortunately, not bad enough for hospital this time. She just came off her oxygen at Christmas.I had it over new years and have been - since 1/8 or so. Short of something really odd, I don't think you can get reinfected with like delta or something if that turns out to be his flavor or vice versa.
Locally, things definitely slowing down anecdotally. I'll look at numbers this week and see if it shows the same.According to our health department . Transmission rate dropped another... .2 in one day... And 7 day average dropped 32% (I know this doesn't mean much anymore)
Hopeful light at end of tunnel for everyone
Locally, things definitely slowing down anecdotally. I'll look at numbers this week and see if it shows the same.
Finally.
We’ve been hovering around 100-110 for about a week. That’s about 40 short of our pandemic max, but quintuple our census from a month ago. The unit still has beds, but med/surg consistently over 100% capacity, and the ER keeps creating “virtual beds” in the hallway, waiting room, outside lanai, etc.Last weekend my hospital unit blew up. 25 inpatient covids which is the max. Right now only about 15.
Small sample size but hopefully it means something.
We've been at the highest census in our history the last two weeks. Fully 1/4 of the patients are in the hospital for covid and even more are in the hospital with covid. And like everywhere else, the unvaxxed are the one doing poorly and requiring intensive care, oxygen, and vents. The ED is constantly on alert with tens of patients waiting for beds. Our OP surgery area has been shut down and is being used to house covid patients now.We’ve been hovering around 100-110 for about a week. That’s about 40 short of our pandemic max, but quintuple our census from a month ago. The unit still has beds, but med/surg consistently over 100% capacity, and the ER keeps creating “virtual beds” in the hallway, waiting room, outside lanai, etc.
And the “with covid” patients are sick as hell.
My behavior remains the same though perception of that behavior clearly hasn't. We have kept it simple the whole time. Stay away from large groups of people. Keep distance from people best you can while in stores etc. Wash hands consistently and often. Wear a mask when in groups of people inside. NONE of that has changed for us. The only thing we've changed is types of masks. Now that we can get better masks, we got away from the cloth ones.There's a discussion going on in the Political Forum's COVID thread that I'd like to pick up over here and get some feedback. This is as good a jumping off point as any, and I will quote the relevant posts below to set the stage: