https://youtu.be/j7PJT9D7twU@IC FBGCav
Since you and I are the only one's who seem to care about this
https://nypost.com/2021/07/28/reinfected-covid-survivors-less-likely-to-spread-virus-study/
Scoresman said:Do booster shots have to be specifically formulated as boosters or are they essentially just a third shot of the same vaccine as before? I know they can be tweaked to work better against variants, but can existing supplies be used as boosters?
Most likely not—but I think the reality is that there are a TON of breakthrough cases that are gong unreported. Most people do not get covid tested super often—especially vaccinated people.. If a vaccinated person feels like they have a mild cold or flu—more often than not—they are just going to ride it out. Breakthrough cases that are bad enough to seek a hospital visit most likely represent a tiny minority. Being that we only count cases that are officially reported by labs or hospitals—I’d say its safe to assume that there is a LOT more Covid out there than we think. A lot of people got vaccinated in February or before—which means the efficacy of them is dropping with each passing day. You have to remember—towards the beginning of covid—one of the biggest fears was asymptomatic spread. With so many vaccinated breakthroughs occurring—asymptomatic spread could be very plausible currently.
Thanks for posting -- there's a valuable link in that CNN piece to this more detailed Washington Post article (appears not to be paywalled): ‘The war has changed’: Internal CDC document urges new messaging, warns delta infections likely more severe (Washington Post, 7/29/2021)Looks like I was right. CNN just revealed an internal CDC document that says that it looks as though vaccinated people can spread the Delta variant just the same amount as unvaccinated people.
They always said the vaccines were not sterilizing, like measles is. But the data was showing it was damn close before Delta. Now it seems like a better version of the flu shot against Delta.Thanks for posting -- there's a valuable link in that CNN piece to this more detailed Washington Post article (appears not to be paywalled): ‘The war has changed’: Internal CDC document urges new messaging, warns delta infections likely more severe (Washington Post, 7/29/2021)
...
Reading these links, something has occurred to me: Perhaps the vaccines -- especially the mRNA ones -- should be considered more as prophylaxis and less as a vehicle for sterilizing immunity. Lots of people are willing to take hydrochloroquine, colloidal silver, and ivermectin prophylactically against COVID. Why not throw the vaccines into the same mental bucket?
Also ... it seems apparent that until the next vaccine-development breakthrough (sorry), current COVID vaccines will probably have to be administered as often as four times annually in some people. A better mousetrap will likely be built, just hard to know exactly when.
Your first sentence is right on ... but as we're aware, your second sentence ended up driving the narrative for a while there.They always said the vaccines were not sterilizing, like measles is. But the data was showing it was damn close before Delta.
Correct me if I am wrong, but the issue isn’t that the vaccine antibodies aren’t binding to the spike protein, but that delta replicates so much faster than the prior strains that there ends up being some type of infection for a period and you are contagious. Or am I missing something (or it’s unknown)?Your first sentence is right on ... but as we're aware, your second sentence ended up driving the narrative for a while there.
To the house:
With the initial legwork and trials done ... I wonder how fast a Delta-specific vaccine can be brought to market? I think we have to keep in mind that the current vaccines were built for the initial 2020 strains, and then happened to work well against the first several big variants as well. A testable mRNA vaccine was developed within a few weeks of the SARS-CoV-2 genome being mapped (early January 2020). Theoretically: a Delta-specific mRNA vaccine could be developed before Labor Day -- the only difference from the current mRNA vaccines would be the precise genetic instructions carried in the capsule.
Of course, we'd need a way to obviate the FDA's current authorization/approval processes. Or get the mRNA COVID vaccines into the same "system" that allows new influenza vaccines to be created annually without new trials.
Correct me if I am wrong, but the issue isn’t that the vaccine antibodies aren’t binding to the spike protein, but that delta replicates so much faster than the prior strains that there ends up being some type of infection for a period and you are contagious. Or am I missing something (or it’s unknown)?
The next few weeks have the potential to be very ugly for much of the country. The variant spreads very quickly, vaccinated people can spread it, vaccines are losing efficacy and are rapidly becoming more like proactive treatments than they are really preventative. I would recommend being very diligent and very careful the next few weeks if possible—limit grocery store trips (try to Instacart if possible), avoid eating at restaurants, and when you do have to go out—use good quality masks —N-95s.JFC this thing looks ugly. All the charts in Texas are vertical.
Worlodmeters showed the US the last 3 days at 92k, 84k, 68k and Texas at 12k, 9k, 7k
Good point, it's likely that the real numbers of unvaxed deaths is what's really skewed downwards to the actual number of unvaxed adults that are dyingOne thing to think about with some of the numbers we’re seeing is who’s getting tested. Some of the percentages with kids probably look a lot worse than they are. Kids generally aren’t being preemptively tested. There’s very few situations where a kid would be tested without showing symptoms. So there’s likely significantly more kids with COVID than testing numbers show and the percentage of kids who require hospitalization is much lower.
With the variants effectively now escaping containment, the article says new goal isn't containment but preventing severe disease.. and that humans need to get comfortable with the idea that this is here for a while.They always said the vaccines were not sterilizing, like measles is. But the data was showing it was damn close before Delta. Now it seems like a better version of the flu shot against Delta.
Wife’s vaccinated cousin just tested positive.
This is depressing. Thought we were about to be back to normal until winter. Now it looks like the experts last year were correct: 2022.
Once kids are vaxxed, it will be better but UGH.
Guess the hope is Delta burns out and the next variant isnt as bad and the boosters are even better.
Just a data point. But I’m immunocompromised. And I’m on planes every week. I do use a n95 or kn95 and always have my mask on indoors even if I’m the only person. The vaccine works pretty well so assuming you are vaccinated, and you aren’t in an area with very low vaccination rates and high spread it’s probably very low risk assuming you wear a mask. Breakthrough cases that lead to hospitalization are like .001% likely.I was getting ready to start taking the train to the office once a week next week and to begin traveling again. I would wear a mask but now I am not sure I want to go back out there yet. Even with an N95 or K95.
More concerned with transmitting to my kids aged 7 and 4.Just a data point. But I’m immunocompromised. And I’m on planes every week. I do use a n95 or kn95 and always have my mask on indoors even if I’m the only person. The vaccine works pretty well so assuming you are vaccinated, and you aren’t in an area with very low vaccination rates and high spread it’s probably very low risk assuming you wear a mask. Breakthrough cases that lead to hospitalization are like .001% likely.
Except vaccinated parents have to worry about kids who likely won’t even have the option until January.Not sure if I entirely buy that vaccinated problem spread the same as unvaccinated. Are they saying vaccinated people who contract the disease? Or vaccinated people that do not (asymptomatic)
Either way if everyone was vaccinated, who cares how much it spreads because it literally isn’t much of a threat at all.
This spike isn’t nearly as concerning to me because the overall hospitalizations and deaths will be WAY down. And for those that aren’t vaccinated, haven’t we reached the point where they bear the responsibility for it, not those of us who got vaccinated and are trying to just live life?
Link.“I think the central issue is that vaccinated people are probably involved to a substantial extent in the transmission of delta,” Jeffrey Shaman, a Columbia University epidemiologist, wrote in an email after reviewing the CDC slides. “In some sense, vaccination is now about personal protection — protecting oneself against severe disease. Herd immunity is not relevant as we are seeing plenty of evidence of repeat and breakthrough infections.”
The document underscores what scientists and experts have been saying for months: It is time to shift how people think about the pandemic.
Kathleen Neuzil, a vaccine expert at the University of Maryland School of Medicine, said getting more people vaccinated remains the priority, but the public may also have to change its relationship to a virus almost certain to be with humanity for the foreseeable future.
“We really need to shift toward a goal of preventing serious disease and disability and medical consequences, and not worry about every virus detected in somebody’s nose,” Neuzil said. “It’s hard to do, but I think we have to become comfortable with coronavirus not going away.”
Very interesting. And helpful. Thanks for sharing.Good thread interpreting CDC data on Delta and vaccine:
https://twitter.com/ashishkjha/status/1420929102253641728?s=21
Bottom line: vaccine still 88% effective against breakthrough. But vaccinated can spread delta, which may be just as contagious as chicken pox.
This part is buried at the very bottom of today's Washington Post article:
Link.
I don't know about you guys, but this has been the pretty consistent message that I've been getting for the past month or so. It just doesn't seem like the national narrative has even begun to catch up. Nearly everyone in corporate media is still talking about the pandemic as if "Zero Covid" is the only good outcome or even an achievable outcome. If covid-19 is like the common cold or even like the flu for vaccinated people, that's extremely good and firmly in the "victory" category.
The end result of all of this is probably getting to a point where we take the same or similar mitigation measures against covid that we do against influenza and/or cold viruses. Namely, some combination of annual shots and nothing, because some level of risk isn't worth mitigating against.
Edit: Well, I see [icon] and I zeroed in on the same part of the article. That's reassuring.
That 88% figure against breakthrough is not correct. Israel reported last week that the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approximately 39% effective against transmission—but the numbers show that it is 88% effective in preventing symptomatic disease in regards to the Delta variant. With that low a level of efficacy against actual prevention of the disease—even vaccinated people need to still implement careful measures and not have a false sense of security. The scary thing is that even with these low percentages—my understanding is that vaccinated people are around 8x less likely to get delta than unvaccinated people—which shows how easily transmittable this variant is. If 8x less likely to get it only translates to about a 39% efficacy—that’s some concerning math.Good thread interpreting CDC data on Delta and vaccine:
https://twitter.com/ashishkjha/status/1420929102253641728?s=21
Bottom line: vaccine still 88% effective against breakthrough. But vaccinated can spread delta, which may be just as contagious as chicken pox.
Reports have said vaccines have picked up significantly the last week. Hope it continues.If this is the end result I wonder how long it will take for the unvaccinated to decide it is in there best interest to get vaccinated? My sister in laws family had covid and have no plans to get the vaccine and would not get the vaccine even if they did not get covid. Once their natural immunity wears off I wonder how many times they will have to get covid to change their mind.
Yeah. It's just bizarre that anyone wants to celebrate a vaccine being < 100% efficacy. Just unreal.Anti-Vaxxers LOVE
- Things that show vaccine isn't bulletproof
Are we listening, "I'll choose for myself and do what's right for me!" crowd? The vaccine is now "what's right for you". For real.“I think the central issue is that vaccinated people are probably involved to a substantial extent in the transmission of delta,” Jeffrey Shaman, a Columbia University epidemiologist, wrote in an email after reviewing the CDC slides. “In some sense, vaccination is now about personal protection — protecting oneself against severe disease.
ditto. I’m in the same boat. Tbh i feel the risk is higher that he would get it in school than from me.More concerned with transmitting to my kids aged 7 and 4.
The tale of a decently-vaccinated country (UJ, 57% full vax) versus a low-vaccinated country (India, 7%), regarding Delta:Hopefully as jvdesigns2002 has said, we see a few more weeks of bad numbers and then we level off.
Both. The idea is that Delta's so fast at replicating, it's able to reach a 'critical mass' of transmissible virus just working in the nose and throats of asymptomatic carriers.Not sure if I entirely buy that vaccinated people spread the same as unvaccinated. Are they saying vaccinated people who contract the disease? Or vaccinated people that do not (asymptomatic)
Reports have said vaccines have picked up significantly the last week. Hope it continues.
That 88% figure against breakthrough is not correct. Israel reported last week that the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approximately 39% effective against transmission—but the numbers show that it is 88% effective in preventing symptomatic disease in regards to the Delta variant. With that low a level of efficacy against actual prevention of the disease—even vaccinated people need to still implement careful measures and not have a false sense of security. The scary thing is that even with these low percentages—my understanding is that vaccinated people are around 8x less likely to get delta than unvaccinated people—which shows how easily transmittable this variant is. If 8x less likely to get it only translates to about a 39% efficacy—that’s some concerning math.
The Israeli numbers are legit and internally consistent, but they're only a piece of the puzzle -- they can't, with that one small-sample study alone, declare a conclusive "39% efficacy". There are other studies with other numbers, and they all have to be aggregated to get a clearer picture.That 88% figure against breakthrough is not correct. Israel reported last week that the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine was approximately 39% effective against transmission—but the numbers show that it is 88% effective in preventing symptomatic disease in regards to the Delta variant.
The same two or three guys in the PSF keep pushing the same narrative about how the vaccines don't really work, and unfortunately CNN and NYT just keep giving them ammo. It's really kind of amazing.This seems like an irresponsible article. People will conflate things and draw conclusions that Delta is vaccine resistant (it isn't) and it plays into on conspiracy theory that vaccines are what are creating the mutations.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/07/30/health/vaccination-alone-variants-study/index.html
The article info was good, and I'm glad you posted it. That headline is painful, though -- that'll be all over Facebook by noon. In a bad way.This seems like an irresponsible article. People will conflate things and draw conclusions that Delta is vaccine resistant (it isn't) and it plays into on conspiracy theory that vaccines are what are creating the mutations.
Arizona is lucky to have Ducey who has been great on the COVID front.Arkansas parents to sue state over school mask mandate ban.
I wish Arizona would follow. Ridiculous dereliction of duty from our Governor and Republican controlled legislature.